Monday, January 29, 2007

Self Evaluation

Attainment (1) I've been doing some good work like the representations of women essay
Effort (2) Still could put more effort in
Punctuality (1) Always on time
Submission and quality of homework (2) Have missed few things but usually OK
Ability to work independently (1) My blogwork looks good
Quality of writing (1)
Organisation of Media folder (2) Could be more organised, getting better
Oral contributions in class (3)

Friday, January 05, 2007

TASK FOURTEEN

How is cross-dressing portrayed in film? With particular reference to “Breakfast on Pluto”.
On television, men dressed as women and occasionally women dressed as men have been a source of mirth for decades and remain a steadfast of British comedy. Iconic comedians such as the two Ronnies, Morecambe & Wise and the cast of Monty Python often donned wigs and dresses, all in the name of entertainment. Similarly, the silver screen has offered humorous images of cross-dressing, such as Jack Lemmon and Tony Curtis tottering along a train platform on high heels in Some Like it Hot. Yet the film industry has also offered a number of alternative portrayals to the caricatured, comedic and often-mustachioed man in a dress. From the strangely sexy Dr Frank-N-Furter in The Rocky Horror Picture Show to poignant Dil in The Crying Game the portrayal of cross-dressing in film seems varied. This essay will illuminate the ways in which cross-dressing is portrayed in film on the hypothetical basis that the depiction can be categorised in four ways: cross-dressing as glamorous; demonic; humorous or personalised.
TASK THIRTEEN: Detailed essay plan
How is cross-dressing portrayed in film? With particular reference to "Breakfast on Pluto”.

Introduction:

Overview of Breakfast on Pluto: MIGRAIN, SHEP,

  • Key Words: Alternative, Art house, Circular-narrative, Coming-of-age film, Counterculture, Norms, Patriarchy, Pluralism, Queer Cinema, Simulacrum, Status Quo (M,In,G,R,A,Id,N,S,H,E,P)

Director Neil Jordan & Auteur Theory,

  • The Crying Game: features transgender character Dil. (In, G, R, Id)

Judith Butler, Queer Theory.

  • Third wave feminism, which began in the early 1990s. Modern movement which was preceded by first and second wave feminism, and as such would only apply to modern film. Cross-dressing has been portrayed in different ways in cinema for many years. (R, H)

Historical texts:

  • Glen or Glenda (1953), has early elements of realism concerning the topic of cross-dressing, due to the transvestite director Ed Wood, who was subject of the semi-biographical film Ed Wood (1994).
  • Psycho (1960) and example of film demonising cross-dressing as it goes against social norms, 1960s progressive society not evident in film.
  • The Rocky Horror Picture Show (1975)- glamorises cross-dressing, reflects the ambiguity of the Glam Rock era as seen in Breakfast on Pluto. Also could be considered as “transvestic fetishism”. This links to Laura Mulvey’s theory of the male gaze which could be considered in terms of Breakfast on Pluto. (M, G, R, Id, N, S, H)

Madonna/Whore Complex

  • As Mulvey’s male gaze theory can be applied to male-to-female cross dressing, as can other female theories, such as the Madonna/whore complex which is evident in Breakfast on Pluto.
  • As this shows, the portrayal of cross-dressing is not exclusively contained in the representation of the cross-dressing character, but all in their interactions and effects on other characters. A scene in Breakfast on Pluto which shows others reactions is… My Showbiz Career (scene analysis) (M, In, G, R, A, Id, N)

Kitten, protagonist. Cross-dressing on TV

  • Breakfast on Pluto is a comedy, but doesn’t generate laughs from the cross-dressing itself, rather from the wit and romanticism of protagonist Kitten.
  • Kitten as a character is a dreamer which somewhat detracts from the issue of cross-dressing itself. He completely contrasts to his modern British counterparts in film, such as… Shaun of the Dead.
  • Cross-dressing in the past has more commonly been used as humour… Some Like it Hot, Tootsie. Furthermore, television programmes such as ‘Little Britain’ and ‘The League of Gentlemen’ continue to rely on cross-dressing as a way to generate laughs, as their counterparts have been doing for decades, ‘The Two Ronnies’, ‘Dick Emery’. (In, G, R, N, S, H)

Conclusion:

  • With an increasingly permissive modern day society… issues such as cross-dressing have progressively become a topic regarded, not just as a subject of comedy, Some Like it Hot, Tootsie, or the actions of a deranged character, Silence of the Lambs, Psycho, but as a serious topic, Transamerica.
  • Although still used in comedy such as Little Britain, the portrayal of cross-dressing is now more varied from men dressing as women in comedy to a more realistic portrayal of the emotional journey of a person who wants to dress as the opposite sex… (G, R, A, Id, S, H)