Teaching Juno

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Teaching Juno

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Title: Teaching Juno


1
Teaching Juno
  • Rick Instrell
  • AMES Conference 29 May 2009
  • www.rickinstrell.co.uk
  • info_at_rickinstrell.co.uk

2
Teaching Literacy Principles
  • Study of the three functions of communication
  • ideational (content)
  • interpersonal (reader engagement)
  • textual (form).
  • Study of how texts employ rhetorical structures
    and devices to combine multimodal elements into
    coherent and enhanced communications.
  • Practice and critique using a range of multimodal
    rather than purely monomodal communications.

3
Teaching Literacy Principles
  • Critical literacy
  • textual critique of the effectiveness of the
    communication in terms of content, form and
    reader engagement
  • contextual considering the text in terms of its
    institutional, cultural, individual and social
    contexts.
  • Pedagogy should involve structured dialogue with
    pupils, posing relevant thought-provoking
    questions which project pupils and teachers into
    enthusiastic cooperative enquiry.

4
Levels of fiction film analysis
5
Levels and analytical tools
6
Higher English SQP Section D
  • 16. Choose a film which has a particularly
    effective or arresting opening. Referring in
    detail to the opening, discuss to what extent it
    provides a successful introduction to the text as
    a whole.
  • 17. Choose from a film or TV drama a scene in
    which the conflict between two characters is at
    its most intense. Outline briefly the reasons for
    the conflict and then by examining the scene in
    detail, show how it gave you a deeper
    appreciation of the text as a whole.
  • 18. Choose a TV drama in which the character
    struggles with her or his conscience. Outline
    briefly the reasons for the characters dilemma
    and go on to discuss how successfully the
    programme-makers engage your sympathy for her or
    him.
  • 19. Choose a film or TV drama in which setting
    in time and/or place is significant. Explain why
    you think the setting is important for your
    appreciation of the text.
  • TV drama includes a single play, a series or a
    serial.

7
What Texts to Study?
  • Texts which engage pupils
  • Texts which exemplify the best use of rhetorical
    structures and devices
  • Texts whose form best communicates their content
    to the intended audience in a coherent way
  • Texts whose coherence and audience engagement is
    expressed at every analytical level
  • Texts which show mise-en-abyme (seemingly endless
    rhyming of motifs at every level) cf. fractal
    zooms
  • Texts which are susceptible to textual and
    contextual critique appropriate to level of
    age/stage of pupil

8
Watching Juno Initial Questions
  • Q. What is the story?
  • Q. What is the moral of the story?
  • Q. What are the recurring motifs? (situations,
    settings, images, audio, cinematography, editing,
    colour, lettering, )
  • Q. What are the conflicts in the story and how
    are they resolved?
  • Q. Compare the beginning and end of the film. How
    do they reflect the narrative arc?

9
Beginning Ending
10
Turning Point Moral of Story
11
Recurring Motifs
12
Recurring Motifs
13
Recurring Motifs Colour
13
14
Recurring Motifs Colour
15
Recurring Motifs Colour
15
16
Symbolism
17
Key Aspects of Media Studies
  • TEXT
  • CATEGORIES
  • purpose, medium, form, genre, tone, style, etc.
  • LANGUAGE
  • denotation/connotation motivations of
    technical cultural codes anchorage
    conventions mode of address signs, discourse,
    ideology, myth
  • NARRATIVE
  • narrative structure, conventions, codes
  • REPRESENTATIONS
  • stereotypes non-stereotypes repns of people,
    places events
  • AUDIENCE
  • mode of address (direct/indirect
    specific/general) preferred reading

decodes
encodes
  • INSTITUTION
  • company type (commercial, public service
    global, independent)
  • finance (budget, income from sales,
    subscription, advertising)
  • internal constraints (e.g. editorial policy,
    house style, hard/software)
  • external constraints (legal, regulatory, market,
    target audience)
  • production processes (planning, implementation,
    review evaluation)
  • AUDIENCE
  • target audience audience factors (individual,
    taste, textual knowledge, gender, age, class,
    ethnicity, interests, nationality)
  • TECHNOLOGY
  • technologies of production, distribution
    consumption

CAPITAL
  • SOCIETY
  • social, cultural, economic, politics
  • ideologies myths

influences
selects
MEANING
18
Purpose
  • Purpose
  • entertainment which allows us the pleasure of
    escaping from everyday reality
  • emotional release/pleasure through comedy/drama
    gives a feeling of intensity which may be lacking
    in our lives
  • profit from screenings in cinema, tv, DVD,
    soundtrack and merchandise sales (in Juno there
    was no product placement revenue for TicTacs or
    Sunny D Juno DVD for sale in Starbucks in USA)

19
Soundtrack album cover
19
20
Juno Merchandise
21
Juno Pregnancy Kit iPod
22
Categories Media
  • Film
  • DVD (including Blu-Ray) 2 disk-sets include
    IPod/PC downloads
  • TV
  • Download on iTunes
  • Hit soundtrack album
  • Social networking site Junoverse

23
Official Website (www.foxsearchlight.com/juno)
24
Junoverse (www.foxsearchlight.com/junoverse)
25
Categories Form
  • Studio independent feature film (Juno ideal
    length 92 min)
  • Independently produced film backed by Fox
    Searchlight with small budget (6.5m) so no big
    stars, few extras in sports meet scene, small
    amount of digital work

26
Categories Genre
  • Generic hybrid
  • Indie (oddball characters, indie music)
  • Mainstream comedy/drama with upbeat happy ending
  • High school movie
  • Coming-of-age
  • Romance
  • Smart teen film
  • Full-term pregnancy sub-genre (cf. Waitress,
    Knocked Up)
  • Q. Genres can be identified by iconography
    (semantics) and narrative (syntax). Identify
    features of each genre in Juno.

27
Categories Tone Style
  • Director Jason Reitman aimed for audience
    perceiving the characters as real
  • So uses conventional classical continuity editing
    which is restrained and does not draw attention
    to itself

28
Language Technical Codes
  • Q. Analyse how key scenes have been shot and
    edited. Note any unconventional techniques.

29
Language Camera Angles
  • Generally the camera avoids high angle shots
    looking down on Juno violating POV rules for
    continuity editing. Why?

Shot
Reverse shot
30
Language Cultural Codes
  • Q. Compare the framing in the two settings and
    mise-en-scène in these two shots
  • Q. How does this contribute to telling the story?

31
Language Cultural Codes
  • Q. Examine how Marks wardrobe changes across the
    film. How does it reflect his character arc?

32
Language Music
  • Composer Mateo Messina The process came down to
    instrumentation. It was about trying to find
    Junos voice. She kind of has an indie rock vibe
    to her. But straight alt rock or indie rock
    didnt feel the right call I wanted to go with
    an acoustic guitar feel, something that jangled
    and was really loose, like Juno So almost every
    cue has this guitar in it.
  • Q. The songs on the soundtrack have a faux-naïf,
    amateurish feel to them (Moldy Peaches, Belle and
    Sebastian). Why are these songs used?
  • Q. If Junos favourite bands are the Stooges,
    Patti Smith and the Runaways, why is their music
    not on the soundtrack?

33
Narrative Structure Todorov
  • Tzvetan Todorov proposes that conventional
  • narrative has this structure
  • Equilibrium
  • Disruption of equilibrium by some force
  • Recognition of disruption
  • Attempt to repair the disruption
  • Return to a second equilibrium different from the
    first
  • Q. Does Juno fit this structure?

34
Narrative 3-Act Structure
  • Story is split into three acts and an epilogue
    with intertitles indicating the season
  • Act 1 Autumn (DVD chapter 1 - 0000) setup
  • Act 2 Winter (DVD chapter 12 - 3601)
    confrontation
  • Act 3 Spring (DVD chapter 19 - 5719)
    resolution
  • Epilogue Summer (DVD chapter 27 - 8543)
  • Q. How is the choice of seasons appropriate to
    the story?
  • Q. Summarise in as few words as possible what
    happens in each act.

35
Comedy Narrative
  • Christopher Booker argues that the comedy
    narrative trajectory is
  • Hero threatened by self or others or world in
    general
  • This is a 3-stage process
  • World where people are confused, uncertain,
    frustrated, isolated
  • Confusion gets worse turns into nightmare
  • Things come to light, perceptions change world
    brought together in joyful reunion
  • Q. Does Juno fit this structure?

36
Narrative Codes
  • Barthes five narrative codes
  • Action code typical actions of age group
    sitting in bedroom flirting and dating falling
    out and making up
  • Enigmatic code enigmas
  • Semic code e.g. connotations of acting, clothes,
    hairstyles, props used to convey characters
  • Referential code references
  • Symbolic codes binary oppositions (male v
    female, teen v parents, working v middle class)
  • Q. Analyse a key sequence in terms of narrative
    codes.

37
Narrative Archetypes
  • We can analyse text in terms of character
    archetypes which recur in myth, literature, film,
    etc
  • Protagonist (hero)
  • Nemesis (shadow, antagonist)
  • Attractor (animus/anima, contrasexual)
  • Mentor (wise old man/woman)
  • Trickster
  • Q. Analyse the characters in Juno (Juno, Paulie,
    Leah, Bren (step-mother), Mac (father), Vanessa,
    Mark in terms of character archetypes.

38
Representations
  • Q. Are the following representations stereotyped
    in Juno?
  • Girls
  • Boys
  • Teenagers
  • Parents
  • Family
  • Social class

39
Representations of Family
  • Director Jason Reitman believes that because of
    its dealings with the nature of family, the film
    is also thematically Canadian.  It has a
    general nature of open-mindedness and Canadians
    are open-minded people, he said. To take on the
    notion of what family is, and what constitutes a
    family single mothers, adopted children,
    stepfamilies I think Americans have a too
    closed-minded view of what family is.

40
Representation Ideological Discourses
  • Q. Does Juno challenge or confirm dominant
    ideologies about teenage sex and family?

41
Audience Target Audience
  • Q. What is the primary audience for Juno? What is
    the evidence for this?
  • Q. What other audiences might enjoy Juno? What is
    the evidence for this?

42
IMDB Ratings for Juno
Q. What does this data tell you about the
reception of Juno?
www.imdb.com, 29/05/2009
43
Audience Mode of Address
  • Direct address at beginning where there is Junos
    voiceover (It starter with a chair)
  • Indirect address events unfold in front of us
    generally either from Junos or bystanders POV
  • General mode of address understandable to wide
    audience some references only understood by
    specific audience
  • Unified mode of address in that it creates a
    single viewpoint for a mainstream audience

44
Audience Preferred Reading
  • The preferred reading is the interpretation of
  • the text as intended by its creators
  • Q. What is the moral of Junos story?
  • Q. What are the themes of Juno?
  • Q. What pleasures does Juno provide to people who
    enjoy the film?

45
Audience Differential Decoding
  • Some of the audience may read the text in
  • ways different from the preferred reading.
  • Q. Who might dislike the movie? Why?
  • Q. How would you research negative views of Juno?
  • Q. How does Juno reflect its contexts
    (geographical, social, institutional, audience)?

46
Plaisir and Jouissance
  • Roland Barthes notions of pleasure
  • Plaisir easily digested gags and situations
  • Jouissance (blissful pleasure) the audience is
    surprised by turn of events
  • Q. Identify moments of plaisir and jouissance in
    Juno.

47
Pleasure of Escapism
  • Richard Dyer argues that entertainment is
    escapist as it allows us to escape temporarily
    from the inadequacies of real life

Q. Analyse Juno in terms of Dyers model.
48
Pleasures of Juno
  • Pleasure comes from narrative film sets enigmas
    and resolves them by the end
  • Also comes from exercising intertextual
    encyclopaedia e.g. music, cultural knowledge,
    knowledge of social mores
  • Characters give us a range of people to identify
    with, laugh at and/or desire

49
Studio Independents
  • The last 20 years has seen the rise of the studio
    independent (Fox Searchlight, Sony Classics,
    Focus Features (Universal), Warner Independent
    Pictures, Miramax (Disney), Paramount Vantage)
  • Subsidiaries of major studios who acquire
    finished independent films or who develop and
    produce marketable films in association with
    independent companies
  • Lowers the financial risk for both studio and
    independent
  • Resulting films may show compromise between
    mainstream and independent values

50
Fox Searchlight Pictures(www.foxsearchlight.com)
  • Founded in 1994 by Fox Filmed Entertainment as
    the independent arm of Twentieth Century Fox
  • Specialty film division of Fox Filmed
    Entertainment.
  • Produces smaller specialized films in genres such
    as drama, comedy, horror, and science fiction
  • Titles include notable indie films such as Little
    Miss Sunshine, 28 Days Later
  • It has its own marketing and distribution
    operations. International distribution is handled
    by Twentieth Century Fox.

51
Institution Internal Context
  • Produced for Fox Searchlight by Mandate Pictures
    and Mr Mudd Productions
  • Film shot in Vancouver, Canada Feb-Mar 2007
    (director and 2 leads are Canadian)
  • Title sequence took Shadowplay Studio 7-8 months
  • Budget 6.5m
  • Marketing spend rumoured to be 50m
  • US gross 143m
  • International gross 88m
  • Total 231m
  • US DVD sales 50m

52
Fox Searchlight Pictures
  • Fox Searchlight bought script and brought in
    Jason Reitman as director who had previous
    success with the satirical comedy Thank You for
    Smoking
  • Worked with Mandate Pictures and Mr Mudd
    Productions to produce Juno
  • Fox Searchlight approved all casting decisions

53
Mandate Pictures
  • Mandate Pictures founded January 2005 and
    acquired by acquired by Lionsgate in 2007
  • Mandate is a full-service production and
    financing company which finances, develops,
    packages and produces films

54
Mr Mudd Productions(www.mrmudd.com)
  • Mr Mudd productions formed by producer-partners
    Lianne Halfon, Russell Smith John Malkovich in
    1998
  • For the Mudd team, the glue that binds are like
    sensibilities and a penchant for reading,
    attracted to material that crosses genres and in
    the end, defies classification. The result,
    hopefully, are smart films that resonate with
    audiences.

55
Key Creatives
  • Scriptwriter Diablo Cody (b USA 1978) -
    ex-stripper and media studies graduate
  • Director Jason Reitman (b Canada 1977) (directed
    satirical comedy Thank You for Smoking) son of
    Ghostbusters director Ivan Reitman. Has directed
    shorts and ads for Wal-Mart, Burger King,
    Nintendo, BMW, Buick

56
Shadowplay Studio(www.shadowplaystudio.com)
  • Artists photographed Page walking and taking
    swigs from a jug of Sunny Delight.
  • Printed out some 900 still images, then
    repeatedly put each through a "bad Xerox machine"
    till they looked nearly hand-drawn, Reitman said.
    Smith invited friends over to his apartment to
    cut out the images of Page, which he then scanned
    back into a computer and linked together to
    create a stop-motion animation.
  • The background was then filled in with scanned
    photos, prints and more cutouts.
  • "There's this kind of cut-and-paste environment
    that we created with the music that's in the
    film, which has this home recording feel,"
  • Reitman said. "And there's Juno herself, whose
    life has that kind of feel, and I wanted the
    opening title sequence to be sweet and homemade,
    and put you in a specific mood, almost put you
    into Juno's head."

57
Creation of Opening Titles
58
Marketing Juno Stage 1
  • Buzz for Juno created at Telluride Film Festival,
    Colorado (1 Sep 2007) and Toronto Film Festival,
    Canada (8 Sep 2007)
  • Fox Searchlight aimed to make Juno a film that
    press and audiences feel passionate about and
    becomes viral (via word of mouth and Internet)
  • But worried about teen-pregnancy theme playing in
    small-town US
  • Stage 1 Limited US release 5 Dec 2007
  • Nov 2006 campaign and limited release in Dec 2007
    aimed at art-house audience and females 18-24
  • On-line Junoverse launched
  • Reitman and Page went on 11-city promotional tour

59
Marketing Juno Stage 2
  • Stage 2 General US release 25 Dec 2007
  • Screened edited version of trailer to female
    18-34 through reality shows and adults 35-64
    through cable news election coverage and key
    morning and evening shows (the writers strike
    had knocked a lot of drama shows off the air)
  • Online ads in social networking sites (MySpace,
    YouTube, Gawker) and smart sites (Comedy
    Central, NYTimes.com, Huffington Post)
  • Number 1 album in US on 9 Feb 2008

60
Teaser Poster
60
61
Theatrical Poster
61
62
Japanese Poster
62
63
Publicity
  • Publicity in New York Post (owned by Rupert
    Murdoch who owns News Corporation which owns Fox
    Searchlight and the tabloid New York Post)

64
Institution external context
  • PG-13 (MPAA www.mpaa.org) for mature thematic
    material, sexual content and language

65
Technology
  • Generally uses traditional methods of shooting
  • Occasional use of Steadicam
  • Small amount of digital work on digital
    intermediate (plus sign on pregnancy kit,
    changing leaf colours to autumn colours)
  • Stop motion animation used for opening sequence

66
Society
  • Popularity suggests that Juno appeals to the
    zeitgeist (spirit of the age) of some social
    groups
  • Appeal
  • Strong-willed lead female
  • Clever dialogue
  • Juno starts cynical but idealistic but becomes
    more hopeful and sincere
  • Hopefulness runs counter to most indie films
  • Could be seen as reflecting a more optimistic
    generation (as seen in young support for Barack
    Obama key words in Obamas campaign were hope
    and change)
  • Can Juno be seen as Generation Y movie made by
    Generation X?

67
Generation X
  • Generation X
  • Born 1960s and 70s (approximately)
  • Children of baby boomers
  • Independent and sceptical
  • MTV and video generation

68
Features of Generation X ads
  • Negativity
  • Subcultural fit
  • Intensity
  • Gender blending
  • Humour and irony
  • Realism
  • Postmodernism (hyperreality, fragmentation,
    intertextuality, )
  • See Leiss et al, 453-518

69
Generation Y
  • Born 1980s and 1990s (approximately)
  • Children of Generation X
  • Idealistic and optimistic
  • Internet and mobile phone generation
  • Social networking
  • Computer games
  • Downloads IPod generation
  • User-generated content
  • Multitasking
  • Watch less tv

70
Features of Generation Y Ads
  • Internet advertising
  • Viral
  • Brands

71
Society
  • Targeting Generation Y leads to a quirky indie
    cinema which is less likely to depict sex and
    violence (as per Tarantino)
  • More likely to depict off-beat characters who
    screw up but appeal to the audience because they
    are well-meaning and kind

72
References
  • Booker, C. (2004) The Seven Basic Plots. London
    Continuum.
  • Bordwell, D. and Thompson, K. (2007) Film Art an
    Introduction (8th edition). New York
    McGraw-Hill.
  • Leiss, W., Kline, S., Jhally, S. and Botterill,
    J. (2005) Social Communication in Advertising
    (3rd edition). London Routledge.
  • Marcks, G. (2008) The Rise of the Studio
    Independents. In Film Quarterly, vol. 61, no.4,
    pp 8-9.
  • Perren, A. (2008) From Cynicism to
    Sentimentality The Rise of the Quirky Indie.
    Accessed 28/05/2009 at http//flowtv.org/?p1210.
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