Monday, February 22, 2010

Watch It? Or change the channel...


The first short film I watched was an animated film called "Vistas: Ignition". I thought the film was interesting but it was too much of the same thing the whole time. I was waiting for the cars speed to change or something to run out in front of the car, I was waiting for some kind of climax to the story. I liked how they had the camera view as if you were riding in the car, almost like you're at an IMAX theatre.


"Tower Bawher" was an interesting film. The flashes of different shapes kept you curious about what was next. I found that it took me a while to figure out the story. I don't think you would know that it was about Russian constructivist art and is filled with visual references to artists of the era, unless you read the blurb beside the film.


After I watched the short film called "How Do They Put the Centres in Chocolate" I was definitely craving some chocolate after! Some of the shots were kinda fast, so it took me a few minutes to figure out what everything was (I know what chocolate looks like, but the centres looked different then they do when I bite into it!). I thought it is the kinda film that lots of people would be interested in watching and it is a type of movie that would be aimed for people who don't work in the chocolate making industry and would be interested to watch because they don't deal with it during their everyday lives.
What do you think about this short film?


Thursday, February 18, 2010

CSI Effect


These days, television and movies are always in the spot light, everyone wants to know how movies are made, and the secrets of movie magic. Movies can make you feel so many different emotions, happy, sad, scared, sometimes even sleepy! They are entertaining and are our society is facinated by the glamour and glitz of Hollywood. Unfortunately, media's "versions" of reality can have a bad effect as well. Young children are really effected by what they see and hear. They are unable to disconnect movie reality, to real life. I think that media's "version" of reality has a positive effect on our society, because we are connected to new things, we can experience from the safety of our couch.



Wednesday, February 10, 2010

To The Extreme


Photoshopping in the media has gone way too far. Media is taking advantage of their audience (young men and women) and making them believe that people in magazines are what normal, healthy, young men and women are suppoed to look like, even when the models on the page don't look like that! Even though photoshopping in the media has it's advantages, like providing jobs, saving money and it also allows and broadens opportunities to be creative, it also has created eating disorders in young men and women who strive to look like a "Barbie doll." Even Barbie is unconventional! If she was a real women, she would be so top heavy that she would not be able to stand up and her hips would be too small she would be unable to produce children. Everyone wants the perfect skin, and a fit body, but in the media industry it seems that healthy won't cut it, and for a while, if you looked like a skeleton, that was beauty. I believe that beauty is when you are confident, and are healthy and happy in your own skin. Everyone is built differently, why would you want everyone to look the same anyways?

http://www.teen-beauty-tips.com/barbie-body-image.html


Wednesday, February 3, 2010

At the Outset... Media Obsessed?


de⋅pend⋅ent: relying on someone or something else for aid, support, etc.
Me personally, am dependent on my cellphone, my Ipod, keeping up with the latest celebrity gossip and the latest fashions. If someone were to ask me if i needed those things for support, I'd say no. I don't need those types of media to survive, but they have become almost obsessions in my life. Since I got it for Christmas, my cell phone has never left my side. If it's not in my pocket, I feel like something is missing, which is strange because I'm definitely all here. :)

in·de·pen·dence: The state or quality of being independent.
Reality can disappear with just a click of a button. The television can take you out for dinner, to Las Vegas or to the beach. You can tune into news around the world just by pressing a button. I have found that as technology grow and becomes more complex, I don't need to watch TV to do exotic things. Compared to when I was little, I watch less TV then I did back then. My independence from this type of media taken a large toll on my lifestyle. I no longer sit inside for hours on end, and I am more active because I have found other ways to feed my media needs.