Conflict Dialogue Research

Baby Driver

 

– Use a random, new character for a brief moment
– Use action to also tell the story
– Character speaking to themselves about the other character
– The use of a third character

 

Little Miss Sunshine

 

 

 

– silence of other characters
– Volume of voice
– Interrogatives
– Use of other characters to show reaction or contrast or add in sentences (“I’m not driving “)
– Characters move around
– Long pauses (before resolution)
– Lack of dialogue to show other characters emotions (glare/uncomfortable etc)
– Declaratives
– Imperatives
– “Frank, shut up”

 

Pretty Woman

 

– One character not sharing what they’re think/feeling with the other character
– Insults
– Characters leaving then coming back again and them both doing that
– Characters using the same words as the previous character to try and convince them
– Body language (e.g. hands on hips)
– One character physically higher than the other
– Characters repeating what they say
– Characters refusing to look at the other one
– Long pauses
– Characters start to randomly do things like open drinks

 

Other research:
-use sound in the background to add to the mess, such as the phone starts to ring or someone knocks at the door
-Try not to say all things explicitly as it’s lazy

Moon Response and Questions

Characters

  • Sam Bell clones – male, middle aged, white
  • Tess Bell – woman, middle aged, white
  • Gertie – male robot

 

The way that gender is represented – the males have the important job working on the moon and the woman is at home looking after the child. This supports the gender stereotype however may just be done for the narrative and plot.

 

The motivations of the characters

  • The Sam clones initially wanted to do their job and go home, but when the cloning was discovered they wanted to discover the true meaning to themselves and what was happening, as well as escape and break the cycle. They also wanted to see their (dead) wife and daughter.
  • Gertie – Gertie was programmed to help the Sam’s, so his only motivation was to help the Sam clones in every way they can

 

How does the opening and closing of the film compare? What has changed? Or are things the same as ever?

  • The cycle has been broken, the clones will be able to find out that they are clones and that they’re lives are a lie. Also, the motivations of the characters have changed.

 

What is the film saying? About humanity, life on earth, work/employment, nature?

  • Determinism – (put very simply) If a person were to live their life again, they would end up in the same place as free will is an illusion. (Dictionary/Google defines it as: the doctrine that all events, including human action, are ultimately determined by causes regarded as external to the will. Some philosophers have taken determinism to imply that individual human beings have no free will and cannot be held morally responsible for their actions.)
  • Could have suggestions to the danger that technology may cause, not necessarily in the way we initially imagine (the robot), but with cloning etc.

 

How does the film sustain ‘narrative tension’ or drama? (How does it keep you interested?) What technical/formal devices does it use?

  • Using the wife and child to make you care for the man’s ambition to go home, and to make you feel bad for him when you find out she is dead and that the videos are fake, as well as himself
  • You feel bad for him when he finds out he’s a clone because you start to care for him
  • The timer countdown of when the others arrive builds tension as they need to solve the mystery and escape in time
  • The set is small and claustrophobic, making the tension rise as the Sam’s have limited space making it feel as though they are trapped

 

Can you link this film to any other film you’ve seen? How? Why?

 

  • I can’t think of any similar films

 

How does this film make you feel? What ideas does it inspire in you?

 

  • Confused – the number of clones and their backstory became hard to keep track off. I didn’t know what was real and what wasn’t even when the characters found out the truth.
  • Sad – because not every Sam made it and because the replicant Sam made life seem a bit meaningless, he could just be replicated

 

First responses to ‘Moon’

  • Initially, I thought that the robot would be evil. The face on the machine seemed ominous and impersonal. This turned out to be false. This could show that technology is not the problem, its humans (and how they use it?) and/or that there could be other technology problems such as cloning
  • Blue lighting and yellow lighting were used to create certain responses from the audience
  • The film seemed to be de-saturated, or at least not colourful or bright which could represent the bleakness of the situation
  • The film was confusing because of the clones, suggesting it could be a good film because it makes the audience think
  • I think Sam got burnt on his hand at the beginning to help identify the Sam’s between one another, as well as one of the Sam’s having a mark on his face (before becoming seriously ill)
  • The hallucinations were confusing, but the women that wore a yellow dress could have the connotation of sickness
  • It could be showing how human life is important, as the idea of clones are portrayed as negative because individual people and their feelings are important or portraying the insignificance of life as the clones were easily created and the emotions towards the wife were easily manipulated and based on lies

 

Mise En Scene Pan’s Labyrinth 20 mark question

 

 

In Del Toro’s Pan’s Labyrinth, different elements of mise en scene such as props, sets and clothing design can be interpreted in different ways to give different meanings. In the paleman scene, the audience sees a close-up of a pile of shoes on the ground. One way this can be interpreted is that they are the shoes of the incorrect princesses, therefore heightening the sense of danger in the audience. Another interpretation is that they have a contextual link to World War 2 and the Nazi’s with concentration camps; which could link to the theme of how war effects children, provoking the response in the audience to consider the deeper meaning of what’s happening to Ofelia, and the tragedy of war. This links into the horrific images around the paleman’s room of children and babies being killed, although some interpretations of this is that it foreshadows the third task with Ofelia’s brother, the main interpretation is that they are inspired by Goya’s painting of Saturn eating his son. The interpretation of that painting is that Goya was scared that his child would grow up and overpower him, and therefore killed him; this links back to world war 2, when the Nazi’s targeted children because of their “dangerous” beliefs.

The paleman himself can be interpreted in many ways. His physical appearance makes him scary, because of his long sharp fingers, incredibly skinny body, sagging skin and his eye hands. Meaning that one interpretation of the paleman is to just evoke fear in the audience to help build tension in the scene. Another interpretation is that the paleman represents Vidal and fascism, and that this is the true meaning for this scene to exist; he sits in the same place that Vidal does – at the head of the table (proxemics) showing the dangers of fascism, and he attacks when Ofelia disobeys, linking to the theme of disobedience and choice and how fascism is commonly linked with obedience and lack of choice. However, the other interpretations of the paleman can be religious. The table with red food that he sits at, although initially cause a tense atmosphere because of the danger connotations to red, have a link to the famous last supper painting as the room itself is similar to that of a church due to the pillars. Plus, the stigmata with his hands, the holes where he puts his eyes, not only cause disgust but link to Jesus being crucified. Linking the paleman to a religious figure represents the critical views towards the church during the Spanish Civil War, this was also shown earlier in the film when the priest was greedily eating food when knowing others were starving. This religious symbolism is an aspect in many Del Toro films, it’s an aesthetic and Del Toro-ism, it’s also used in “The Devils Backbone” which is none as a sister film to Pan’s Labyrinth.  To contrast, the holes in his hands may also be a link to another scene in the film, when Vidal and his men find the rebels and start to kill them. One of the rebels puts his hand in-front of the gun in an elongated moment, before being shot directly in the centre of his hand where the paleman’s eye’s go. Suggesting again the importance of choice (hand) and morals (sight) being something that should be united, as killing mercilessly due to obeying is obviously wrong and fake choice (obedience) without thinking of morals.

The watch prop which is a part of mise en scene can be interpreted as a metonym for Vidal, that it stands in for everything that Vidal is and represents who he is as a person. The watch face being cracked, shows the audience that he is a broken man, most likely due to the toxic masculinity (representation of gender) that his father placed upon him; he smashed his watch at the time he died, and would have encouraged Vidal to act and die like a man, making Vidal a cold character that has a big and mean reputation that he cares about greatly, but also damages him as a person because he’s forced to conform. A different interpretation is that the watch is a symbol of morality, the ticking of it going and his father smashing it when he died reminds the audience that the characters and that they themselves are mortal, creating the aesthetic feel of a gothic and/or horror movie, which are genres Del Toro often explores.

The use of colour and therefore aesthetic look and feel of the costume design can mean different things. Ofelia typically wears green dresses such as at the beginning when she see’s the fairy and when she enters the toad tree. However, when she is in the fantasy world after dying at the end of the movie, she wears red and gold. As the real world is typically blue (low-key blue lighting) as its connotation is coldness (and it has a link to fascism), the green outfits suggest a link to the real world as the shades used are both dull and they are often associated with one another. Meaning, the red and gold outfit is those colours because the fantasy world normally has yellow high-key lighting, with yellow/gold and red surroundings such as props. This could be done to help identify the two worlds and the feelings attached as gold and red are warmer colours, or to show how Ofelia always belonged in the fantasy world as she removes her green dress before entering the tree (fantasy world). Another interpretation, which Del Toro has spoken about, is that red and gold were used because they were internal colours, it showed Ofelia’s desire to be back inside her mother which has links to loneliness because of the war taking her dad away and Vidal taking her mum (genre of how the war effects children). Hence why Ofelia physically crawls into the tree which symbolises fallopian tubes wear the insides are internal colours and why she is reborn at the end of the movie. It’s also part of the coming of age/bildungsroman genre of the film to do with Ofelia being on the cusp of womanhood. This links to the fallopian tube symbolism and imagery through the film due to mise en scene which is used for the toad tree, the shape that the faun’s horns make, the shape that the paleman’s arms make in the book and the shape of the blood that appears in the book, it becomes a motif as it’s symbol is portrayed many times.

Lastly, the chairs at the end of the movie where Ofelia’s parents sit have different interpretations too. One is the symbol and suggestion of royalty and the idea that the patriarchy still exists in the afterlife, as well as sexism as the dad is the highest, possibly suggesting the aftermath of the Spanish civil war as issues still carried on after, it didn’t all stop in 1939. Another interpretation is that it links to the genre of bildungsroman/coming of age, that Ofelia has grown up and no longer is treated like a child and is greeted like an adult, or that the representation of young children is that the film has proven children shouldn’t be and do not need to be spoken down upon as if they were lesser like Vidal and Carmen does to Ofelia. The other interpretation is plot and narrative related, that the seats are impossibly high because Ofelia has proved herself as the lost princess and can therefore still sit upon the chair, despite it’s impossible height.

 

Aesthetics Pan’s Labyrinth 20 mark question

 

The aesthetics are the ‘look and feel’ of the film, during the ending scene, the film form elements all work together to make the audience feel certain ways as well there being links to other movies that Del Toro has taken inspiration from. Del Toro is an auteur, the input he put into the scene shapes everything that you see, hear and feel and it was like this throughout the film.

The mise en scene and visual style of the final scene, when Ofelia is in the afterlife place is golden and red. Ofelia’s dress is red and gold (contrasting to her usual green dresses) links her to the fantasy world in the audiences minds and gives a warm and comforting feeling in the audience as they are the opposite of cold colours such as blue, which is associated with the real world; the yellow high-key lighting of the afterlife contrasting with the blue low-key lighting of when Ofelia is dying also does this; it also combines the magical and real world as parallels and the contrast between the fantasy and horror elements of the film. The colours from the mise en scene and lighting (and the high-key lighting) makes the audience happier, and we feel a sense of relief as we know that Ofelia is safe; it also gives a sense that Ofelia has been reborn. As well as this, Ofelia’s red shoes which are a part of mise en scene link to The Wizard of Oz and the idea of going home, suggesting that Ofelia is now home with her family and that everything is okay.

The room with her parents is church like. Their are stained glass windows and the people sit on what looks like pews. This contrasts to the church symbolism in the paleman scene, where the negative views to the church during the Spanish civil war was portrayed. The positive church design, suggests to the audience that Ofelia is going to be happier, therefore making the audience feel happy. This religious symbolism is a del Toro aesthetic/ a Del Toro-ism, he often includes religious symbolism in his movies; one other movie where he uses religious symbolism is in The Devils Backbone, which is described as a sister film to Pan’s Labyrinth as it covers similar topics such as the Spanish Civil War and uses similar techniques such as the low key lighting.

The only off-putting feeling that the audience would get is from the height of the chairs being different which we see through a long shot. The king, Ofelia’s dad, has the highest chair. Possibly suggesting that the patriarchy system still exists in the afterlife and possibly some sexism as well. This could link to the after effects of the Spanish Civil war, and how even though it ended in 1939, issues were still existent. Another audience interpretation of the high chairs is that the representation of age has come to a positive conclusion, Ofelia was greeted like an adult and not a child (linking to the bildungsroman genre) suggesting that Ofelia was finally not spoken down upon because of being a child again making the audience feel happier. The chairs could also be tall because of the narrative and plot, a suggestion of how Ofelia has proved herself, the chairs to the audience appear impossible to sit on, but Ofelia has proven herself as the lost princess and therefore is not troubled by this.

The motif of the lullaby that Mercedes sings and is used throughout the film gives a sense of how peoples choices have been taken away from them because of the war, as the song has no words suggesting they had no say (and specifically the effect that war had on children which Del Toro wanted to explore). The film highlights how people should disobey and have their own choice, and it’s shown to the audience that Ofelia has this now as the lullaby stops after the she enters the fantasy world until the sound bridge of her coming back into the reality world. This again makes the audience happy and feel comforted knowing that Ofelia will have a better life now.

While running away from Vidal, the blue low-key lighting makes the scene cold, harsh, and emotionless, it makes the audience feel afraid and sad. This has links to fascism and the Spanish Civil War as throughout the film, the blue low-key lighting has been linked to Vidal and therefore fascism, the connotations of the colour blue present fascism negatively and as something that has lack of morals (cold). Normally, the reality world is presented as being just as dangerous as this fascism filled and dark world such as in the paleman scene, but the final fantasy scene suggests that Ofelia is now safe and going to be happy. However, the cinematography is also used to show how Ofelia is not alone, the mid-shot of her and Mercedes when Ofelia is dying contrasts to the mid-shot at the beginning of the film where Ofelia is dying alone, giving a bitter sweet feeling as we are glad to know that Ofelia isn’t alone, but she’s dead so it’s too late and almost meaningless. However, this does provide a circular structure to the film as it ends leaving the audience feeling as though the film is definitely concluded.

Some audience members may argue that the ending shows how it’s all in Ofelia’s head. The editing means that Ofelia is dying (which is a Gothic/horror element), then she and the audience see the afterlife, then she dies, suggesting that she imagined it to herself. Plus, the world is too perfect, all of the fairies are there despite some of them being dead, suggesting that the flood of yellow light that took her into this fantasy was her beginning to imagine rather than being “the light at the end of the tunnel”, and that she was imagining a happy place that she’d rather be in. Some audiences may also feel that the entire film has been in her head as she dies, because the film begins and ends with her in the same place. These are ways that the film is left ambiguous, causing the watcher to rethink the movie and be curious.

Representation Pan’s Labyrinth Question

In the opening sequence of Del Toro’s Pan’s Labyrinth the audience learns about representation of gender, age, ethnicity and about fascists.

In terms of gender, the film sets up gender stereotypes and then tears them down later in the film to show issues with sexism against women and toxic masculinity. One of the first things we see is Carmen, an adult pregnant woman, needing help from a man with her pregnancy issues. This presents the stereotype that women are in need of men’s help and cannot cope alone. The character Vidal, only cares about his son. He removes his glove to touch Carmen’s belly which is more personal than with Ofelia as he puts his gloves back on before greeting her and crushing her hand. He also doesn’t great Carmen lovingly, he forces her to do things she doesn’t want to such as sit in the wheelchair, ‘Do it for me’, for the sake of the baby being okay. This controllement  is also a stereotype of men with women, that women are more passive. He gives the baby bump, a better greeting than the other characters and throughout the film he makes it very clear that when it comes to trouble in the pregnancy, the doctor should save the baby. Suggesting, that Vidal views women as baby making machines and only cared about passing down his family name. Plus, he never considers that the baby might be a girl, he always assumes that it’s a boy, showing the stereotype that boys are more desirable and the one that should pass down the family name like Vidal wants. Therefore overall, women have been shown to be the weaker, more passive and the undesirable gender and that men have control and are more aggressive. This stereotype is broken in the rest of the as women such as Mercedes, surpass expectation and have a key role in taking down Vidal and breaks all gender stereotypes and Ofelia, is able to do the three dangerous tasks as a female also breaking down these stereotypes.

The audience immediately knows about Vidal and his men as fascists because of mise en scene,  the cars have the fascist symbol on them. Plus, the cars themselves are expensive suggesting the title of Vidal as a captain and how he, a man, has power. We learn immediately through Vidal’s performance that he is a leader and punctual as his first line is ’15 minutes late’ and he’s watching his watch rather than the car with his wife and child in it, which  presents him as a cold character. It also suggests that the people in this film feel that men are fit to be leaders and women aren’t as Vidal as a man is captain but the lower down workers such as cleaners and cooks are women (such as Mercedes). Showing this unfair treatment and the real side to women throughout the film .breaks these gender stereotypes.

The representation of age in the opening scene shows the impossible standards that children are supposed to meet. Ofelia has to help take care of her sick mother, which is an adult responsibility. Plus, her mum Carmen doesn’t want her to be reading the fairy tale books suggesting Carmen wants her to act more grown up in-front of Vidal. However, Carmen also talks down on Ofelia and Ofelia is presented as having the curiosity of a child as she wonders off immediately to explore. Therefore, Ofelia acts both childlike and mature, and is treated both like a child and an adult, suggesting the impossible standard that has been placed upon children. This has links to one of the film genres being bildungsroman, Ofelia is becoming a woman and more mature and therefore has to overcome this complicated boundary between child and woman.

Ofelia, a child, suggests the hope that children are to the future of Spain by rejecting fascism. We know that Vidal is a fascist and that his men are fascists, and we learn that Ofelia instead is more left wing. When she greats Vidal, she goes to shake his hand using her left hand suggesting that she is more left wing, contrasting to the fascist Vidal who says she’s supposed to use her right hand, linking him to fascism. This could be the film suggesting the end to the Spanish Civil War aftermath and the toxic views such as fascism coming to an end with the next generation.

Although Vidal is evil, he is a victim of toxic masculinity. This is one reason why he treats women as though he is above them in status just by being a man. His father, would have given him the idea that he needs to act like a man and die like a man, he gave Vidal a watch that he smashed when he died so that Vidal would know when he died. Vidal goes on to try and do this during the ending, showing that the toxic masculinity had been passed down to him. He also tries to pass it down to his son, by asking Mercedes to tell him when he died, Mercedes refuses marking the end to the passing of toxic masculinity. Vidal trying to give commands throughout the film and be punctual all the time is a suggestion of how he believes he has to act like a man.

The characters are all Spanish and white, this could have a contextual link  to Spain at the time the film was set, after the Spanish Civil War which ended in 1939.

 

Contexts Pan’s Labyrinth Question

 

In Del Toro’s Pan’s Labyrinth, the paleman sequence portrays many different contextual links and has use of themes that run throughout the movie.

The paleman’s room itself is similar to that of a church, it represents the critical view of the church that was held during the Spanish Civil War which the film was set shortly after. When Ofelia firsts open the door, the reverse tracking shot allows the audience to see how big the space is and how similarly designed it is to a church, such as, it has big pillars. In the paleman’s actual room, the horrific pictures on the ceiling are in the same position and designed the same (apart from the actual image) as religious images in church. Plus, the big table that the paleman is sitting on, could also be a reference to the famous last supper table painting, the food being red suggests the negative opinion on the church as red connotates to danger. Plus, the stigmata holes in the paleman’s hands have a link to Jesus being crucified. Therefore, placing such a violent and visually disturbing character (sagging skin, skinny, sharp fingers) in a religious room with connection to Jesus, is implying the critical views of the church at that time.

The gruesome images around the room not only make the audience feel disturbed but have a contextual link to the Spanish artist Francisco Goya who painted Saturn eating his son. The interpretation of this painting is that the Titan feared that his children would overthrow him and therefore ate them.  This was used in Pan’s Labyrinth as it links to world war 2 and the Nazis. They targeted children because of their alleged membership in political, biological or racial groups. The effect that war has on children is atrocious, and it’s something that Del Toro often wants to explore in his films. In Pan’s Labyrinth, he showed the effect that war had on Ofelia with characters such as Vidal and the many references to fascism and the dangers of it including within this scene. Another film where he explored this was ‘The Devils Backbone’ which is often described as a sister film to Pan’s Labyrinth.  Another link to the holocaust in the paleman scene is the pile of shoes, as it has links to the gas chambers. However, another interpretation of this is that they are the shoes of the incorrect princesses, and instead link to the theme of horror and fairy tale rather than a political and historical link.

In the paleman scene, the mise en scene identifies which door Ofelia should use to get they key in the book that she opens. However, she disobeys this and opens the left door, it was this disobedience that allowed her to succeed in the task; suggesting that obeying for the sake of obeying is morally wrong. Obedience and choice are a theme throughout the movie, and obedience is typically linked to Vidal and fascism, it portrays the idea that having no choice and obeying without considering morals and fascism as wrong. The doctor explicitly tells Vidal, ‘Captain, to obey – just like that – for obedience’s sake… without questioning… That’s something only people like you do.’ supports the message that fascism and obeying is wrong. However, Ofelia doesn’t obey, she picks the left door, which links her to left wing politics and therefore not fascism unlike Vidal and suggests hope in the future for Spain as the children will make positive changes. The book that she found the task in, also had the paleman’s arms in the shape of fallopian tubes which supports the genre of bildungsroman throughout the film.

In this sequence, the barrier between the two worlds is clearly defined. One way this is done is when the parallel action shot takes the audience out of the paleman’s room and into Ofelia’s room where we see that the time has run out. The change from high key lighting with yellow and red to low key blue lighting emphasises the separation between the two worlds. However, the blue low-key lighting does still suggest coldness and dangers because it’s connotations which supports that the two worlds are just as dangerous as one another, which is something Del Toro tried to explore. We also get this separation when Ofelia is climbing out of the paleman room and there’s a mid-shot of Ofelia where her top half is in the real world and her legs are in the fantasy place, this give the sense to the audience that both worlds are real as we see them coexist at the same time. They way that Ofelia climbs up to get out of the paleman’s room gives the suggestion of hell, as well the fire which is emphasised by its loud foley sound. This connects back to the critical opinions on the church during the Spanish Civil War and shows the audience how much danger Ofelia is in, causing worry and tension. This religious symbolism is a Del Toro-ism which also appears in the sister film to Pan’s Labyrinth, ‘The Devils Backbone’.

 

 

I used this website:

https://encyclopedia.ushmm.org/content/en/article/children-during-the-holocaust

Performance Pan’s Labyrinth Question

In the ending sequence of Del Toro’s Pan’s Labyrinth, the audience can tell a lot about one of the main characters, Vidal, by the way he acts in the presence of other characters compared to when alone.

During the ending scene, Vidal has been drugged with sleeping medication which has caused him to stumble throughout the scene while chasing Ofelia through the labyrinth. After shooting Ofelia, he continues to stumble out of the labyrinth until he sees the rebels (including Mercedes) and immediately straightens himself up and tries to walk straighter, taller and stronger without stumbling in-front of them.

It is to do with Vidal’s pride and ego. Even when clearly defeated, he is unwilling to show that he is beneath or even equal to them. He’s also unwilling to show that he is anything other than strong. He does this despite knowing defeat, which the audience knows that he knows due to his facial expression, which is stern yet shows defeat.  The proxemics also support this, as he positions himself directly in the centre of the rebels rather than cowering in a corner, showing that he doesn’t want to loose his title and ego/pride even when it’s already all gone. It could also have links to him being a captain after the Spanish civil war, and in charge of defeating rebels. He didn’t want to loose his reputation or job title even when all was lost, which watchers wouldn’t be surprised about. The film set after the Spanish Civil War which lasted from 1936 to 1939 but had after effects that lasted for years, these after effects were explored in the film through many characters including Vidal.

This has links to the gender representation during the film. Vidal’s character, although completely cruel and evil, is a victim of toxic masculinity that was passed down onto him by his father. The timeline of this was stopped when Mercedes decided that Vidal’s son wouldn’t even know his name, giving hope for a better future. Vidal had to live up to his father expectations and his fathers actions, his father smashed a watched before he died so that Vidal would know what time he had died; Vidal would have been cautious of how he should not only act like a man but die like one too, suggesting a reason why even in his last moments where all hope was lost he still wasn’t prepared to loose his dignity or reputation.

The aesthetics and the way it makes the audience feel can be complicated. Although all watchers will be glad that Vidal didn’t win against the rebels, he had already killed Ofelia and killing him wouldn’t reverse this act. The evilness of his character still lives on which has links to how the Spanish Civil War had lasting effects, it didn’t all suddenly go back to normal in 1939. However, the look of how Vidal is surrounded by everyone (proxemics) gives a sense of how the evilness is coming to an end, as no more evil acts can be committed by him suggesting hope in the far off future.

Editing Pan’s Labyrinth Question

In Del Toro’s Pan’s Labyrinth, during the paleman sequence, parallel action (parallel editing) is used with the main character Ofelia and with the timer five times. Ofelia has a limited amount of time to complete her third task, otherwise she’ll be trapped with the dangerous paleman, meaning, the audience feels concern for her. The parallel editing of seeing Ofelia and then the timer that is quickly running out of time builds tension, it reminds the audience of the time limit and how she needs to be quick. The first two times this parallel edit happens is once at the beginning when the scene is setting up, to establish the time constraint for the rest of the scene. The second is when Ofelia is using the key to unlock the doors, as a reminder for time ticking down. Both of these times build tension. However, the two next times build tension and bring a strong sense of danger as they happen when Ofelia is running away from the paleman who we know from the mise en scene to be dangerous and evil and so we therefore don’t want Ofelia to be trapped with him. This makes the movie more immersive, as the audience will get lost in the scene to see if Ofelia is okay. The final time the parallel action happens is when the time has run out. We see the timer in the other world not only giving us a sense of worry but also a sense of the two worlds being real and divided.

The idea of time running out links to the theme of morality which was initially introduced with Ofelia’s death at the beginning causing dramatic irony and Vidal’s watch. It reminds the audience of different things, one being that the characters, specifically Ofelia, are mortal and can die causing us to worry and builds tension, especially since we already know that she is going to die. It also reminds the audience that they themselves will run out of time one day, as they are not mortal either. Lastly, it has a contextual link to the Spanish Civil War which lasted from 1936 to 1939 but had long lasting effects. The film was set after the Spanish Civil War, and covers topics such as fascism, morality is one of the themes that link back into this contextual link as over 500,000 people died. The film is portraying the idea of how fragile life can be, and how the effects of war can be catastrophic.

The representation of age is different in this scene compared to others as in the paleman sequence children are presented as naive. Ofelia is running out of time which is emphasised by the parallel action of her and the timer, however, she still goes slowly. Some audience members might find this frustrating, but it could be that Del Toro was trying to present children in a specific way by contrasting how Ofelia, a child, handled the task to how an adult would. However, it is possible that it’s another link to Ofelia not following the general flow and forging her own path away from fascism and Vidal, which is explored a lot throughout the film with the theme of obeying and disobedience.

Del Toro’s aesthetics in this scene are similar to horror, all the film form elements add to this. Specifically, the parallel action giving a sense of strong danger and building tension while a small child is running away from an evil being is very horror like, which is arguably one of the genres of the movies along with others such as fantasy. Del Toro often dabbles in the horror genre, so this is not an unusual decision for him. He also often explores the Gothic genre, which this film also does such as with the exaggerated (foley) wind sound effects which happen throughout the film including in the paleman scene such as when Ofelia notices him. Linking on from this, the scene feels scary and disturbing and the parallel action helps build the scariness.

 

Sound Pan’s Labyrinth Question

In Del Toro’s pans labyrinth, the film form element sound, helps emphasise the fantasy element of the film and that one of the film genres is that it’s a fairy tale. This non-digetic sounds occurs multiple times during the paleman sequence.

In the paleman scene there are multiple moments where exaggerated and fantastical sounds are used. One example of this non-digetic sound is the high pitched note, fantasy related noise of the key when Ofelia takes it out and looks at it. This reminds the audience that this film has elements of fantasy and fairy tale to it, and that the world she is in with the paleman may just be her imagination. This is similar to the non-diegetic sound of Ofelia running her fingers over the blade that she collects. It’s an exaggerated and high pitched noise that shows the audience how sharp it is; it’s a noise you’d associate with fantasy films.

The same noise occurs when Ofelia initially takes out the dagger before we see it, suggesting the sharpness and danger before we know what it is. Because of Ofelia’s age (she is a young child), knowing that the object is sharp and therefore dangerous makes the audience worry for Ofelia as they would have grown to like her. It may also be a way that the film is suggesting that children are braver and stronger than most adults think such as Vidal and Carmen, and that they shouldn’t be talked down on.

Another non-diegtic sound during this scene that could have potential links to fairy tale and fantasy is the wind like sound often used when loot is found on quests in other movies supporting that the paleman scene is all part of Ofelia’s mission and quest, which can often be associated with fairy tales.

Del Toro’s aesthetic with these sounds is the sense of danger and worry that the audience would feel for Ofelia, Del Toro wanted to present that the fantasy world was just as dangerous as the real world and the sharp blade as well as the rest of the paleman scene supports this. The fantasy world being just as dangerous as the real world has contextual links to the Spanish Civil War, Ofelia living with a fascist captain puts her in danger and the fantasy world is no escape from this, especially as the paleman as links to Vidal. The fantastical sounds also have connection to other fantasy and/or quest films, supporting that Ofelia’s tasks are left ambiguous regarding whether they are real or not, as the fantasy element suggest that it’s fake, but the quest suggests she’s completing the tasks for a reason and that it is therefore real.

Mise En Scene Pan’s Labyrinth Question

The Mise En Scene in Del Toro’s Pan’s Labyrinth is used to develop the characteristics of the characters. Specifically, the prop, the watch, in  the opening sequence identifies what type of person Vidal is to the audience straight away. We learn that he is punctual and leader like, but also that he is a broken man. It also introduces the theme of morality, which is because the film was set after the Spanish Civil War.

The watch is logocentric and a metonym for Vidal, the watch stands in for everything that Vidal is. The clock face is cracked and broken, from when his father smashed it when he died, suggesting that Vidal is a broken man.  The watch also symbolises that Vidal is broken because of toxic masculinity (gender representation), his father smashing it so his son knew when he died suggests the toxic idea of “dying like a man” and acting “like a man” in general, we also get the idea that Vidal was told to do this by the way he treats women. Suggesting that although Vidal is an evil and cruel villain, he is also a victim.

The watch is the first thing we see of Vidal, implying how punctual and systematic he is to the audience, it links to him being leader since he is a captain. This could have links to obeying and therefore fascism as Vidal is obeying the time and making sure he does everything on time and systematically, including whatever he is instructed to do by people above him regarding the rebels.

The watch adds to the theme of morality after witnessing Ofelia’s death. The idea of time continuing and ticking forward reminds the audience that humans are not immortal and that their life will end. Especially since the watch was smashed by Vidal’s father when he died. This has links to the Spanish Civil War (1936 – 1939), which the film was set shortly after, as around 500,000 people died. The film could therefore be suggesting the fragility of life especially in war and presents  war and the results of war in a negative light.

The aesthetics are that the reader is reminded of death and morality which could have a Gothic feature link which is a genre that Del Toro often uses. This makes the audience feel uneasy as they feel something bad is going to happen regarding death, especially since they already know that Ofelia dies through dramatic irony. In terms of influences from other films, “Alice in Wonderland” can be referenced throughout the film. Ofelia like Alice enters another fantasy world, and it’s left ambiguous whether this world is real or fake. The watch has a link to the Alice in Wonderland character the, white  rabbit, with both Vidal and the white rabbit the watch is one of the first things we associate and see with that character.  As the white rabbit is a symbol for Alice’s search for knowledge an audience member may think that Vidal sparks Ofelia’s desire to understand what’s going on around her more as she is entered into a dangerous and new territory where Vidal is her biggest threat.