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Hunger Games: Catching Fire (Film Industry) (Institution (Global…
Hunger Games: Catching Fire (Film Industry)
Audience
Targeting
Demographic audience profile (A - E)
Four C's (Young and Rubicam)
Positioning
Active
Two-Step model (Katz and Lazarsfeld)
Received message through 'opinion leaders'
Passive
Hypodermic Needle Model
Appeal
Uses and Gratifications theory (Blumler & Katz)
Diversion
Surveillance
Personal relationships
Identity
Responses
Theoretical
Reception Theory (Stuart Hall)
Preffered
Negotiated
Oppositional
Literal
Online reviews
Newspaper reviews
Genre
Conventions
Reflection of society and issues
Challege and reinforce stereotpyes
Reinforces stereotype of 'chavs'
Challenges the stereotype of the expressive female
Genre specific lexis
Police terminology
Sensitive subjects
Character roles (Propp)
Hero
Villian
Donor
Princess
Dispatcher
Falso hero
Helper
Iconography
Plain costumes for the districts
Elaborate costumes for the capitol
Weapons
Codes
Visual
Technical
Audio
Narrative
Structure
Linear Narrative
Flexi-narrative
Equilibrium (Todorov)
Binary opposites (Strauss)
Revenge vs. Forgiveness
Capitol vs. Districts
Good vs. Bad
Survival vs. Death
Right vs. Wrong
Conventions
Dystopian narrative
A controlling force
exaggerate an aspect of modern society
Anti-utopia
Key codes
Action codes (Barthes)
Before Katniss goes into the games
Enigma codes (Barthes)
Basic information
Characters
Catherine Cawood
Clare Cartwright
Ann Gallagher
Tommy Lee Roive
Nevison Gallagher
Ryan Cawood
Kevin Weatherill
Themes
Relationships
Patriarchy
'Trouble Town'
Revenge
Survival
Narrative strands
Kevin Weatherill trying to get money to pay for Daughters schooling
Catherine and Richards affair
Catherine and Tommy
Catherine and her grandsons anger
Helens cancer
Kidnapping
Newspaper closing
Representations
Class
Class inequalities
Place
'Gritty north'
Hebden Bridge
'Troubled Town'
Issues
Poverty
Drugs
Patriarchy
Relationships
School
Gender
Female
Women victims
How did rape become TV entertainment? - The Guardian
Strong independant womrn
Male
Breadwinner / instrumental role
'Men are the enemy'
'Crisis of masculinity'
Institution
Global implications
Production
Marketing/ promotion
Background
Distribution
Regulation