TWEET

Saturday, 27 November 2010

MAGAZINES

0 comments
Bookmark and Share

Why are men’s magazines being left on the shelf?

By Rhodri Marsden
Saturday, 27 November 2010
'Front is targeted at men who are bored in their bedrooms,' says its editor. But are those men now on Facebook?Rex Features
‘Front is targeted at men who are bored in their bedrooms,’ says its editor. But are those men now on Facebook?


What do men want? It’s an imponderable question which I feel strangely unqualified to answer. I suspect there are quite a few men who feel like me: I have an aversion to shopping, contempt for most advertising, only a vague notion of where I’m going in life, a bemused attitude to extreme sports, and a fairly strong conviction that repeatedly showing me images of semi-naked women will do nothing but make me feel depressed, frustrated and grubby. So when I leaf through a pile of men’s magazines, I can’t help wondering who they’re addressing.
But the inner dialogue of British men – their preoccupations, needs and neuroses – is something that editors on these magazines must spend untold hours pondering.
A stack of current issues reveals some of their attempts at connecting with me: FHM asks if I’ve ever paid for sex before telling me what it’s like to be a Californian firefighter; GQ enlists Piers Morgan to “undress” a “Hollywood hottie”, while Zoo prefers to show images of Jodie Marsh sucking a lollipop while a teddy bear obscures her genitals; Esquire gives a taste of what it’s like to freefall from space; Nuts shows some stills from horror films, and a camera-phone snap sent in by Laura (from Burnley) of her in the bathroom with her top off. Men’s Health, by contrast, tells me how to master the “one-arm chin-up”, something that I’ve never even come remotely close to attempting.
While this is obviously a cursory spin through, much of the content could be summed up as cars, tits, danger, six-packs, tits, booze, football, tits, and tits. How’s this approach working out? Not particularly well. The sector as a whole is selling 3.8 per cent fewer magazines than last year, but four titles in particular – FHM, Zoo, Nuts and Loaded – have shown a dramatic fall; FHM has slumped by 18.1 per cent year-on-year, while Zoo has seen a 27.9 per cent fall to 80,026 copies per week. Five years ago it was shifting 260,000.
Following their triumphant launch in the mid-1990s, the magazines that might loosely be termed “lads mags” now appear to be stuck in a decline that, for some, might prove to be terminal. While some of this is down to the fall in consumption of print media, the way that the sector’s decline is borne largely by these four titles has led to a debate about how relevant they are to the 21st-century bloke. Are we rejecting their swagger in a return to a more touchy-feely, new-man approach? Have we decided their portrayal of women is crass and insensitive? Or are we simply spending our cash on booze and protein shakes and getting our kicks from online porn? What does our wildly changeable magazine consumption say about our masculinity?
Drawing parallels between the sale of glossy printed paper and shifts in sexual politics inevitably involves sweeping generalisations and misplaced theories. But the focus groups employed by the industry have returned the same findings for the past few years: men don’t necessarily share the lads mags’ values any longer. Phil Hilton, formerly of Men’s Health, Nuts, and now the editorial director of free men’s weekly title Shortlist (the most widely-read men’s magazine in the UK) believes that much of this is down to the uncertainty faced by young men. “There’s been a social change for them – employment-wise, role-wise, relationship-wise,” he says. “A lot of certainties have faded away. They’re trying to build careers, they’re finding it nerve-racking, and I don’t think those magazines reflect the current mood so much. As for older men, our research shows an almost visceral hatred of that market. I think times are changing.”
Proving the suggestion that we’re more playboy in boom-time and more puritan in a recession is tricky. And it’s equally hard to interpret focus-group findings as broadly representative of men’s attitudes – after all, we’re enamoured enough with the range of men’s magazines to buy 2.12m copies of them every month. But journalist and sociologist, Natasha Radmehr, notes a shift in the portrayal of men in film and television that also runs contrary to the lad mag ethos. “Geeky, sensitive guys have become the new pin-up boys (or protagonists, at least) in a lot of film and TV,” she says. “They’re more attuned to how women feel, and this doesn’t sit well with that image of guys being beer-and-boob-obsessed oafs who need constant guidance on how to deal with the opposite sex.”
The presentation of women in lads mags has always been a controversial topic. I can almost hear the debate play out in my head as I open a copy of Nuts and look at pictures of the actress Maria Fowler. She’s undeniably beautiful, but seeing the legend “34E CHEST!” slapped across the photos makes me roll my eyes and adopt a pained expression.
“You can see the tone of contempt that runs throughout these magazines,” says Matt McCormack Evans, the 22-year-old founder of the campaigning group, The AntiPornMenProject. “Not just the objectification, but also the trivialisation of issues like prostitution. For socially-conscious young men, I think there’s a huge disconnect between what they’re presented with and what they think is right.”
But the publishers aren’t stupid; over many years they’ve established that putting a semi-naked woman on the cover of a men’s magazine is a surefire way of selling it. The issue of GQ I’ve got in front of me features a picture of a pouting, gently perspiring, slightly dishevelled Jessica Alba. Inside the magazine, meanwhile, is a thoughtful piece by The Independent’s Johann Hari exploring the reasons why speed cameras should remain stationed on our highways. The contrast between the two feels almost surreal.
Shortlist, as a free title handed out at railway stations, doesn’t have news-stand pressure and refrains from using such images. It would feel strange if they did; I can honestly say that I’ve never seen a man reading a copy of Nuts or Zoo on public transport, which may well be a quiet indicator of how we really feel about them. But while Phil Hilton stresses that Shortlist will only ever use cover images “that reflect well on the people holding them”, pretending that sex doesn’t sell magazines is ridiculous, according to Joe Barnes, editor of independent men’s magazine, Front.
In stark contrast to the rest of the sector, Front has seen its readership increase by 7.8 per cent in the past year, attracted by its mix of music coverage, irreverent humour, ladette-next-door photo features and a “no fake boobs” guarantee. “It’s depressing how people want to stick an axe in our back,” he says. “People seem to celebrate the demise of lads mags, but if they think they’re celebrating the end of men enjoying looking at naked women, they’re very wrong. I’m really proud of Front – I think it’s a really interesting, creative mag, targeted at young men who are bored in their bedrooms, who just want a bit of irreverence. And girls love it, too. If you could release a version of the mag for them, I think it would outsell Front.”
The almost unimaginable quantity of hardcore pornography on the internet is often cited as a reason why men may be rejecting the milder titillation on offer below the newsagent’s top shelf. But internet porn has been a constant throughout the lives of Nuts, Zoo and Front; they found their niche by focusing on “real women” that their readership might consider more attainable.
According to Fred Attenborough, a lecturer in media studies at Loughborough University, the competition is now coming from an entirely different internet source – and one that men may be equally unwilling to admit to focus groups. “For me, it’s all about Facebook,” he says. “It’s the interactive element. You have young men who were once looking at the girl-next-door in lads mags, now actually interacting with female friends of friends online. As someone who’s surrounded by teenagers at Loughborough, I know it’s going on. They just don’t need the mags anymore. It’s becoming a DIY culture.”
And faced with a long train journey, the lure of Facebook – along with games, the web, text messages, video etc – on a smartphone may be another reason why some magazines’ sales are declining. The more upmarket men’s mags are having an easier time than their lad-mag counterparts. Sales of GQ and Esquire are holding up, while Shortlist’s success – over half a million weekly copies distributed – incorporates similarly “intelligent” content.
All this may have inspired the decision by the publishing house Bauer to pilot a new weekly newsstand title for “successful” men (irritatingly) called Gaz7eta. Ella Dolphin, publisher of Grazia and overseer of the Gaz7eta project, says that focus groups revealed another strong current need for men: mentorship and guidance. “Our testing showed that men have a real interest in the idea of legends, mentors and advisors,” she says. “So our pilot issue has a back-page feature called ‘What I Learnt’, which features Lemmy from Motorhead passing on advice from genuine experience.”
I’m unsure as to whether Lemmy has anything to say to me about my life, but Gaz7eta isn’t alone in identifying some kind of need for mentorship. Hilton references one very popular section of Shortlist’s website, “Instant Improver”. “It partners a newish slot in the magazine called ‘Instructions for Men’, and I think there’s a hunger for this – the lost manly skills. With the end of a lot of industrial work, men are sitting around in offices – but we don’t know how to mend a plug or change a tyre. That makes us feel uncomfortable.”
Manlab, a current BBC2 series presented by James May, adopts a similar thread, while a clutch of American websites – The Art of Manliness, Made Possible, Man of the House and Good Men Project – are also proving popular, with a combination of witty writing and self-improvement tips.
Benoit Denizet-Lewis, a writer for The New York Times Magazine and editor of the Good Men Project, says that the website is something of a leap of faith. “By putting this out there, we’re saying that there are thoughtful men, men with a conscience, who aren’t currently being spoken to in any kind of intelligent or interesting way. So we’re starting an honest conversation about manhood, about what it means to be a good man in America. Twenty-five per cent of our profits go to charity to help at-risk boys, too, so we’re genuinely trying to do good across the board. This is an experiment that’s going on right now with us and other websites, and the signs are positive.”
My inability to wrestle with fuse wire without first consulting my dad doesn’t really bother me unduly; I find myself watching Manlab more because it’s gently funny and nicely researched. The author and journalist Mark Simpson also believes that this reclamation of masculinity is merely entertainment. He sees the only real evidence of self-improvement as being physical – as demonstrated by the huge success of Men’s Health. “The victory here is that a magazine with men’s tits on the cover has become Britain’s bestselling men’s magazine,” he says. “That’s happened because it focuses on men themselves, their neuroses – and particularly their own bodies.” It’s a title that’s celebrated within the industry because of the way its incredibly rigid formula – particularly its obsession with abdominal muscle development – has succeeded in getting almost a quarter of a million men to part with £3.99 every month. What’s less clear is the readers’ motivation for doing so.
Suraya Sidhu Singh, the editor of women’s erotic magazine Filament, isn’t sure that it’s about attracting women. She believes it’s a culmination of the growing issue of male vanity. “It’s strange: they’re marketing a body image, an appearance in men that women aren’t necessarily into. For some men, it’s become a competitiveness thing; I’m sure that some believe that it will make them hot for the girls, but it’s not necessarily the case.”
This comes as a relief to me; my own physique bears as much similarity to the front cover of Men’s Health as it does Angling Times. “I think this is more about how men feel about themselves when they look in the mirror,” says Simpson. “Men’s magazines today have to speak to men directly about their interests, and if the success of Men’s Health is anything to go by, they’re mostly interested in themselves.” Young men of the 1970s would probably regard their modern counterparts’ willingness to openly discuss the merits of various brands of hair gel utterly baffling.
Perhaps the feminist argument is right: men are now being put in the position that women have been in for decades (if not centuries), in that we’re being pressured to look a certain way, and persuaded that certain products are needed to achieve that. I can certainly find no other explanation for the quantity of Nivea-branded items in my bathroom. “I think men’s magazines have done what they were invented to do,” says Simpson, “and that’s to deliver high-end advertising to a market that had remained resolutely unpenetrated. Loaded came up with the formula for getting men to buy glossies. FHM perfected it. And now we’re buying the products they advertise. But we’re advertised at in a million different ways, now. So magazines are finding themselves caught in a pincer action between a lack of interest in print media, and the fact that they don’t really have a function anymore.”
The columnist Suzanne Moore believes that magazines will continue to struggle to speak to men. “Women are used to being identified as a consumer group,” she says. “We’ve been addressed this way for 50 years. But men identify themselves more by what they do, and I’m not sure that issuing them with instructions on how to be a man is something they necessarily appreciate. The magazines are almost becoming manuals. And I think men like to assume that they know what they’re doing – which of course they don’t.”
Do I want, or need, to be told how to be a man? For decades there’s supposed to have been some kind of crisis of masculinity, but there are so many cross-cutting discourses that it’s impossible to know exactly what that crisis is. Perhaps no wonder, then, that the failing magazines feel they’re on something of a wild-goose chase. But according to Phil Hilton, it’s simple. “It’s just about arming yourself up for relationships and working life, making the best of yourself. Find the right woman, try not to be a total shambles at work, look as if you know what you’re doing when you leave the house in the morning.” If that’s all that us men want, it’s a fairly modest ambition. But it’s one that Jodie Marsh, sucking on a lollipop, probably isn’t going to be able to help me with.

Enhanced by Zemanta

Saturday, 13 November 2010

MEDIA STUDIES - REPRESENTATION - VILLAINS WITH BRITISH ACCENTS

1 comments
Hannibal (2001)Image via Wikipedia Bookmark and Share  An interesting article from the BBC on why so many villains in American films have British accents.  
It has often been asked why the bad guy in (chiefly American) movies always speaks with an English accent. The answer has to do with two interlocking concepts: that of stereotype and that of the connotations of the English accent in America.
The Power and Convenience of Stereotypes
Most of the biggest-grossing Hollywood movies, for all their merits, are generally not replete with plotlines driven by unique or complex characters. The age of such productions as Lawrence of Arabia, in which the character of one of the most fascinating men ever to have lived is explored over the course of nearly four hours of film, is decidedly over. Today’s moviegoing audiences won’t stand for it, and even if they would, the big movie production houses are rarely willing to take the risk. They prefer to populate their movies with characters that are instantly recognisable: The Down-and-out Little Brother, the Amusing Ethnic Guy, and the Tough, Bitchy Battleaxe Who Is Revealed To Be Warm-Hearted At The End, Coming To The Aid Of Our Less Experienced Heroine. These are stereotypes, massive distillations of recognisable trends and tendencies. You may know people like this, but stereotypes have none of the uniqueness that makes the individual. Real battleaxes and ethnic guys you know are real and individual. Stereotypes provide the audience with prepackaged characters, often accessorized with easily recognisable motivations and predictable one-liners, sparing everyone (producers and audience both) the need to develop and understand a unique persona. With the valuable screen minutes thus saved, moviemakers can add more explosions and gratuitous sex scenes.
However one stereotypical character you’ve probably never met in real life is the Evil Genius. And this presents a problem for filmmakers.
The English Accent in America
The solution they came up with was admirably clever. Drawing on the legends of such gentlemanly criminals as Edward Pierce, and combining them with the American perception of the English accent1, the Sophisticated Evil Genius was born, to populate villainous roles in film on countless occasions.
The accent most commonly employed in this manner is received pronunciation (or RP). This and other English accents, and sometimes even Scottish or Welsh accents as well2, in America have a ring of sophistication and intelligence. This association possibly stems from frontier times, when among the rough and tumble talk of the wild west the less altered speak of genteel folks from the east stuck out conspicuously. It may have to do with the general impression of Great Britain as the ‘Old World’: a place of tradition and schooling and nobility. Also, the concept of the British as the ‘old masters’ and British influence as an unjust yoke to be thrown off is deeply ingrained in American cultural history. In any case, though most Americans don’t know what RP is, it sounds smart to them.
This phenomenon has led to the creative use of accents to be found in Robin Hood movies. Beginning with Errol Flynn’s classic portrayal, and leading up to Kevin Costner’s laughable (and anachronistic) accent in Prince of Thieves3, Hollywood Robin Hoods have had American accents. The Sheriffs of Nottingham have, naturally, spoken with English accents.
Star Wars: a Case Study
The original Star Wars trilogy4 is an interesting case. On the side of evil we have the Empire, whose officers sound quite British. The baddest of the bad, however, is Darth Vader, voiced by James Earl Jones, an American. It is interesting to note, though, that casting Jones was a decision that came late in the film and he merely overdubbed the lines of the British actor who played Darth Vader. Also, Vader was redeemed at the end of The Return of the Jedi, and imperial officers were not. On the side of good, most of the characters had American accents, including the über-American, space cowboy Han Solo. But there is an exception in the Star Wars movies, as well. Sir Alec Guinness gives the role of Obi-wan Kenobi his most deliciously wise English voice. He is a remnant of the old order, a mentor guiding our young brash hero, and is still in line with the prevailing stereotypes.
History of the Villainous Accent in American Film
In previous times, Hollywood stars were American, while character actors came from everywhere else. Your American star carried the film, and never played a villain because it might tarnish their image. The role of the villain was handed to a stock of character actors. Any US actor wanting to be a star some day might avoid the villainous role, whereas British character actors have always been more flexible. The same applied with crossing media. Once an American actor broke into films, it used to be seen as career death to go back to TV, but this limitation was rarely applied to the British.
The English accent in film has had a unique history. The casting of bad guys has often been politically motivated. During the first half of the century, they often had German accents, and during the Cold War, the thrillers of the era naturally had Russian bad guys. However, ever since film has become a popular medium has there been an overt political need to cast Britons as baddies. As mentioned above, the connotations of the accent come from centuries of anti-imperialistic fashionable thought. Even so, modern Americans don’t necessarily associate modern Britons with the big, bad Empire of yesteryear. It’s the accent that’s seen as evil, not the nationality5. It has become merely a stereotypical way of indicating the bad guy, a job once done by white and black cowboy hats or the glow of a cigarette in a dark alley.
While some people who speak with British accents in real life find this phenomenon offensive and yet another example of American arrogance, others see it differently. To quote one Researcher:
As an Englishman born and bred I have to say that I’m quite fond of the American tendency to cast my countrymen as the villain of the piece. He might always fall foul of the hero and/or his own devious plots at the end of the film, but he always gets the best lines and brings an impeccable style to the dance that you just can’t get with a US accent. Alan Rickman, Charles Dance, Jeremy Irons and many others always steal the scene away from the likes of Kevin Costner, Bruce Willis and Tom Hanks every time.
Some Examples
Please note - the following list contains potential spoilers, as even with the strong signifier that the character is English, the villainy of some of the ones listed below is only revealed as a late twist in the plot.
Gone in Sixty Seconds
Tango and Cash
The Aristocats
Alan Rickman in Die Hard (a case of an English actor playing a Germanic character with a slight accent), Help! I’m a Fish, Robin Hood: Prince of Thieves and Quigley Down Under.
Anthony Hopkins in The Silence of the Lambs6.
Basil Rathbone in Anna Karenina, David Copperfield, Son of Frankenstein and The Mark of Zorro7
Ben Kingsley in Sneakers.
Betty Lou Gerson as the definitive villainess, Cruella DeVille in 101 Dalmations (see also American actress Glenn Close playing the same role for the live-action remake).
Charles Dance in Last Action Hero.
Christopher Lee in (among many others) Star Wars: Attack of the Clones and The Lord of the Rings Trilogy.
Claude Rains in Notorious8.
David Bowie in Labyrinth and The Last Temptation of Christ (in which all the non-Roman biblical characters are played by Americans).
Dougray Scott in Mission: Impossible 2.
George Sanders in Rebecca and Walt Disney’s The Jungle Book.
James Mason in North by Northwest , Salem’s Lot and The Verdict.
Jeremy Irons in Die Hard With a Vengeance (where again, it’s an English actor playing a Germanic character), The Lion King and The Time Machine.
John Lithgow in Cliffhanger and Shrek (American actor hamming as British, though Lithgow has also played his fair share of homegrown villains, too).
Jonathan Hyde in Jumanji
Joss Ackland in Lethal Weapon 2 (British actor, South African accent!)
Pam Ferris in Matilda
Patrick Stewart in Conspiracy Theory
Peter Cushing in Star Wars9 (an example of the Imperialism mentioned above being used as short-hand to differentiate between the old order (Jedis and the Empire) and the new (the Rebellion Alliance).
Pierce Brosnan in Mrs Doubtfire10.
Ray Milland in Dial M for Murder.
Richard Attenborough in Jurassic Park (although his character in the film version was much more benign and unconsciously dangerous than in the books).
Sir Ian McKellen in X-Men11
Steven Berkoff in Beverly Hills Cop.
Tim Curry in The Rocky Horror Picture Show (alongside Richard O’Brien and Patricia Quinn, both sporting East-European accents).
Timothy Dalton in The Shadow.
Tom Wilkinson in Rush Hour.
1 Though we use the term ‘English’ throughout this entry, accents ranging from Scots to Boston Brahmin have been used in this manner.
2 The distinction between these is often difficult for American ears to discern.
3 This was later spoofed by Cary Elwes in the film Robin Hood: Men in Tights when he speaks the line ‘Unlike some Robin Hoods, I can speak with an English accent!’
4 Episodes IV-VI. While Episodes I and II (at time of writing) do present some interesting use of accents that are worthy of analysis, that is beyond the scope of this entry.
5 An exception to this use of accents occurs in historical dramas, such as Pocahontas, Braveheart or The Patriot (which all coincidentally star Mel Gibson) in which the British actually are the bad guys.
6 Although Hopkins is playing Lecter with an Anglicised American accent, to most he just sounds English. Which is strange, considering he’s Welsh
7 Though he more than made up for it by playing good guy Sherlock Holmes in lots of movies, too.
8 Though the hero, Cary Grant, is also English, his accent is not… quite.
9 The first film, later subtitled ‘A New Hope’.
10 An Irish actor ‘playing’ an Englishman.
11 Here, McKellen continues the tradition of playing Eastern-European characters with a cut-glass English accent, whereas his character in Apt Pupil, former Nazi officer Dussander, has a strong German accent. McKellen’s casting in both films was, however, almost certainly down to having a theatrical English knight for the respective parts.

Enhanced by Zemanta

MEDIA STUDIES - ZOMBIES

2 comments
Bookmark and Share 
I'm really enjoying this series.  Just hope it maintains such high standards.  Plenty of British actors in it too which is a trend in American TV at the moment.  Below is a review from The Guardian.                
Sam Wollaston
They love us over there. There’s a new addition to the list of Brits who star, as Americans, in big American TV dramas, a list that already includes Hugh Laurie, Ian McShane, Eddie Izzard, Minnie Driver, Idris Elba, Dominic West and Joseph Fiennes. Now add Andrew Lincoln. Yes, Egg from This Life and whatshisname from Teachers; now he’s Rick Grimes, a police officer in Georgia, with an awful lot on his plate. He’s having to deal with the aftermath of a zombie apocalypse.
And he’s excellent. I’m not properly qualified to judge the accent – you’d need an American for that – but he’s convinced me. I’m not normally a massive fan of the zombie drama, apart from Shaun of the Dead, obviously. But The Walking Dead, based on the comic book of the same name, is quality. There’s an eeriness to it, a cinematic feel, and a languidness that both suits its southern setting, and is such a relief after all the manic attention-deficit dramas such as Fast Forward and The Event. It doesn’t mean things don’t happen – they do, majorly – but they happen in time. And because it’s not 100 mile-an-hour splatter-gun action, there’s time for the tension to gnaw away at you. There’s something of Cormac McCarthy’s The Road about it, as well as Dawn of the Dead.
And man is it grisly. The zombies’ state of decay varies, from a look that most of us can achieve the morning after a big night, to vile creatures that lack flesh and bottom halves and drag themselves along the ground trailing their entrails. I can’t believe they ate that poor horse, too! Maybe those ones were French zombies. Zeurmbeez.
It’s a shame The Waking Dead is hidden away on FX. But that’s where The Wire started, too; maybe it will be picked up by someone further to the left on the listings pages. Otherwise, if you haven’t got all the channels, it might be a case of waiting for the box set.
Enhanced by Zemanta

TEST

0 comments






Bookmark and Share

Sunday, 31 October 2010

THE M. R. JAMES TRILOGY

0 comments
Last night I visited  the Lowry for a performance of two of M.R. James's classic ghost stories  performed by Robert LLoyd  Parry.   


Confusingly, only two stories are performed, not three.  The trilogy reference is to the fact that there are in fact three shows being performed at the Lowry.  Three of the major ghost stories are performed at each show so no performance uses the same text.   This did confuse the audience on the night including myself who waited for a third story but alas this was not to be.


Lloyd Parry was excellent and really did bring the stories to life pardon the pun.   I particularly enjoyed his rendition of "A Warning to the Curious", the story of an archaeologist who is haunted by the guardian of an ancient treasure.  Dressed in tweeds and waiscoat and  enunciating the clipped R.P. of the 1930s, LLoyd Parry really was the part.  Both stories were told by candlelight in an intimate confines of the Stage Theatre which added greatly to the spooky atmosphere.


During the performance Lloyd Parry frequently paused to imbibe whisky, or was it cold tea?  I hope it was the former.  I note that the programme sports an advert for whisky.  Try and catch The M.R. James Trilogy if you can.  A real Halloween treat.
 Bookmark and Share
Enhanced by Zemanta

Saturday, 30 October 2010

A2 ENGLISH LITERATURE: ANTONY AND CLEOPATRA

0 comments
kim-cattrall-antony-and-cleopatraKim Cattrall is a ‘finely gauged’ Cleopatra at the Liverpool Playhouse. Photograph by Tristram Kenton
Janet Suzman was a dazzling Cleopatra nearly four decades ago. Now she directs her own daringly intelligent, challenging and occasionally puzzling production. It starts with a great, rolling, sonorous grunt of a snore. Antony, that “triple pillar of the world”, lies sleeping, sprawled on the floor, his head lolling on Cleopatra’s lap, mouth gaping wide. He is bare-chested and his once-powerful muscles saggingly expose a man well past his prime. The queen of Egypt bends to rap his skull with her knuckles: does she want to wake him for the pleasure of lovers’ play or because his abandoned, noisy body disgusts her – or a little bit of both? This unsettling ambiguity is the only constant in their playful, passionate, bitter encounters. Kim Cattrall and Jeffery Kissoon are cleverly cast, since each carries an aura from a previous role that lends lustre to the part they play: he as the great warrior Karna from Peter Brook’sMahabharata and she as Samantha, Sex and the City’s love ‘em and leave ‘em, 40-something vamp. Does Cleopatra love Antony or does she love the fact that he is one of the three most powerful men in the Roman empire?
  1. Antony and Cleopatra
  2. Playhouse,
  3. Liverpool
  1. Starts 8 October
  2. Until 13 November
  3. Box office:
    0151 709 4776
  4. everymanplayhouse.com/
For these two, the personal can never be untangled from the political since every move they make is overshadowed by the threat of Rome – literally, in Peter McKintosh’s soaring set with its towering stone walls, iron girders, glass walls and overhanging gantry looming above and around the glittering oriental lamps and sumptuous fabrics of the Egyptian court. Octavius Caesar, in Martin Hutson’s riveting interpretation, is Cleopatra’s dark-suited, nervy, uptight counterpoint. In his buttoned-up Roman way, he, too, loves Antony, praising his military virtues with a starry-eyed admiration. Although he coldly calculates Antony’s destruction, this pursed-lipped Caesar weeps helplessly at the news of his idol’s suicide and, having wiped clean the sword on to which the old soldier fell, he reverently tucks his bloody handkerchief into his breast pocket, as though it were a precious relic.
It is at the point of death that Kissoon’s Antony is most ridiculous and most sublime. By this point, Cattrall’s Cleopatra has been so finely gauged, so quick to switch between histrionics, coquetry and calculation (when Antony is absent she settles spectacles on her nose, a chair at her desk and busies herself signing papers of state) that we still cannot tell whether she loves him or not. The result is that Antony’s extreme grief at the fake news of her supposed suicide, instead of being a dramatically ironic expression of tragic and ennobling love is so ridiculously bathetic (especially when contrasted with his raw cry of pain on hearing of the death of his friend Enobarbus) that the press-night audience laughed. More shocking than the sound of the laughter was the realisation that it was appropriate, a sort of emotional palate-cleanser to prepare for the end. Antony the soldier having been bested in battle by Caesar, it is now the turn of Cleopatra the seductress to be spurned by the self-satisfied Roman. Both have been defeated by the new order; there is no place within it for their messy complexities. It is death that brings them grandeur; united in death, they rob Caesar of the triumph of his conquest. But even this efficient Caesar turns to his advantage. As he orders the lovers to be buried together, attended by “solemn show”, his eyes slide from side to side as if surveying the reactions to his magnanimity – he is using the funeral to win their friends to his side.
Suzman’s production takes a great risk by harshly depicting a world where politics is as important as passion and, for the most part, it pays off. Some other directorial choices, though, were not so effective. In particular, why cast the unfortunate Mark Sutherland as Octavia? This bizarre piece of cross-gender casting made a burlesque of Antony’s marriage to Caesar’s sister and gave a far too literal reading to the idea of Roman virtues being masculine. Although Ian Hogg’s Enobarbus and Aicha Kossoko’s Charmian were both splendid, others of the cast seemed too young and inexperienced, as if the acting budget had been blown on the leads. Overall, like Shakespeare’s serpent of old Nile herself, flawed but fascinating.Bookmark and Share
Enhanced by Zemanta

GHOST STORY CONVENTIONS

6 comments



I remember reading the ultra-scary "The Woman In Black" many years ago and then watching a TV version and then a stage-play.  All were equally frightening especially in terms of their "pay-offs".  I  would highly recommend all versions but the stage play really does have the capacity to connect on a visceral level.  

From the Telegraph:

Telegraph ghost story writing competition

Susan Hill, the celebrated author of haunting tales, invites Telegraph readers to enter an exclusive writing competition - and outlines the art of the ghost story

By Susan Hill
Published: 12:18PM BST 29 Oct 2010
Comments
The ghost story is having a new lease of life. It was at its most popular in the Victorian and Edwardian eras, before being overtaken by the horror story, which began to thrive with the horror film. But think of coffin lids opened slowly by a skeleton hand and mummified corpses – and laugh. In piling it on so thick, horror quickly became comic.
A good ghost story is never funny. It is too near to us. Perhaps in order to find it convincing we must believe that it could possibly happen. I do not know of any “true” horror stories, but there are thousands of true ghost stories, beginning with those told by the flickering firelight in the caves of prehistoric man. Every region of the British Isles has its local ghost stories, and every country and culture has its repeated tales.
To be any good, a ghost story needs a structure, characters, a narrative line (dialogue is optional). Above all, the ghost must have a purpose. It may be revenge for harm suffered. It may be to explain some past incident. It may be to protest, to offer information – the whereabouts or contents of a will, a murdered body or the identity of a killer.
I have never written a ghost story merely to evoke a shudder. I cannot see the point in simply making people afraid. I want to do more. I want the reader to ask questions, to ponder, to be intrigued and to create an atmosphere from which the story will emerge.
Atmosphere is essential to a ghost story. How does it come about? By evocative description and a sense of place – perhaps the traditional empty, haunted house at night. Buildings are important. But a deserted office block at night in an empty city centre could be a place full of ghosts.
One of the finest ghost stories ever written, M R James’s “Oh, Whistle, and I’ll Come to You, My Lad”, is set in a small Suffolk seaside town – supposed to be Aldeburgh – to which a university scholar has gone for a holiday. His hotel is old and half empty but he is asked to take a room with twin beds. He walks along the shingle beach at twilight. There have been archeological excavations during which graves have been uncovered and ancient bones disturbed. And so it begins. After reading it you may never be able to sleep alone in a room with twin beds again.
The other James – Henry – was also a master of the ghost story. He wrote several short ones and one long masterpiece, The Turn of the Screw. The title indicates what the form needs to do – ratchet up the tension almost unbearably slowly.
Weather is the writer’s best friend. The sudden chill breeze whistling down the chimney or a howling storm are wonderful tools to help one establish atmosphere. Time of day is important too – twilight is as good as midnight.
Yet a ghost story can take place on a brilliantly sunny day, or a calm evening. Kipling’s great story about ghostly children in a garden is set at the end of a summer’s day; several of Edith Wharton’s magnificent short ghost stories take place in fine English summer weather.
One of the best modern ghost stories I know breaks every rule, in that it is not, and is not intended to be, frightening: A S Byatt’s “The July Ghost” is profoundly moving and sad, and it raises many questions.
The ghost story is alive and in better shape than it has been for a long time. I hope many of our finest writers may be challenged to take it up. There is plenty of room.
* We are delighted that the novelist Susan Hill, Andrew Franklin, Managing Director of Profile Books, and Lorna Bradbury, Deputy Literary Editor of The Daily Telegraph, will be the judges of this ghost story competition.
* The winner will have his or her story published and illustrated in The Daily Telegraph Saturday Review, and will receive a unique specially bound copy of The Small Hand by Susan Hill.
* All entries must be 2,000 words or fewer, and the deadline for entries is November 20. A shortlist of six stories will then be selected and published on telegraph.co.uk on December 4, and the winning story will be published in The Daily Telegraph on December 11.
* Please post your 2,000-word story to Lorna Bradbury at The Daily Telegraph, 111 Buckingham Palace Road, London SW1W 0DT. The envelope should clearly be marked “Ghost Story Competition”. Alternatively entries can be emailed to lorna.bradbury@telegraph.co.uk. Please paste your story into the body of the email, and clearly mark your email “Ghost Story Competition” in the subject line.


    Enhanced by Zemanta

    A2 ENGLISH LITERATURE: ANTONY AND CLEOPATRA

    0 comments
    Antony and Cleopatra, Liverpool Playhouse, review
    The production has potential, despite it being Sex and the City star Cattrall’s first major role in Shakespeare. Rating: * * *
    By Charles Spencer
    Comments
    Back in 1973, at the susceptible age of 18, I saw my first Antony and Cleopatra with Janet Suzman starring as the queen of old Nile. She knocked me for six and her Cleopatra still glows in my memory as one of the greatest Shakespeare performances I have ever witnessed.
    Now Suzman is directing the play herself, with Kim Cattrall, so fondly remembered for her performance as the sensual Samantha in Sex and the City, tackling this most demanding of roles.
    Cattrall isn’t in the Suzman class yet. Especially in the first half, her lack of Shakespearean experience shows. This is her first major role in Shakespeare and Cleopatra is a hell of a place to start.
    She often misses the pulse of the verse, and she has a tendency to shout stridently. But in her elegant gowns and with her hair dyed black she is a splendidly alluring queen, even when she puts on reading glasses in a production that stylishly combines ancient and modern. And if she is not yet the mistress of Cleopatra’s infinite variety, she grows in stature throughout the performance and in the great last act becomes extraordinarily moving.
    Right from the start she captures Cleopatra’s wit, especially in her dealings with her handmaidens, Charmian and Iras. But there is a disappointing lack of sexual spark in her relationship with Jeffery Kissoon’s battered Antony, an old campaigner who has run to seed and is first discovered snoring loudly in a drunken stupor at Cleopatra’s feet.
    I’m not asking for the frantic bouts of simulated oral sex that notoriously accompanied one RSC production, but it would be a much stronger evening if there was a sense of the addictive passion that has turned Antony, one of the three most powerful men in the world, into “a strumpet’s fool”.
    But if the first half sometimes seems alarmingly tepid, the production really catches fire after the interval.
    Kissoon is deeply moving as he bids farewell to his troops for the last time, and seems to penetrate the very heart of grief and shame when he realises that Cleopatra has led him to defeat yet again. His bungled attempt at suicide is both comic and unbearably sad — which is exactly as it should be.
    Cattrall, too, begins to scale the dramatic heights as she mourns his loss and transforms a vainglorious old roué into a god in perhaps the most transcendentally beautiful verse Shakespeare ever wrote. I suspect her shaky start was due largely to first-night nerves and the performance will become richer and deeper as the run progresses. Among the supporting cast in Suzman’s production, spectacularly and atmospherically designed by Peter McKintosh on a split-level set, there is especially strong work from Martin Hutson as a priggish, unexpectedly comical Octavius Caesar and Ian Hogg as a cynical but finally touching Enobarbus.
    This isn’t a great Antony and Cleopatra yet but it has the potential to become one if Cattrall works on the verse and Kissoon responds more ardently to her charms.
    Enhanced by Zemanta

    Wednesday, 27 October 2010

    AS MEDIA STUDIES, EXAMINATION PAPER, ANALYSIS SHEET

    0 comments
    Bookmark and Share
    How to Analyse and Approach MS1 in the Examination Paper

    AS MEDIA STUDIES GROUPS A AND B

    0 comments
    Image via WikipediaNotting Hill and PowerPoint presentation contents and marking frame

    Group A ignore the reference to Wednesday and the questions on Notting Hill.


    g
    Enhanced by Zemanta

    MEDIA STUDIES: INSTITUTIONS - THE POPULAR PRESS

    0 comments
    The Guardian looks at the new paper on the block. It's called "I" for "The Independent" in short apparently.



    View original
    guardian.co.uk

    i lives up to its name - it’s a digest of its big brother, like an upmarket Metro

    Independent's i newspaperView larger pictureThe Independent’s i newspaper. Click for larger cover image“It’s a red-letter day! i is all you need”. That front page boast in today’s launch issue of Britain’s first new national daily title in a generation reads oddly when it arrives alongside The Independent itself.
    If i is all we need, then what are readers to make of the Indy itself? That boast illustrates the problem of a paper published as a condensed version of its parent.
    But let’s get beyond that obvious problem of newspaper cannibalism to consider the content in the 56 pages of i.
    It begins with an Independent trade-mark poster-style front page with several cross-reference blurbs, and opens into a couple of pages of news-in-briefs.
    I couldn’t see the point of the page 2 top-to-bottom picture of Jeremy Clarkson (no caption, no reference in adjacent copy) until I read further into the “news matrix” and discovered a story about him on page 9. Rather bizarre.
    We reach the “opinion matrix” on page 12, with one-paragraph “lifts” from commentators and editorials of papers in Britain and abroad. Opposite is devoted to Johann Hari’s Indy column.
    After a page reproducing blogs and tweets and a people page (with an awful pun catchline, Caught & Social) comes the final opinion page and we go back into several more pages of short news items from home and away.
    The spread is given over to TV listings with a hard-to-read guide in what looks like the equivalent of 6pt type. After that is a run of features pages, leading off with a goodish piece on Mel Gibson.
    There are four pages of arts reviews, five pages of business - with the obligatory “business matrix” digest - and eight pages of sport plus a page of puzzles.
    Well, that’s the skeleton. But the overall effect of i - the look, the pace and content taken together - strikes me as a sort of upmarketMetro, or even a British-style USA Today.
    Indeed, there were also overtones of Today, the British title launched in 1986 by Eddy Shah and closed down in 1995 byRupert Murdoch because of its failure to make a profit.
    i is what it says on the tin: a paper for time-poor people dashing between home and work. It is pleasantly designed, bright, colourful without being garish, easy to read, and fast-paced.
    In essence, it is pop paper with serious or, at least, semi-serious content. I say that because it is difficult to regard very short items, even when they deal with serious topics (such as Iran’s funding of the Afghan president and Haiti’s cholera outbreak) as serious coverage.
    That, of course, is the point of the exercise. It is the belief of the Indy’s senior team - especially managing director Andrew Mullins and editor Simon Kelner - that there is an audience for a paper that offers nuggets of information.
    My hunch, on the basis of this first issue, is that the cross-over from full-strength Independent to decaffeinated i will not be too great. The differences between the two papers - Big I and Little i - are greater than the similarities.
    But the fact that it resembles Metro is more of a problem. Will people rushing to work take the trouble to stop and pay 20p for it rather than pick up their free Metro?
    Then there is the most obvious problem that faces the whole print market: can any paper supplant the enthusiasm among young people to consume their news and opinion online?
    I wish it well, of course. It would be wrong to rain on the parade of any publisher and editor willing to launch into this dismal market. (Full disclosure: I write a weekly media column for the Indy’s stablemate, the London Evening Standard).
    But I would be surprised if it can locate that mysterious young audience that, for a variety of reasons - mainly cultural and technological - have turned their backs on print.
    Enhanced by Zemanta

    MEDIA STUDIES: REPRESENTATION AND SEXUALITY

    0 comments
    An interesting take on this issue from Sue Perkins writing at  the Queerty Website.



    If Gay TV Characters Weren’t So Stereotypical, How Would We Recognize Them? / Queerty

    image
     
    If Gay TV Characters Weren’t So Stereotypical, How Would We Recognize Them?

    Sue Perkins, the lesbian British comedian who is not related in any way to Tony Perkins, read all 226 pages of the BBC’s report on the portrayal of gay characters on television, and she’s got a suggestion: it’s the soap operas that need to start offering up more accurate representations of ‘mos if any minds are going to change.
    The report, which made our radar for revealing how many straight Brits have a problem with the way gays look on the tube, also showed gay audiences were a bit fed up with the stereotypical characters they usually see under the LGBT banner. Which is the problem Perkins — who was outed in 2002 on I’m A Celebrity…Get Me Out Of Here! by ex-girlfriend Rhona Cameron — has. Writing inGuardian op-ed:
    Although the BBC and Channel 4 fare well in this report, there is much left to do. The responsibility must fall on the biggest hitters – soap operas. Watched by millions of middle Englanders week after week, they could change the perception of gay people where it matters most. In 1987, EastEnders’ Barry and Colin shared a chaste mouth-graze. In 1994, Brookside’s Beth and Margaret locked lips. Coronation Street discovered lesbians this year. If gay history had evolved as slowly and timidly as television portrayed it, then the first drag queen would be tiptoeing out of the primordial ooze around about now.
    What saddens me is that the same issues keep arising. For gay men, it’s the predominance of the camp cliche. For lesbians, despair at the outdated butch-femme stereotypes. Gay women generally are under-represented, unless you count the number of times the word “lesbian” or “dyke” features as a lazy comic’s punchline.
    There’s no real mystery that television writers are “lazy” and network execs “dumb things down,” because that is how the industry works, at least according to some antiquated model that says viewers will only tune in if we give them caricatures. Which is why we’re usually presented with the gay BFF, always there to shop or gossip.
    When gay characters stop cat-hoarding, scatter-cushion throwing and compulsively shagging — when we’re just sitting around paying bills like Average Jos – then middle England, and the Queer Nation, will be happy.
    And as we all know, Average Jos are themselves accurately represented by the over-sexed, money-obsessed, impossibly-thin characters also seen on television.


    Enhanced by Zemanta