Microaspects, such as sound, edditing, angles, are used to back up Macro aspects in theory, such as narrative, genre and representation.
Thriller shots:
High angle shots of women in Dracula films reiforce the idea of gender by showing the helplessness of female characters. This backs up the steriotypical dominant idealology of women being inferiour to men.
Hustle
The idealology of gender is represented in a stereotypical way for women but it challanges the idealology for men. The man in the shop is in a steroetypically feminine career, this is higlighted by the change between the man and a conversation between two men at a gentlemen's club. The two men in the bar epitimise massculinity. They are discussing business over whiskey and smoking. The men seem more sophisticated than the contrasting woman and man in the shop. This mice-en-scene of a stereotypical business man by connotating that they are serious about getting the job done. This is further reinforced through slow-pace editing, showing a sophisticated atmosphere. The absence of women in the club highlights the masculine feel.
At transition between the two scenes, there is a wipe effect. This highlights the difference between the two meenwhies, as well as making the men seem even more superiour to the next scene. This is done because the transition creates the idea that the sophisticated men have finished in deciding the next course of business and therefore can go back to the other scene where ladies are shoping in their natural environment.
The whole clip shows an upper class of people. The men are in a gentlemans club alone, sugesting that they are too superiour to enter a usual pub. This is hinted by their use of glass, it is a crafted glass for a higher class of peope, and their choice of Whiskey which is expenisve. The woman enteres a designer store and demands a louis vouton dress. This higner class representation means gender can be shown as more of a split as Men are stereotypically in the working role and the women just spend the money. This is higlighted because the woman talks about a ring that her husband has brought her, and the men have no mention of women.
The first two women in the extract are examples of gender idealologies that are challanged and reinforced. There is a low angle shot for the first woman in the scene, reinforcing her insignificance to the narrative and inability to afford the dress. However, there is an eyelievel shot of the seccond woman, the show of her hand pans to her face, showing that she is a sexual object.
Thriller shots:
High angle shots of women in Dracula films reiforce the idea of gender by showing the helplessness of female characters. This backs up the steriotypical dominant idealology of women being inferiour to men.
Hustle
The idealology of gender is represented in a stereotypical way for women but it challanges the idealology for men. The man in the shop is in a steroetypically feminine career, this is higlighted by the change between the man and a conversation between two men at a gentlemen's club. The two men in the bar epitimise massculinity. They are discussing business over whiskey and smoking. The men seem more sophisticated than the contrasting woman and man in the shop. This mice-en-scene of a stereotypical business man by connotating that they are serious about getting the job done. This is further reinforced through slow-pace editing, showing a sophisticated atmosphere. The absence of women in the club highlights the masculine feel.
At transition between the two scenes, there is a wipe effect. This highlights the difference between the two meenwhies, as well as making the men seem even more superiour to the next scene. This is done because the transition creates the idea that the sophisticated men have finished in deciding the next course of business and therefore can go back to the other scene where ladies are shoping in their natural environment.
The whole clip shows an upper class of people. The men are in a gentlemans club alone, sugesting that they are too superiour to enter a usual pub. This is hinted by their use of glass, it is a crafted glass for a higher class of peope, and their choice of Whiskey which is expenisve. The woman enteres a designer store and demands a louis vouton dress. This higner class representation means gender can be shown as more of a split as Men are stereotypically in the working role and the women just spend the money. This is higlighted because the woman talks about a ring that her husband has brought her, and the men have no mention of women.
The first two women in the extract are examples of gender idealologies that are challanged and reinforced. There is a low angle shot for the first woman in the scene, reinforcing her insignificance to the narrative and inability to afford the dress. However, there is an eyelievel shot of the seccond woman, the show of her hand pans to her face, showing that she is a sexual object.