Saturday, September 26, 2009

Classical Hollywood Style

Classical Hollywood Style

Film’s protagonist is in almost every shot, photographed using the most flattering makeup, clothing and lighting

Point-of-view shots—in which the star looks at something outside the frame and then the next shot focuses on the object—gave the star an implied power, in that what we see is limited to what the actor sees

Main character usually isolated in the center of the frame, to be stared it and admired by the viewer

Pub. Depts. Benefited and Restricted Actors

Increased Publicity Power

Responsible for taking a newly “discovered” actor, sculpting his/her physical appearance and developing the actor’s publishable history

Pub. Depts. Benefited and Restricted Actors

Genre stereotypes

Created stars

Typecast and limited careers

Privacy Issues

Publicity made stars more familiar

Ended any privacy

Studio Publicity departments—1912

Studio Publicity departments—1912

Actors began making personal appearances to promote films

Provided exhibitors with press kits filled with free passes, poster, postcards, displays and ready-made newspaper articles

Suggested contests for theater owners: treasure hunts, poster-drawing competitions, etc.

Distributors were also supplied with excess footage from which they could fashion trailers

Burden of the Stars

Burden of the Stars

Dichotomy

Idols must appear simultaneously identifiable and close enough to be attainable

Yet, they must be idealized and far away enough to seem flawless

Double-edged sword

Affords actors great fortune

Strictly limits the actor’s ability to be a real person, flaws and all

Why the need for stars?




Viewing public search for the “ideal” man/woman — we crave onscreen icons that harkens back to that ideal self-image

Film start becomes an object of our desire as the persona of the actor blurs with that of the character

New cinematic styles and techniques transformed actors into the viewer’s ideal, positioning the actor as an eroticized and fetishized icon

Close ups made them larger than life but also close enough to touch