Tuesday, April 12, 2016

Rear Window



In film and theatre, the concept of the fourth wall implies a separation between the audience and the actors. The actors engage in a drama while the audience passively spectates. The fourth wall is “broken” when the audience is confronted directly by the actors and stage activity. This engagement places the audience in an active role. Another example has actors speaking directly to the audience. A more extreme example might be a theatre production with audience participation.

Film Screening: Thursday, 4/14, in class, digital lab.

Please read before and after screening:

  1. Michel Chion article (handout)
  2. Kate Bellmore blog article: (below)
https://reelclub.wordpress.com/2013/08/04/dont-be-afraid-to-stare-rear-window-a-film-in-support-of-voyeurs/

Q&A
Based on reading, film and other sources you might find, please prepare answers to following questions for class discussion Thursday, 4/21

Rear Window Questions

  1. The main character L.B. "Jeff" Jefferies (played by James Stewart) was based loosely on the famous war-correspondent photographer Robert Capa. What significant traits do the real and fictional versions of this photographer share, especially with regard to photography?
  2. The modern usage of the word camera has origins in the Camera Obscura, or dark chamber. How can Jeff's apartment be considered analogous to a large camera?
  3. In the most general sense, what defines the fourth wall in photography? Is this the same for film/cinema?
  4. How does the film Rear Window call attention to the fourth wall (and perhaps challenge it) through visual means? Pay attention not only to the set itself, but to camera work.
  5. How does Rear Window call attention to the fourth wall through the storyline/plot/narrative?
  6. Describe the most poignant moments in which the fourth wall is challenged or broken in Rear
  7. Overall, what seems to be Hitchcocks attitude towards voyeurism here? Who is looking or spectating? Who is being observed? Are we as audience complicit in any way with Jeffs fixation on his neighbors?
  8. How does the concept of fourth wall relate to the notion of point-of-view? How could you use some of these ideas to engage your audience more directly in you own work?



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