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GENRE

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Title: GENRE


1
GENRE
  • A genre is a division of a particular form of
    art or utterance according to criteria particular
    to that form. In all art forms, genres are vague
    categories with no fixed boundaries. Genres are
    formed by sets of conventions, and many works
    cross into multiple genres by way of borrowing
    and recombining these conventions. The scope of
    the word "genre" is usually confined to art and
    culture, particularly literature. In genre
    studies the concept of genre is not compared to
    originality. Rather, all works are recognized as
    either reflecting on or participating in the
    conventions of genre.

2
The Horror Genre
  • Films from the horror genre are designed to
    elicit fright, fear, terror, disgust or horror
    from viewers. In horror film plots ,evil forces,
    events, or characters, sometimes of supernatural
    origin, intrude into the everyday world. Horror
    film characters include vampires, zombies,
    monsters, serial killers, and a range of other
    fear-inspiring characters

3
ACTION ADVENTURE
  • Action Adventure films are a film genre, where
    action sequences, such as fighting, stunts, car
    chases or explosions, take precedence over
    elements like characterization or complex
    plotting.
  • KING KONG

4
THE RISE OF ACTION ADVENTURE
  • Action Films began in the 1920's with a well
    known actor called Douglas Fairbanks. The
    phenomenal success of the James Bond series in
    the 1960s and 1970s, helped to popularise the
    concept of the action film in recent years. The
    early Bond films were characterised by quick
    cutting, car chases, fist fights and ever more
    elaborate action sequences. The series also
    established the concept of the resourceful hero,
    who is able to dispatch the villains with a ready
    one-liner.
  • Early American action film usually focused on
    maverick police officers, as in Bullitt (1968),
    The French Connection (1971) and Dirty Harry
    (1971). However, the action film did not become a
    dominant form in Hollywood until the 1980s and
    1990s, when it was popularized by actors such as
    Arnold Schwarzenegger, Bruce Willis and Sylvester
    Stallone. The 1988 film Die Hard was particularly
    influential on the development of the genre in
    the following decade. In the movie, Bruce Willis
    plays a New York police detective who
    inadvertently becomes embroiled in a terrorist
    take-over of a Los Angeles office block. The film
    set a pattern for a host of imitators, like Under
    Siege (1992) or Air Force One (1997), which used
    the same formula in a different setting.
  • Action films tend to be expensive requiring big
    budget special effects and stunt work. Action
    films have mainly become a mostly-American genre,
    although there have been a significant number of
    action films from Hong Kong which are primarily
    modern variations of the martial arts film.
    Because of these roots, Hong Kong action films
    typically center on acrobatics by the protagonist
    while American action films typically feature big
    explosions and modern technology.

5
ACTION ADVENTURE SUB-GENRES
  • Action drama - Combines action set-pieces with
    serious themes, character insight and/or
    emotional power. This sub-genre can be traced
    back to the origins of the action film. Graham
    Greene's The Third Man was an award-winning
    example of this sub-genre.
  • Action comedy - Mixture of action and comedy
    usually based on mismatched partners (the
    standard "buddy film" formula) or unlikely
    setting. The action comedy sub-genre was
    re-vitalized with the popularity of the Lethal
    Weapon series of movies in the 1980s and 1990s.
  • Action thriller - Elements of action/adventure
    (car chases, shootouts, explosions) and thriller
    (plot twists, suspense, hero in jeopardy). Many
    of the films of Alfred Hitchcock and the James
    Bond series of films are icons of this popular
    sub-genre.
  • Caper/Heist - Protagonists are carrying out
    robbery, either for altruistic purposes or as
    anti-heroes. The film You Only Live Once, based
    on the exploits of Bonnie and Clyde, was one of
    the first examples of this sub-genre.
  • Die Hard - Story takes place in limited location
    - single building or vehicle - seized or under
    threat by enemy agents. This sub-genre began with
    the film, Die Hard, but has become popular in
    Hollywood movie making both because of its crowd
    appeal and the relative simplicity of building
    sets for such a constrained piece.
  • Science Fiction Action - Any of the other
    sub-genres of action film can be set in a science
    fiction setting. The Star Wars films began the
    modern exploration of this combination of high
    action content with futuristic settings in the
    1970s, based in part on the serials of the 1930s
    and 1940s such as Flash Gordon. An explosion of
    science fiction action films followed in the
    1980s and 1990s.
  • Action Horror - As with science fiction action
    films, any sub-genre of action film can be
    combined with the elements of horror films to
    produce what has increasingly become a popular
    action sub-genre in its own right. Monsters,
    robots and many other staples of horror have been
    used in action films. These were particularly
    popular in the 1950s. In the 1980s, Aliens
    introduced movie goers to the potential of a
    hybrid of science fiction, action and horror
    which would continue to be popular to the present
    day.
  • Buddy Cop - Two mismatched cops (or some
    variation such as a cop and a criminal) team-up
    as the main protagonists. Major examples are Rush
    Hour, 48 Hrs., Lethal Weapon, and Tango and Cash.

6
Film Noir
A genre of films characterised by a distinctive
visual style low-key and high-contrast lighting
emphasising light and shadows, and a narrative
focusing on the dark side of human life.
7
Inspirational teacher movies
  • A teacher that uses original and sometimes
    controversial methods to inspire and get the best
    out of there students, often in the face of
    adversity.

8
Musicals
  • Musical theatre is a form of theatre combining
    music, songs, spoken dialogue and dance. The
    emotional content of the piece humor, pathos,
    love, anger as well as the story itself, is
    communicated through the words, music, movement
    and technical aspects of the entertainment as an
    integrated whole.

9
American High School
  • Consists of plots based upon the special
    interests of teenagers such as the coming of
    age, first love, rebellion, conflict with
    parents, bullying etc. They are usually, although
    not exclusively set within an American High
    School.
  • Stereotypical characters usually feature quite
    heavily.

10
Rom Com (Romantic Comedy)
  • First made popular by the 90s smash hit When
    Harry met Sally followed by a spate of Tom
    Hanks/Meg Ryan films. Very popular among the
    female audience.

11
Science fiction
  • A genre of film that emphasizes science and the
    empirical method interacting in a social context
    with magic and religion in attempts to explain
    the unknown to man. Often science fiction movies
    involve aliens.

YODA!!!
12
WESTERN
  • The Western is an American fiction genre,
    predominantly seen in film and television.
  • Westerns, by definition, are set in the Western
    United States during the period from the start of
    the American Civil War in 1860 to the end of the
    so-called "Indian Wars" at Wounded Knee in 1890.
    Some westerns incorporate the Civil War.
  • Westerns have crossed the US borders
    frequently into Mexico, sometimes into Canada and
    even, famously, into Bolivia. The timeframe is
    stretched even further. The genre includes films
    about the Battle of the Alamo in 1836 and the
    Mexican Revolution as late as 1920. There are
    also westerns which take place in Australia, such
    as Quigley Down Under and The Proposition. The
    Australian relationship with Aboriginals has many
    parallels with the U.S. treatment of Native
    Americans.

13
Common themes
  • The western film genre often portrays the
    conquest of the wilderness and the subordination
    of nature, in the name of civilization or the
    confiscation of the territorial rights of the
    original inhabitants of the frontier. The Western
    depicts a society organized around codes of
    honor, rather than the law, in which persons have
    no social order larger than their immediate
    peers, family, or perhaps themselves alone.

14
Western movies
  • A genre in which description and dialogue are
    lean, and the landscape spectacular, is well
    suited to film. Early Westerns were mostly filmed
    in the studio like other early Hollywood movies,
    but when location shooting became more common,
    producers of Westerns used desolate corners of
    New Mexico, California, Arizona, Utah, Nevada,
    Kansas, Texas, Colorado or Wyoming, often making
    the landscape not just a vivid backdrop, but a
    character in the movie. Productions were also
    filmed on location at movie ranches.
  • The Western genre itself has sub-genres, such as
    the epic Western, the shoot 'em up, singing
    cowboy Westerns, and a few comedy westerns. The
    Western re-invented itself in the revisionist
    Western.
  • Cowboys and gunslingers play prominent roles in
    Western movies. Often fights with Native
    Americans are depicted. In early Westerns, the
    "Injuns" are frequently portrayed as dishonorable
    villains however, many "revisionist" Westerns
    give the natives more sympathetic treatment.
    Other recurring themes of westerns include
    western treks and groups of bandits terrorizing
    small towns such as in The Magnificent Seven.

15
BRICOLAGE
THE PROCESS OF DELIBERATELY BORROWING OR
ADAPTING SIGNS OR FEATURES FROM DIFFERENT STYLES
OR GENRES TO CREATE A NEW MIXTURE OF MEANINGS
OFTEN ASSOCIATED WITH POSTMODERNISM. Shanghai
Noon- Western/Kung fu/Comedy
16
HYBRID TEXTS
Hybrid texts mix and match a range of genres.
They draw on formats that have proven popularity.
At the same time , they also prevent these
formulas from becoming stale. Shaun of the dead-
comedy/horror.
17
Fly on the wall documentary
  • Fly on the wall is a style of documentary-making
    used in film and television. The name derived
    from the idea that events are seen candidly, as a
    fly on a wall might see them. In the purest form
    of fly-on-the-wall documentary-making, the camera
    crew works as unobtrusively as possible however,
    it is also common for participants to be
    interviewed, often by an off-camera voice.

18
POPULAR CULTURE
  • Popular culture, sometimes called pop culture,
    (literally "the culture of the people") consists
    of widespread cultural elements in any given
    society.
  • It is often dismissed as trashy and
    throwaway in contrast to the perceived
    superiority and demands of high culture such as
    classical music and literature.

19
Postmodernism
  • Is a term used in a variety of contexts to
    describe social conditions, movements in the
    arts, economic and social conditions.
    Postmodernism in film can loosely be used to
    describe a film in which the audience's
    suspension of disbelief is destroyed, or at the
    very least toyed with, in order to free the
    audiences appreciation of the work, and the
    creators means with which to express it.

20
Reality Television
  • Those television programmes specifically designed
    to represent ordinary experience, people in real
    life situations, utilising actual or sometimes
    reconstructed scenes of real events.

21
Soap Opera Docusoap
  • An ongoing, episodic work of fiction, usually
    broadcast on television or radio.
  • Are a self-professed form of documentary that
    claim to follow the lives of real people.
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