Thursday, June 4, 2015

Gothic in a loveable way

 Gothic in a loveable way
Examining Tim Burton's style in the movie Edward Scissorhands

Anyone who is familiar with Tim Burton's style easily recognizes his works, the dark, Gothic and quirky horror and fantasy films that made him famous and popular. He was born at the end of the 1950s in the United States in California and grew up in the suburbs of the city of Burbanks. He started making films in his backyard as a hobby before he would turn 13 years old; he used stop motion techniques or shot them on 8 mm film without sound (The Famous People). Burton loved monster movies as a kid, his favorites were Godzilla, and the British Hammer movies (Tim Burton Collective). His childhood exercised a great influence in his later film directing work.


After high school, Burton started studying character animation at the California Institute of Arts. His works drew the attention of Disney, and he spent a few years at the company working as an animator, storyboard artist and concept artist before he was dismissed for his movie, Frankenweenie in 1984 (Tim Burton Collective). His style obviously did not match Disney's expectations. However, horror writer Stephen King saw this movie and commended Burton to Warner Bros movie studio, where he finally got the chance to direct his first movie, Pee Wee's Big Adventure (The Biography Channel). The film was very successful, and Burton's individual career set forth.

The first movie with which he was given a full creative control was Edward Scissorhands – Burton wrote the story and also produced the film (The Biography Channel). The film is a romantic drama, a kind of Gothic, horrorish fairy tale. The main character of the story is Edward, who resembles Frankenstein's monster in the sense that he was “made” of a cooking robot by an old man, the Inventor. Unfortunately, Edward's creator died before he could have been finished, and he was left “incomplete and all alone” in the Gothic, scary mansion where the Inventor lived his life (Edward Scissorhands, 4:35). Several years later, a nice woman, Peg, finds Edward in the empty mansion, and takes a pity on the lonely man. She brings Edward back to her suburban home, and thus she sets off several troubles – Edward does not really know how to adapt to the people of the suburb. This movie is regarded as the best one of all of Burton's works by critics (The Famous People), and it also sums up the director's style perfectly.


Tim Burton has several easily recognizable characteristics: he likes to use Gothic style, suburban lifestyle and flashback storytelling. He has common archetypes as protagonists and antagonists, and his main characters are mostly eccentric, misunderstood people, outcasts from society. He also uses dark-light contrast deliberately, and often casts the same actors and actresses in his movies. Edward Scissorhands represents all of Burton's characteristics.

Edward Scissorhands is full with the Gothic visuals that characterize Tim Burton so well. Gothic tradition evolved from Romanticism, which emphasized the importance of emotion and imagination. “Where the classical was well-ordered, the Gothic was chaotic; where the classical was simple and pure, Gothic was ornate and convoluted; where the classics offered a world of clear rules and limits, Gothic represented excess and exaggeration, the product of the wild and the uncivilized, a world that constantly tended to overflow cultural boundaries”, said Punter and Byrorf about Gothic (The Gothic Imagination, 5). The main aim of Gothic was to reconnect with the dark side of life and human nature, to show and evoke the extremes of emotion, and the thrill of terror (The Gothic Imagination , 5). At the beginning of the existence of the film industry, it aimed for the same experiences. Entering the dark cinema was equal to exploring the strange and the unknown. The stylistic characteristics of the horror genre also originate from these experiences (The Gothic Imagination , 7). The style of Gothic horror was first presented by the German expressionist directors – Tim Burton gains his main inspiration from these movies most of the time.


The dialogue between the old Kim and her granddaughter clearly shows the main assumption of people on Gothic. Kim asks the little girl: “You know that mansion on top of the mountain?”, and she responds: “It's haunted” (Edward Scissorhands, 3:50). Even the position of Edward's house evokes fear in people: it's above the suburbs, as if it was threatening its people. When Peg, Kim's mother sees the mansion in the rear view mirror, scary music starts to play (Edward Scissorhands, 7:59). Edward himself is dark, he has dark hair, he is wearing dark clothes, his face is pale white and full with scars, and he has huge scissors where his hands should be – he instantly scares people around himself. However, Tim Burton's Gothic is actually nice from a closer perspective. The haunted mansion becomes friendly with the hedge animals, the creepy robots bake heart shaped cookies, and the threatening mansion above the suburb becomes a source of beauty – it is the reason why it is snowing down in the hill. Edward turns out to be a warm-hearted and selfless person, he would do anything for the people he loves and expects nothing in return. Tim Burton presents Gothic in a loveable and friendly way, which stands in a huge contrast with the candy colored, seemingly nice but actually hideous suburb.


Tim Burton has always emphasized in his movies that darkness is part of human existence, that there is a dark and a light side of life and one cannot exist without the other. The people of the suburb in Edward Scissorhands do not understand this, they live their life on the surface. Their denial of the reality of death makes it impossible for them to accept different perspectives of life and imagination. Tim Burton told about the suburbs of his childhood in the following way: “That thematic thing of the living world being much more ‘dead’ than the dead world, playing with juxtapositions and those feelings – I remember having that from very early on. It goes back to childhood: I just remember that feeling that what people call ‘normal’ is not normal and what people call ‘abnormal’ isn’t abnormal” (The Gothic Imagination, 3). The people in Edward Scissorhands resemble Tim Burton's neighbors from his childhood. They live in perfect, but at the same time, repelling candy colored houses, and the first scenes show that no one actually cares about the others, the only thing that has the significance to connect them is gossip. After Peg brings down Edward to the suburbs, the first thing to do is to give him “human” clothes and put makeup on him. This shows that the people expect Edward to assimilate to the neighborhood. At dinner, nobody listens to each other, Peg asks her husband not to call Edward “Ed”, but he does not hear her. The neighbors do not understand Edward, and through him, Gothic and darkness, and that darkness is part of existence. The deeply religious woman warns them that Edward is “straight from stinking hell” (29:44), and that they should “trample down the perversion of nature” (Edward Scissorhands, 31:03). Edward begins to love and appreciate his new family, and he is also falling in love with Peg's daughter, Kim. All he wants is to fit in, and being inexperienced and unbiased as he is, he easily falls for the intrigue of the neighbors: he helps to break into the house of Kim's boyfriend, which results in his later expulsion. The neighbors do not trust him anymore, and after Jim, Kim's boyfriend, tells him “you can't touch anything without destroying it” (Edward Scissorhands, 74:41), he cuts off his clothes, which is a sign of him not being part of the suburb anymore. He is fed up with the people around him and with his own faults as well, and realizes that it might be best for everyone if he went home to his mansion. As he is running away and the police are chasing him, an old man asks Kim's brother: “Have they caught him? […] That cripple.” The same person told Edward only days before not to let anyone call him a cripple. This sums up the wickedness of the suburb: people are backstabbing, two-faced and vicious. Peg's and Kim's personalities are in a sharp contrast with the other people of the suburb: Peg is brave and unbiased, she goes up to the castle to see Edward and then she brings him home, and Kim recognizes the human in Edward, and is not afraid of hugging him or even kissing him. At the end of the story, she stays away from Edward to protect him.


Burton often uses eccentric, misunderstood people as protagonists in his movies. They are outcasts from society, eccentric and strange, thus, nobody understands them. Edward is a perfect example for this character. The old Kim says about him: “[he] was left by himself, incomplete and all alone” (Edward Scissorhands, 4:35). When Peg finds him in the mansion, she asks him: “What happened to you?”, and Edward answers: “I'm not finished” (Edward Scissorhands, 13:43). The Inventor died before he could have finished Edward, so he lived alone for a long time, and this way he does not know how to behave when he is brought back to society. He constantly scares people with his scissors, he does not know how to eat, he knocks his head on the car door. For him, the suburb is much scarier than his old mansion was: he gets startled when he sees himself in the mirror, and accidentally breaks the water filled mattress on Kim's bed. For Edward, everything is black and white: when Kim's father asks him what he would do if he found a suitcase on the street full with money, he says he would give it to his loved ones (Edward Scissorhands, 69:58). Kim smiles at this answer: although Edward does not live by the rules of society, it only means that he lives without restrictions, and without bias.


Tim Burton also likes to use sharp visual contrasts in his movies, which he represents with contradictory colors. He uses these contrasts to highlight the important details in the scene, and also to emphasize the difference between two characters, places or items. The first huge contrast in Edward Scissorhands is shown at 8:21, between the colorful suburb and the dark mansion on the hill. As I already mentioned, the contrast here is delusive, since the colorful suburb is actually the source of all evil, and the dark mansion is the home of peace and love. When Peg enters the mansion at 11:52, the conveying is in a bright light, while the rest of the room is dark. Later the importance of the conveyer belt turns out: it was the “birthplace” of Edward. At 12:17, there is a sharp contrast between Peg's clothes, and the rest of the mansion, which shows that she is very different from Edward's world. At the end of the movie, when Edward returns to his mansion in his original dark clothes again, Kim follows him in a white dress. Also, while Edward has black hair, Kim is blond. These contrats represent Edward as the dark, the Gothic, and Kim as the light, the purity. It also highlights the differences between them, and the incompatibility of their worlds.


In almost every Burton movie there is a witch, the antagonist, an evil woman who is up to no good, and causes a lot of trouble for the main character. In Edward Scissorhands, this witch is Joyce, the seductive neighbor of Peg. Joyce is constantly flirting with Edward since the first moment they have met, but her innocent badinage turns serious when she tries to make love to Edward in the backroom. Edward does not know what is happening to him, and he leaves Joyce half-naked after they fall off of a chair. Later on that night, the police arrests Edward after breaking into Jim's house, and the following day, Joyce lies to the disillusioned neighbors that Edward tried to rape her, and thus irrevocably turns them against him. When Edward returns to the mansion, the policeman tells the neighbors to go home, but Joyce convinces them to follow him up to the hill, and thus Kim is forced to lie that Edward died in order to stop them from breaking into the dark house.


It is a well-known attribute of Burton to tell a story within a larger story to explain the history of the protagonists. This flashback storytelling adds an additional depth to his characters and helps the audience understand their behavior, their personality, problems, fears, pains and goals. There are three flashback stories in Edward Scissorhands. The first one happens in the 33rd minute, this is the first time the audience meets the Inventor, and the conveyer belt in the mansion. This story explains how the Inventor got the idea to create a man out of a salad chopping robot. The second flashback in the 38th minute shows the process of the creation of Edward: the good Inventor tries to educate him and discipline him for good manners. At this point, Edward is in a semi-finished state, his legs have not been attached to his body yet, and he learns how to express emotions with his face. The last flashback occurs in the 85th minute, and it shows the moment when Edward gets his hands – but unfortunately, the Inventor dies of a heart attack before he could attach them to his body. Thus Edward is left to fend for himself, up until the point when Peg finds him.


Finally, Burton has his own crew who he likes to work with. His favorite actor is incontestably Johnny Depp, who plays the main character of Edward Scissorhand, and who also stars in seven other Burton movies: he is one of the main characters in Ed Wood, Sweeney Todd, Charlie and the Chocolate Factory, the Corpse Bride, Sleepy Hollow, Alice in Wonderland, and in Dark Shadows (“The Best”). Winona Ryder, who plays Kim in Edward Scissorhands stars in two other Tim Burton movies: Beetlejuice and Frankenweenie (“Winona”). Also, musician Danny Elfman, who made the soundtracks for Edward Scissorhands is the main colleague of Burton, considering that he composed the soundtracks for all of his movies except Ed Wood (Perno). The recurring actors and music makes Burton's style even more recognizable, which further contributes to his success in film directing.



 The purpose of my essay was to explore and present the attributes of Tim Burton's style in his movie, Edward Scissorhands. The story represents Burton's affection towards Gothic style, since its main character, Edward is a half-human who lives in a dark castle on the top of a mountain. The suburb lying on the foot of the hill resembles the suburbs of Burton's childhood, where people does not understand and deny everything that is abnormal, and they do not like disturbing people in their seemingly perfect, but actually wicked and boring, lives. Edward is a perfect example for the misunderstood and eccentric protagonist Burton likes to feature: he has been living alone for no one knows how long, and he has no idea about how to assimilate to the society that is surrounding him. There are numerous visual contrasts in the movie, which is also a specific technique of Burton, and this contrast is also visible between the two main characters: Edward and Kim. Joyce, the selfish and seductive woman from the neighborhood plays the role of the witch, as she is the one who contributes to Edward's downfall the most. Flashback storytelling shows Edward's past and tells the story of the kind Inventor who gave him life. Finally, Johnny Depp and Winona Ryder are recurring actors in Burton's movies, and composer Danny Elfman is the foremost musician of Burton. Edward Scissorhands is a beautiful and sad Gothic fairy tale, symbolically telling a story about the feeling of loneliness, being an outcast and misunderstood, but at the same time, it is about sacrifice, hope and love.

Monday, June 1, 2015

Expressionist Elements in Fritz Lang’s “Metropolis”



      This paper seeks to analyze the visual expressionist elements in Fritz Lang’s “Metropolis” as well as the impact that they may have on the overall experience of the audience, while providing background information regarding the movie and the director, Fritz Lang.
According to encyclopedia Britanica, expressionism is defined as” the artistic style in which the artist seeks to depict not objective reality but rather the subjective emotions and responses that objects and events arouse within a person.” This is often achieved through the depiction of pessimistic visions of social collapse, the use of doubles in order to show the duality of the human nature and its appetite for destruction as well as the portrayal of non-realistic but rather symbolic sets to show the fine line between reality and dreams. It is also of note that Fritz Lang, the director of “Metropolis”, is considered a pioneer in expressionism and one of the greatest representatives of German Expressionism.
 Born in December 5th 1890 at Vienna, Austria-Hungary Lang was widely known for his ability to use expressionistic suspense and strong visual composition in order to depict the inability of humans to escape their fate. All of his works are considered as “noirish masterpieces of menace” or “tone poems of fear and fate” (Britannica) even today and had such a great influence on the German audience that Joseph Goebbels himself asked Lang to organize the Nazi propaganda, despite his Jewish heritage. Lang decided to flee to America that very day, leaving everything behind including his wife Thea von Harbou, who later became one of the major writers and directors of Nazi propaganda. His career in America is still considered as a letdown by many due to the great changes that he made to his directing style, making “Metropolis” his last trademark film.
Much like his career in America “Metropolis” had a polarized reception either being hailed as a technical masterpiece or heavily criticized even by the renowned author H. G Wells from suffering of "foolishness, cliché, platitude, and muddlement about mechanical progress and progress in general.”(Wells). Either way, “Metropolis” can compensate for any narrative flaws, or unconvincing acting with its great use of technical means such as photography and sound; however these elements will be discussed later on.
Before dwelling into the analysis of the more complex expressionist elements it is important to highlight that they are evident even in the plot of the movie. Metropolis revolves around a future society, divided in the working class and the elite thus depicting the polarization of a utopian/dystopian society. Furthermore the romance developed between Freder, the son of the mastermind of the society with a working class woman foreshadows the imminent social collapse, enhancing in that way the expressionistic elements of the film. The deliberate lack of sound, in order to appeal to a wider audience accounts for the over theatricality of the actors since their movements and expressions are over the top, however it is uncertain up to this date whether this is due to Lang’s directing style or the lack of professional training.
Having discussed the general expressionistic elements of the film, we should focus on the wide variety of the visual elements used in “Metropolis”.  As mentioned above, a wide variety of technical means is used in order to enhance the overall emotions caused by the film as well as its expressionistic character. One of the trademark techniques used by Lang is the use of a static camera. A concrete example of this technique is when Freder tries to save Maria from Rotwang. Although the scene is filled with suspense and revolves around his agony to find his lover, the camera has limited movement with most of the frames depicting empty corridors or halls and the protagonist just walking in and out of the frame shots thus giving the feeling of constant surveillance.  The theme of surveillance is also evident in other scenes mainly due to the use of extreme camera angles. For instance the scenes when the workers carry out their daily routine or when Freder, as a twisted version of the Vitruvian man, operates the heavy machinery are shown from an objective and omniscient point of view.
Another concrete example of the surveillance theme in combination with the extreme camera angles is when Freder sneaks into the city of the workers, which is depicted from a birds eye perspective. Unexpected switch of camera angles, more specifically from worms-eye view to bird’s eye view, is also used in order to depict the grandeur of the Metropolis during Freder’s encounter with his father. Another one of the prime expressionist elements used in “Metropolis” is the use of chiaroscuro lightning. Chiaroscuro, the strong antithesis of black and white, can be traced in various scenes throughout the film. One of the most important ones is when Rotwang examines Maria in order to make the so called Machine man. The Contrast gives depth to the frame, while showing clearly the intentions of the characters. The mad scientist is portrayed in black, leaving only his face in its normal color, while the innocent savior is shown in pure white. The most important scene however is the one in the Yoshiwara nightclub, where the mechanical Maria starts dancing. The extended use of Rembrandt lighting is spectacular even up to this date and considering the technical means available at the time of the movie it is an admirable feat.  
Last but not least the symmetry is an important element of Lang’s direction since almost all of his shots are considered as perfectly balanced with the most striking of them being the first time where the heart of the machine is depicted with all the workers being completely synchronized like gears of the machine.
To sum up “Metropolis” poses a generic expressionistic scenario with a polarized society on the verge of collapse. Fritz Lang’s direction on the other hand is unique including all of the elements that have made him beloved to the wider audience: Strong mise-en-scène composition featuring vast shadow and light contrast. Furthermore the use of unexpected camera angles causes a feeling of awe to the audience towards the magnitude of his futuristic Utopia, while also putting them in the place of an omniscient narrator. Concluding, Fritz Lang’s “Metropolis”, raised several juxtapositions regarding its quality as a movie both technically and plot wise, however it is undoubtedly one of the most characteristic expressionist films and a must see for all the fans of the genre.

Bibliography
·          Expressionism. (2015). In Encyclopædia Britannica. Retrieved from http://www.britannica.com/EBchecked/topic/198740/Expressionism
·         Fritz Lang. (2015). In Encyclopædia Britannica. Retrieved from http://www.britannica.com/EBchecked/topic/329603/Fritz-Lang/313528/Films-of-the-1950s
·         Kreimeier, Klaus (1999). The Ufa story: a history of Germany's greatest film company, 1918–1945. Berkeley: University of California Press. ISBN 0-520-22069-2.
·         Minden, Michael; Bachmann, Holger (2002). Fritz Lang's Metropolis: Cinematic Visions of Technology and Fear. New York: Camden House. ISBN 978-1-57113-146-1.