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The Various Theoretical Approaches to Kate and Leopold

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Title: The Various Theoretical Approaches to Kate and Leopold


1
The Various Theoretical Approaches to Kate and
Leopold
  • Kimberly M. Radek,
  • Humanities, Fine Arts, Social Sciences

2
The Various Theoretical Approaches to Kate and
Leopold
  • A young man discovers a time warp and goes back
    in time, meeting a duke who would/was to become a
    successful inventor. The duke follows the man
    back to modern day New York, where he falls in
    love with a successful career woman who follows
    him back to the past, apparently to live happily
    ever after.

3
Auteur Theory
James Mangold, Director
  • I.D. (2003)
  • Kate Leopold (2001)
  • Girl, Interrupted (1999)
  • Cop Land (1997)
  • Heavy (1995)

In his own words, on his style Most of what I
try and do is try and construct a story to tell
that comes from my life, but also find something
formal/ architectural, something structural, that
makes it interesting to me cinematically, that
makes it a different movie. It's not just some
fresh spicy dialogue and a neat story.
In his own words, on his heroes They have much
the same kind of tenderness and soulfulness . .
. and much of the same kind of struggle to climb
out of life's shadows and do something.
4
Old Historicism
  • Look at events in writers or directors life to
    see personal influences in the work.
  • Draw parallels between Mangold and the films
    main character.
  • Mangold is the son of artists, who went to film
    and art school, had a job at Disney at 21, but
    was let go for refusing to play the corporate
    politics game. After being unemployed, he went
    back to film school where he wrote and directed
    his first film, Heavy, which won him a best
    director award at the Sundance Film Festival.
  • Leopold is a man who has a dream to pursue, as
    well, but reality (economics, class, etc.) appear
    to get in his way.

5
Formalism
  • The focus is on the work itself as a cinematic
    structure and it aims to discover the ways in
    which the work achieves (or fails to achieve)
    unity.
  • No part of the work is (or should be)
    superfluous.
  • Sees other contextscultural/sociological,
    biographical, historical informationas lacking
    importance or as secondary to the question of the
    films artistic quality.

6
Structuralism
  • There are two kinds, which are closely related
  • One concentrates of the patterns formed by the
    cinematic elements in the work and examines these
    patterns to find ones which unify the text and
    throw certain elements into relief.
  • The other sees the cinematic conventions and
    forms as constituting a system of codes that
    contribute to and convey meaning. The special
    interest here is on the organization and function
    of the elements, on how meaning is conveyed
    rather that what meaning is conveyed, on how the
    cinematic devices function rather than how they
    imitate an external reality. (This branch is
    closely related to semiotics.)

7
Semiotics
  • The study of systems of rules and conventions
    that enable social and cultural phenomena,
    considered as signs, to have meaning. In film,
    this means an analysis of the film (or films in a
    related group) at the shot/frame level.

8
Modernism
  • Modernism dominated the arts and culture of the
    first half of the twentieth century. It
    challenged the old standards concerning how art
    should be constructed and what art is, favoring
    different and opposing conventions, such as the
    dissolution of harmony and melody in music, and
    the rejection of traditional realism in favor of
    experimental forms in literature and film.
  • Modernists view the break with tradition in favor
    of experimentation as mournful they see it as
    leaving behind a longed for (and better) past.

9
Post-Modernism
  • Postmodernism is an answer to Modernism, as it
    celebrates the freedom of new forms of
    expression.
  • A discussion of Modernism and Postmodernism would
    not be complete without some attention to
    culture, specifically high and low or popular
    culture. In brief, whereas Modernists privilege
    'high' culture such as literature and classical
    art and music, Postmodernists refuse to put any
    art forms on a pedestal and revel in combining
    the everyday aspects of popular culture with what
    has been considered high art.

10
Marxism
  • Marxists see the base (material means of
    production, distribution, and exchange) as the
    driving force of society, and the superstructure
    (cultural world - ideas, art, religion, law) as
    being shaped by the base or as a reflection of
    events that take place within the base. This view
    of society is economic determinism.
  • Based on this description of art as a influenced
    by the economic base of society, general Marxist
    literary criticism maintains that a writer's or a
    directors social class and the prevailing
    ideology (outlook, values) thereof have major
    bearing on what s/he writes.

11
Deconstruction
  • Deconstruction, or Deconstructionsim, grew out of
    philosophy and, consequently, is skeptical
    concerning the existence of absolute truth or
    reliable knowledge. It sees a certain anxiety in
    the reliance on language, and thus on shots and
    scenes, etc., as the path to knowledge.

12
  • Deconstructionists see meaning as fluid and
    emphasize the lack of attachment between the
    verbal sign and the idea or concept to which it
    is supposed to refer.
  • This free play of meaning breaks down the concept
    of signifier/signified in that the relationship
    can be compromised when everything becomes a
    signifier (a sort of chain effect with no
    beginning or end) or when there are multiple
    elements on either side of the relationship.

13
  • The idea that words, and by extension shots,
    angles, etc., cannot be defined without viewing
    them in terms of their opposites also troubles
    deconstructionists because this relational way of
    acquiring meaning defies the possibility of
    pure or true meaning.
  • In the same way that words are influenced by
    other words, they are also contaminated by their
    own histories. Since language does not take place
    within a vacuum , the very history or connotation
    of words influences how they are used in present
    day.

14
  • Deconstructionists, then, attempt to show how
    meaning breaks down in a text because of the
    text their goal is to deconstruct the text.
  • A deconstruction of Kate Leopold might, then,
    look at what the text says love is (using
    scenes, shots, angles, and definitions from the
    film) and show that Kate and Leopold do not
    really love each other, based on the films
    determination of love or it might show via the
    several different plot lines that the film cannot
    be pinned down to any meaning at all.

15
Sociological Criticism
  • Focuses on the time/place context that produced
    the work to help explain the works meaning or
    relevance. It holds that the product, the film,
    cannot be understood without understanding the
    world that produced it.
  • One might situate this film in the conservative
    movement that began in the1980s and picked up
    speed nationally amid the Clinton-Lewinsky
    scandal.

16
New Historicism
  • Combines Old Historicism, the Sociological
    Approach, and an understanding of the industry
    factors that control the production and
    dissemination of the film.

17
Feminism
  • Look at the roles men and women play to see
    whether they are equal or not.
  • Are women rewarded for playing traditional roles?
  • Are women punished for playing non-traditional
    roles?
  • Are men conversely rewarded or punished?

18
American Eclecticism
  • The movie as being important and speaking to
    people through their American values.
  • Approaching it through a specific rubric or
    perspective, like through a particular
    sociological concept.

19
Overview of U.S. Values
  • Fairy tales, romances, and chick flicks, have a
    great popularity and staying power, as can be
    explained when one analyzes the values they often
    communicate, perpetuate, and reinforce.
  • Sociologists have identified several core values
    and beliefs that are communicated by, perpetuated
    through, and reinforced within our culture.
  • James Henslin, Southern Illinois University
    Sociology Professor, identifies fifteen.

20
Henslins U.S. Values
These values can be either explicit or implicit These values can be either explicit or implicit
Achievement and success Individualism
Activity and work Efficiency and practicality
Science and technology Progress
Material comfort Humanitarianism
Freedom Democracy
Equality Racism and group superiority
Education Religiosity
Romantic love
21
The Values within Kate and Leopold
These values can be either explicit or implicit These values can be either explicit or implicit
Achievement and success Individualism
Activity and work Efficiency and practicality
Science and technology Progress
Material comfort Humanitarianism
Freedom Democracy
Equality Racism and group superiority
Education Religiosity
Romantic love
22
Achievement and Success
  • Achievement and success are defined, at least
    from the female point of view, as concerning love
    and companionship. That is stressed for the
    male, as well, but for men creating something,
    doing something work-related or
    reputation-related is also stressed.

23
Individualism
  • The female character is portrayed as not being
    like other women, while at the same time
    representing the modern woman to the man from
    the past. This uniqueness among women makes her
    successful at work but, apparently, not at love.

24
Activity and Work
  • Females do occupy positions in the workplace in
    the film but the heroines ultimate choice, after
    attaining success at work, is to leave it all
    behind for love. The subordinate secretary
    clearly values love over the work, too.
  • The male character, apparently, never has to
    choose between work and the past.

25
Efficiency and Practicality
  • Even the duke from the past values this, as the
    broken toaster scene illustrates.

26
Science and Technology
  • That science is stressed is obvious, as it
    motivates the entire plot. It is science and
    math that allows the young man from the present
    to visit the past and start the events in action.

27
Progress
  • The idea of progress is challenged in the film,
    as corresponds to the conservative perspective it
    espouses. Life was better in the dukes time
    less caught up in time-wasting technologies, more
    caring, more honest, better educated, more
    devoted to individual happiness.

28
Material Comfort
  • Female character considers it important, as she
    judges her brother on his lack of success.
    Worrying about money is a value the duke is
    resistant to and resentful of, even though he
    shouldnt be as it is his livelihood at stake.

29
Humanitarianism
  • The duke is certainly presented as being
    concerned for the average person when he realizes
    that modern society is willing to lie about
    butter just to sell it to the masses. He does
    not feel comfortable lying to the masses in that
    way.

30
Freedom
  • Freedom of choice is clearly an issue in the
    film. The duke resents that he does not have the
    monetary freedom to choose a companion wife, and
    the heroine does have the freedom to choose
    between work and familyand perhaps will be able
    to continue to work in the past.

31
Democracy
  • Democracy is an implied value in the film, as the
    duke is feeling entrapped, to a degree, by his
    noble status and position. Hence, he has
    already re-located to America from England.

32
Equality
  • That equality, or at least honesty, is advocated
    in the film is evident at the way honesty in
    relationships is stressed through the film. The
    duke, too, shows he has not let class prejudice
    interfere with his actions when he informs the
    heroine that he once courted a librarian.

33
Racism and Group Superiority
  • There is still an example of class superiority as
    the duke, held up as the hero, is clearly of
    noble status. Further, he shows that his
    education and manners are better than his rival
    for the heroines affection.

34
Education
  • Education, in terms of academics, intelligence,
    and social skills like manners and treating women
    properly, are all used as positives in the film.

35
Religiosity
  • Love is portrayed as an almost spiritual
    experience in the film, especially in the moment
    the lovers are reunited. The jumping to and from
    the past as fated gives it a larger than real
    significance. Love for science on the mens part
    is clearly held up as more spiritual than the
    heroines love for her work.

36
Romantic Love
  • The whole plot hinges and depends on the
    supremacy of this value, of course, as do romance
    novels.
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