Buffy Vampire
Transcription
Buffy Vampire
Buffy the Vampire Slayer A Study Guide By Desmond Murphy Preface This study guide has been prepared in the first instance for students and teachers of the Scottish Qualifications Authority (SQA) National Qualifications in Media Studies. However, I hope it will also prove useful to students studying other courses. It uses Buffy the Vampire Slayer to deepen the study of a television text through applying the Key Aspects of Media Studies, a conceptual framework developed to give a coherence to the study of media texts. The Key Aspects (or Concepts) were developed from the early 80s by a number of pioneer media educators and are widlely used, with variations according to different systems and exam boards. All variants, however, have a combination of both textual and contextual concepts. In the SQA Media Studies Arrangements, the Key Aspects are defined as: Categories, Language, Narrative, Representations, Audience, Institutions and Technology. In this study, Technology is not treated as a separate concept but one that can permeate the other Key Aspects. I happened to watch the first episode of Buffy shown on UK television when my youngest daughter Rachel wanted to watch it and I watched with her so I could turn it off if it became nightmare-inducingly scary. She said she was indeed scared but no nightmares ensued and she was determined to continue to watch it, became a solid fan (as did her two older sisters), an authority on all things Buffy and, as such, a tremendous resource I could call on in the writing of this study guide. I therefore dedicate this work to her. As for me, I was vaguely aware of the show in the background, thinking it was like Sabrina the Teenage Witch but with more of an ensemble cast (a mistake the Sky and BBC executives committed as will be seen when we deal with the show’s UK screening). But it wasn’t untill the second series took off, the first full twenty-two episode season, that I began to be a regular viewer, finding the writing witty and intelligent, and the acting, direction and other technical aspects to be outstanding. It was perhaps the fact that this was the season where the use of narrative arcs really took off, hooking me into the long-term development of character and plot. Another source of attraction for a Media Studies and English teacher was the richly allusive text, with the most unexpected “hommages“ popping up and a cornucopia of references to classic literature, films both arthouse and popular, and all aspects of our media-saturated culture. Later, seeing beyond the humour, the excitement and the scary moments (although these are very few for a show operating partly in the horror genre), I was taken by the richness of the text, especially its metaphorical levels which allowed a show about vampires and demons and with a heroine going by the name of Buffy to address significant issues. It was this textual richness and allusiveness, as well as the fact that it was an example of a concept of “quality TV” from the USA which was drawing serious attention from scholars and commentators, that caused me to use it in my own Media Studies teaching, where I found that many of my students knew more about Buffy than I did, always a salutary lesson for a Media Studies (and any other) teacher. I should therefore like to thank those students from Bridge of Don Academy in Aberdeen for their insights which made their way into this study guide. Because of the regretable lack of systematic provision of media education across all schools and stages in Scotland, students will come to Media Studies with different levels of prior learning. Some will have been exposed to media education from S1 or even primary school; others will be studying it for the first time in S5. Even in single-level classes, there will be a wide range of ability and experience. This study guide is designed so that the key aspects are at first dealt with at entry level for those doing Media Studies for the first time and then at a more advanced level, where concepts required for a top pass at Higher, Advanced Higher and the early stages of higher education are dealt with. Desmond Murphy Aberdeen December 2006 Preface 1 Contents Preface 1 Introduction 7 CHAPTER 1: CATEGORIES 1.1 Medium and Form 13 1.2 Genre 1.2.1 1.2.2 1.2.3 1.2.4 1.2.5 1.2.6 1.2.7 15 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 The Repertoire of Elements Generic hybridity A Semantic/Syntactical Model of Genre Horror Gothic and Vampire Youth/Teen/High School Drama Comedy 1.3 Tone 23 1.4 Postmodernism 1.4.1 Intertextuality and Pastiche 1.4.2 Self-referentiality and self-reflectiveness 24 25 26 1.5 Auteurism 27 1.6 Cult 28 CHAPTER 2: LANGUAGE 2 2.1 Mise en scene and Cinematography 33 2.2 Technical and Cultural Codes, Polysemy and Anchorage 34 2.3 Editing: the Continuity System 34 2.4 Sound 35 2.5 Film Language in Buffy 35 2.6 Specific Sequences (i) Opening scene of first episode: Welcome to the Hellmouth Title sequence (ii) (iii) Hush: The Gentlemen at work (iv) The Body 37 37 38 39 40 Contents CHAPTER 3: NARRATIVE 3.1 Diegesis 45 3.2 Plot and Story 45 3.3 Chronology 46 3.4 Narrative Structure: Equilibrium and Disruption (Todorov) 47 3.4.1 47 Todorov and an episode of Buffy: Inca Mummy Girl (2.4) 3.5 Long-form Television: Series and Serial 48 3.6 Hybrid Long-form Narrative and Narrative Arcs 48 3.7 Narrative Arcs in Buffy 49 3.8 The Four-Act Structure 3.8.1 Four-Act Structure in Buffy (i) SCHOOL HARD [2.3] (ii) LIE TO ME [2.7] (iii) CONSEQUENCES [3.15] (iv) HUSH [4.10] 50 51 51 52 52 53 3.9 Propp and Narrative Functions 3.9.1 Propp and Buffy the Vampire Slayer 53 54 3.10 The Monomyth and the Hero's Journey 3.10.1 The Journey 54 56 3.11 Levi-Strauss and Binary Oppositions 58 3.12 Barthes' Narrative Codes 3.12.1 The Hermeneutic (Enigma) Code 3.12.2 The Proairetic (Action) Code 3.12.3 The Semic Code (Code of Signs) 3.12.4 The Referential/Cultural Code 3.12.5 The Symbolic Code 59 59 60 60 61 61 CHAPTER 4: REPRESENTATION 4.1 Gender 65 4.2 Sexuality 66 4.3 Social Class 66 4.4 Englishness 66 4.5 Race 66 4.6 Religion 67 4.7 Buffy and Metaphor 67 Contents 3 CHAPTER 5: AUDIENCE 5.1 Target Audience 73 5.2 What Audiences Get from Texts - Uses and Gratifications (i) Personal identity (ii) Social interaction and the need for companionship (iii) The need for information (iv) The need for entertainment 74 74 74 75 75 5.3 Differential Reading/Coding and Decoding 5.3.1 Differential Decoding and the Postmodern Text 76 77 5.4 Mode of Address 77 CHAPTER 6: INSTITUTIONS 6.1 US Network Television 81 6.2 Film and Television 82 6.3 The "Big Three" and the newer networks 83 6.4 The Economics of US Network TV: Nielsen ratings and the "Sweeps" 84 6.4.1 The "Sweeps" and Buffy the Vampire Slayer 84 6.5 Broadcasting and "Narrowcasting" 85 6.6 Buffy's Defection to UPN 86 6.7 Institutional Constraints (i) External controls (ii) Internal controls (iii) Institutional constraints in the UK 87 87 87 88 Appendix 1: BUFFY THE VAMPIRE SLAYER: SEASON AND EPISODE SUMMARIES 91 Appendix 2: BIBLIOGRAPHY 95 Appendix 3: FILMS AND TELEVISION PROGRAMMES REFERRED TO 97 Appendix 4: GLOSSARY 99 4 Contents Acknowledgement I should like to thank Liz Roberts for proof-reading and for helpful suggestions for making things clearer for the uninitiated. Some of the material in this study guide appeared in The Media Education Journal Issue 35 (Spring 2004.) Buffy the Vampire Slayer: A Study Guide is typeset in Avenir saved as a pdf file. Cover design by Scott Cumming (Title font: Buffied font (available at http: simplythebest.net/fonts/fonts/buffied/html) Typesetting by Jackie Dixon Copyright c 2006 by Desmond Murphy and Aberdeen City Acknowledgement 5 The complete seven series of Buffy the Vampire Slayer are available on DVD and can be found in the main retail outlets such as Virgin and HMV, and can be ordered online at such sites as www.play.com and www.amazon.co.uk. They can also be found on www.ebay.co.uk. The DVDs can also be borrowed from many public libraries. Sky Television regularly shows reruns of Buffy on weekdays throughout the year and Buffy also appears intermittently on the Scifi Channel. In this guide, terms in boldface are defined in the Glossary on page 87 - 97]. Buffy the Vampire Slayer is referred to as a text: in Media Studies, texts are not limited to the written word; films, TV programmes, pieces of popular music, newspapers and magazines etc. are referred to as texts when the product is an object of study. 6 Introduction Introduction Buffy the Vampire Slayer began on US television in 1997 and featured Sarah Michelle Gellar as Buffy Anne Summers. The basic premise of the show is stated in the first episode by the stuffy English school librarian, Rupert Giles: This world is older than any of you know, and contrary to popular mythology, it did not begin as a paradise. For untold aeons, demons walked the Earth, made it their home, their Hell. In time, they lost their purchase on this reality, and the way was made for mortal animals. For Man. What remains of the Old Ones are vestiges: certain magicks, certain creatures...." Buffy, along with a small group of friends (who became known as the Scoobie Gang or Scoobies) are pitched against a range of vampires and other demons, from which she must defend the world. According to Joss Whedon, creator of Buffy the Vampire Slayer, the original idea for the show came with the reversal of an image from traditional horror: a fragile-looking girl walks into a dark place, is attacked - and then turns and destroys her attacker. 1 The series mission statement, therefore, aims to challenge gender stereotyping and invert the audience’s expectations. The character of Buffy Summers was first aired in the 1992 film starring Kirsty Swanson and Donald Sutherland. The script was by Joss Whedon who claimed to be unhappy with the result and, learning that film is more of a director's medium than a writer's, Whedon became the Executive Producer when he was offered the chance to develop it into a television series, wrote many of the episodes and later directed a number as well. Unlike in the film, Whedon has a considerable degree of control over the show. The television series picked up where the film ended with Buffy, while fighting vampires in her old school in Los Angeles, having managed to burn down the gym, now moved to Sunnydale, a "one-Starbuck town" in Southern California - which happens to be located on a "Hellmouth" (a portal to other dimensions which means that demonic energies are rampant.) She gathers round her a group of helpers, starting with the brilliant but "nerdish" Willow Rosenburg and class-clown Xander Harris under the direction of Rupert Giles, who has been appointed by the Watchers' Council, a powerful anti-demon authority based in England, to be Buffy's Watcher - her guardian and trainer. The series was made by Fox Television and was given a run of 12 episodes by the Warner Brothers network and ratings were sufficient to allow a complete 22-episode second season. It moved to a rival network, UPN, at the start of Season 6; a seventh and final season followed. The first three seasons were based at Sunnydale High School; in the fourth season, the main characters moved on to the Sunnydale Campus of the University of Southern California and the show explored more adult themes as the characters confronted new experiences. At the end of the third season the school burned down and was rebuilt in time for Season 7, where Buffy got a job as school councillor while her sister Dawn, who was suddenly introduced in Season 4, was a student. Early in the first season, we meet a mysterious character called Angel who comes out of the shadows to warn Buffy about impending danger. Their relationship develops later into a romance. It turns out that he is a vampire but one with a soul. A gypsy curse (revenge for his having killed one of their tribe) has restored his soul so that he will have a conscience and suffer remorse for all his evil deeds. He spends his time trying to atone for these actions by helping to defeat vampires. Buffy and Angel fall in love but it is a love which can have fatal consequences. Unknown to Angel and Buffy, the curse is so arranged that he will lose his soul if he achieves one moment of pure bliss - which he does the first time he and Buffy sleep together, on her seventeenth birthday, in Season 2. This has disastrous consequences, with Angel reverting to his alter ego Angelus who, linking up with, fellow vampires, Spike and his girlfriend Drusilla, wreaks havoc in Sunnydale, including killing Jenny Calder, techno-pagan computer teacher and love-interest for Giles. She is of the same tribe as the one which implemented the curse and is sent to keep an eye on him but, from remorse at what has happened, she tries to find a way of returning his soul. She succeeds but Angelus kills her before she can pass on the computer disk where the spell is stored. The season ends with Buffy having to kill Angelus/Angel just after Willow has found the spell which restores his soul, returning him to his "good" self but Buffy has to kill him to save the world from an apocalypse, sending him to a hell dimension at the moment she realises his soul has been restored. However, the popularity of the character was such that the producers found a way of bringing him back in the next season. Introduction 7 Season 2 also saw the arrival of another slayer, a West Indian girl called Kendra, summoned by the (temporary) death of Buffy at the end of the first season. (It is part of the mythology that there is only one Slayer but a larger nunber of “slayers-in-waiting,” ready to take up the call at the death of the Slayer.) She helps Buffy to defeat Spike early in the season and returns home but later in the season, with Angelus gone bad, she is summoned again but is hypnotised and killed by Drusilla, an English mystic-vampire. Each Season has its "Big Bad" - the main villain pitted against Buffy. In Season One it is a monstrous ancient vampire called the Master, modelled on the vampire in one of the earliest vampire films, Nosferatu – a Symphony of Terror, a German silent film directed by FW Murnau in 1922. However, the Master had limited appeal for the show's youthful audience and in Season 2 an English punk-style vampire called Spike rolls into Sunnydale with girlfriend Drusilla (whom Angel had "sired", that is, made into a vampire, she in turn having sired Spike) and makes regular appearances as the resident evil or "Big Bad" (a role he shares in Season 2 with Angelus). Spike has, for a vampire, a fatal flaw: love - and jealousy. Confined to a wheel chair due to injuries he received fighting Buffy and jealous of Angelus's advances on Drusilla, he offers an alliance to Buffy against Angelus which she accepts out of desperation. Spike manages to flee at the end with Drusilla. Buffy's mother Joyce at last realises her daughter's calling but finds it difficult to come to terms with it. Another slayer, Faith, is summoned near the start of Season 3 by the death of Kendra. She is wilder and less disciplined than Buffy, and she leads Buffy into bad ways. After killing a human being by mistake, Faith goes over more and more to the dark side. She kills Mr Trick, vampire henchman of the evil Mayor Wilkins (the Season's "Big Bad") but then offers her services to the mayor who is actually planning his "ascendancy" - assuming his demonic form - at school graduation. However, the students, led by Buffy, fight the mayor-turned-monster and defeat him, burning down the school (a second for Buffy). Angel, now "re-ensouled", manages to return in Season 3 from the hell-dimension he has been confined to but, realising his relationship with Buffy has no future, he eventually leaves for Los Angeles and his own spin-off series, also produced by Whedon. Before this climactic end to Season 3, Faith poisons the (now good) Angel which leads her into direct conflict with Buffy. Buffy has also broken with the Council of Watchers who refuse to help her find a cure for Angel. The cure is a Slayer's blood and Buffy fights Faith, whom she stabs with her own knife, but Faith throws herself from the building. She goes into a coma until the middle of season 4 where she tries to exact revenge on Buffy but some semblance of good reasserts itself in her and she helps Buffy deal with a group of vampires set on massacring a church congregation. She then leaves for LA where (crossing to Angel) she finds imprisonment and redemption; she reappears at a key moment in the battle against the "First Evil" near the end of Season 7. Like Angel, Spike (who was absent for most of Season 3) is also capable of change, not by means of a gypsy curse but because of a chip put in his brain by a government-sponsored group of scientific demon-hunters called The Initiative which dominates Season 4. The chip makes it impossible for Spike to harm humans and while he spends the rest of the season trying to get his vampire powers back, the chip draws him closer to humans and his love of violence makes him Buffy's ally in the fight against demons. His obsessive hatred for Buffy turns into its opposite. Eventually he even becomes a semi-detached (but highly unreliable) member of the Scoobies when the Initiative prove to be more sinister than they at first seemed, and the Scooby Gang end up helping him to evade capture. A secret experiment in The Initiative, under the direction of Maggie Walsh, Buffy's Professor of Psychology, gives rise to Adam, a Frankenstein's monster-like combination of human, vampire and other demon parts, powered by a nuclear power source and directed by a computer brain. Like Frankenstein's monster, he eventually destroys his creators. The group had been drifting apart in this season and their differences were accentuated by Spike in return for Adam’s promises to remove his chip. However, joining forces, they manage to defeat Adam. Spike, feeling double-crossed by Adam, changes sides and is able to survive into the next season. The Initiative also provides love-interest for Buffy in the form of Riley, ostensibly Maggie Walsh's teaching assistant, in reality, a soldier in The Initiative under Walsh's control. The Initiative is eventually disbanded by the government who conclude that demons' power cannot be harnessed to America's military might. Early in the next season, Riley cannot cope with Buffy being more powerful than he is and eventually leaves on a secret military demon-hunt in Central America. 8 Introduction Over the series, the Scoobie Gang is enhanced from time to time by the addition of extra members. First there is Cordelia - cheerleader, socialite, queen bitch and leader of the high school "in-crowd" (the "Cordettes") - who becomes hostile to Buffy when Buffy insists on hanging out with "losers" such as Willow and Xander. However, when she in turn is attacked by demons and thrown in with the Scoobies, she becomes one of them. She even starts to date Xander, which demands more courage on her part than facing demons as she risks being ostracised by Harmony, second-in-command of the "Cordettes", (and who herself later becomes a vampire, although a highly ineffectual and comic one, and for a while is Spike's girlfriend). Cordelia, along with Wesley Wyndam-Pryce who had been sent by the Watchers' Council as a replacement for Giles when they feel his attitude towards Buffy is too paternal, leaves Sunnydale to join Angel in LA in the spin-off series. Then there is Oz, laconic lead guitarist of the punk-rock group, "Dingoes Ate My Baby" but who contracts lycanthropy (ie he becomes a werewolf three nights every month) and submits to being locked up. This does not deter Willow and they become a couple. However, he leaves Sunnydale to find a cure and when he returns a long time later, Willow is already involved with Tara, a shy student and apprentice witch. Oz realises he cannot control his condition and leaves again (a plot line dictated by the actor Seth Green’s decision to take on the role of Scott Evil in Austin Powers – another example of the narrative in a long-running TV series being driven by such chance factors), leaving Willow and Tara to continue their relationship, a controversial one for prime-time network television: the affair is conducted at first on a metaphorical level as witchcraft but is finally made explicit. Another important character is Anya, who had spent many centuries as a vengeance demon making men suffer for the way they treat women. However, she loses her power and becomes human and in turn the love-interest for Xander. She has the same comic function as Cordelia. Both Cordelia and Anya's comedy come from the same source because they always say what they think, often with embarrassing consequences. In Cordelia's case it was self-centred lack of tact; in Anya's it is because she has not been human for so long and doesn't quite understand the social norms which determine what should be said and what avoided. Dawn is another addition to the Scoobies. In Season 5, it transpires that Buffy has a sister; in fact, she has always had a sister. It takes a few episodes before the mystery is solved. Dawn is in fact a ball of mystic energy made human by monks and sent to Buffy who they know will protect her; they also conjure up memories of Dawn, not just for her own family but for all who come into contact with her. She is "the key" whom the hell-god Glory (the Season's "Big Bad") is seeking as a way back to her own dimension. She is trapped on earth and forced to share a body with a young doctor, Ben (though we are unaware of this until well into the season). If she captures the key and carries out a ritual killing, she will be able to return to her hell-dimension but it will destroy the world. Meanwhile, Spike, who has been deserted by Drusilla, returns to Sunnydale and gradually falls for Buffy, going as far as commissioning a robot version of Buffy as a substitute for the real thing which he cannot aspire to. Buffy is horrified by his advances but after Spike proves his loyalty by refusing to reveal Dawn's identity under torture by Glory, Buffy is grateful and treats him with respect. Joyce, Buffy's mother, dies in this season and Buffy must now be a substitute parent to Dawn. Glory is defeated in a final apocalyptic battle (when she transforms into Ben, Giles is able to suffocate him, thereby killing Glory) but Buffy has to sacrifice her own life to save Dawn and the world. In Season 6, after Giles returns to England, Buffy is brought back from the dead by Willow's witchcraft (which she has been developing over the course of the previous three seasons) but Buffy feels she has been dragged out of heaven where she was happy, back to earth which she now feels is hell. She goes through a difficult period of alienation and has a brief and very physical affair with Spike but in the end rejects him. She is full of self-disgust and admits to Tara that, feeling she has come back from the dead "wrong", she used him as a way of being able to feel something. The "Big Bad" of this season is not some formidable demon or arch-villain but a "troika" of nerds from Sunnydale High School, Warren, Jonathan and Andrew, who concoct a series of inventions to defeat Buffy. They cannot defeat her, but the leader of the group, Warren, tries to shoot Buffy; he fails but kills Tara instead. In her grief, Willow calls on her by now considerable magical powers to avenge Tara but this leads her to lose her mind to such an extent that that she wishes to destroy the world to put an end to its pain. Giles returns from England to help deal with the situation but it is Xander, Willow's childhood friend, who brings her back from the brink through a declaration of unconditional love. Introduction 9 Buffy's rejection of Spike sends him to Africa to find the magic that will change him. We think it is to remove the chip but the season ends with Spike being given back his soul. In Season 7, Buffy and the Scoobies fight their most formidable enemy, the First Evil (shortened to "the First"), the evil force behind all evil. The First can only appear by assuming the form of dead people but has a powerful army of helpers - "bringers" - who do the dirty work, and monstrous vampires more powerful than any Buffy had so far encountered. There is also Caleb, a powerful villain who takes the form of a fundamentalist preacher. The Council of Watchers having been destroyed, Giles assembles all the "potential slayers" (that is, would-be slayers waiting for the actual Slayer's death to take up their calling) in Sunnydale to prepare for the final conflict. Buffy is aided not only by the Scoobies and potentials but by the newly-ensouled Spike, and two other characters who have come over from the dark side: Anya, who had briefly returned to her former trade as vengeance demon after being jilted at the altar by Xander but is released from her calling and sides with the humans; and Andrew, the nerdiest of the nerd troika. They are joined by Robin Wood, Principal of the re-opened Sunnydale High School who, it transpires, is the son of a slayer Spike had killed 30 years before (Fool for Love [5.7]). Before the final climactic battle, Buffy manages to travel back in time to confront the original patriarchal chiefs who had decreed that there could only be one slayer at a time and, aided by Willow's magic, manages to transform the potentials into slayers with enough power to defeat the forces of evil. Sunnydale collapses into the earth in an earthquake and Buffy and the Scoobies, at the cost of some lives, manage to survive the battle. What an outline such as the above can't do is give a real flavour of a show which is a mixture of horror, teen movie and comedy, not to mention a whole host of generic traits (which will be developed in the Chapter 1: Categories). It is subject to sudden tonal shifts, from horror to romance, from tragedy to high comedy, not only from episode to episode but within episodes. Despite being a genre television series, it is capable of dealing with important contemporary issues, especially those involving young people. For example, the broadcast of one episode was delayed at the time because it dealt with high school shootings shortly before several students were shot down by fellow students in Columbine High School, Colorado. Unlike many such shows, it does not go in for the "Very Special Episode" in which issues such as drug addiction, alcoholism or AIDS are highlighted in an immediated way and out of the normal run of the show, 2 for example, the famous “Just say No” (to drugs) episode on the BBC’s Grange Hill. Instead, Buffy 3 deals with issues through metaphor, the central one being that high school is hell-on-earth and teenage life a torment. The show symbolically presents the struggle of good and evil, desire and duty, in the playing out of battles between the light and dark sides of human nature. It is a very rich text from a Media Studies perspective. The multiplicity of categories and genres has already been referred to. The way in which the show references other texts, both popular and "high" culture, makes it a rich source of reference for the study of postmodernism, a popular field within Media Studies. Its use of film language is outstanding, especially for television which lacks the budget of films made for the cinema. Its witty dialogue and its idiosyncratic language have made it not only one of the most literate shows on television but it has even given rise to its own "idiolect" – “Buffyspeak “- prompting Michael Adams, a professor of Linguistics, to bring out a dictionary devoted to the show's language. 4 The way it bestrides both the series - one-off episodes more or less self-contained – and the serial, with "arc episodes" which continue plot lines over several episodes and resists closure, makes it very fruitful in the study of narrative, as do its mythic qualities. It also deals with issues of gender and sexuality, the generation gap and other such issues (whether literally or metaphorically) and so provides a rich seam for the study of representation. With regard to Audience, its sixyear run allowed the younger layers of its audience to grow up with the show and reinterpret it in a new light. It has also attracted an adult audience (including an academic one of "scholar-fans" – resulting in at least three international academic conferences). The way that it has gone beyond its original target audience make it a useful text in which to look at differential decoding, a central aspect in the study of audiences. And from an institutional perspective, the 10 Introduction series provides a very useful case study of American network television and the institutional constraints involved in producing such a series. Buffy has been influential not only on US television, where strong female characters dealing with the supernatural such as Dead Like Me and Joan of Arcadia are clearly influenced by Buffy, but also in the UK where it became a blueprint for the revived series of Dr Who. Writer and Executive Producer Russell T. Davies said: Buffy the Vampire Slayer showed the whole world, and an entire sprawling industry, that writing monsters and demons and end-of-the world isn’t hack-work, it can challenge the best. Joss Whedon raised the bar for every writer—not just genre/niche writers, but every single one of us. 5 The most cogent expression of Buffy’s appeal is perhaps that of Michael Adams: ... it [Buffy the Vampire Slayer] captivates the 14-year-old and the 50-year-old, the political and the literary, the thoughtful and the vacuous; it is an allegory of American high school and teen social life; it asserts girl power; it is humor and pathos, death and duty and another day, love and hatred, and is so incredibly complex, complex enough to represent the experience of living in this world, which, if we're honest, is not what most television is about.. 6 Introduction 11 Notes Please note that there are several references in this guide to the Slayage website. Some time in December 2006, its domain name – slayage.tv - was taken over. The editors hope to get it back but have set up a mirror site: www.slayageonline.com. If the former does not lead to the site, the latter will. 1 2 3 4 5 6 12 Whedon, Joss: DVD Commentary to Welcome to the Hellmouth {1.1) (in Season 1 DVD) Wilcox, Rhonda. Why Buffy Matters, London: IB Tauris, 2005, pp 17-29. It could, however, be argued that the ending of Wrecked [6.10], when Willow admits to Buffy her magic is out of control and begs for help, has elements of the “Very Special Episode.” Buffy the Vampire Slayer is a long title and I have mostly abbreviated it to Buffy, in preference to BtVS which is widely used in academic writing on the subject. Adams, Michael. Slayer Slang: A Buffy the Vampire Slayer Lexicon. New York: Oxford University Press. (2003). Moore, Candace, "John Barrowman Plays Bisexual Time Traveler on New Dr. Who", Afterelton.com (Retrieved May 19, 2005). Ibid, p.11 Introduction Chapter 1: Categories THIS CHAPTER AIMS TO EXPLORE MEDIA CATEGORIES IN BUFFY, IN PARTICULAR: l l l l l l 1.1 the media of film, the medium of television and the tendency towards convergence genre, in particular generic hybridity genre in Buffy (horror, youth/high-school, etc) tone postmodernism auteurism Medium and Form medium of television it is useful to contrast it with film. Television and film have many features in common and The table below is adapted from the analysis of the share a common visual language; indeed, many films differences between the two media established by John which have a theatrical release will end up on the small Ellis in "Visible Fictions" (1982). 1 screen and most will be issued on DVD for domestic consumption. Nevertheless, there are significant differences between the two media. To understand the i. ii Screen Size Framing, Aspect Ratio Television Cinema Television has a small screen, with a relatively poor quality of image and detail. Consequently the viewer is bigger than the image and looks down at the television set. The characteristic way of looking is the glance, with the image frequently in the background and competing for attention with other things going on in the room. Most people watch television most of the time with the light on, and people usually watch with family or friends in the familiar surroundings of the home. Conversation frequently takes place during programmes, either about the show or about anything. The programme is frequently interrupted by commercial breaks, especially in US television. There is therefore a distance set up between viewer and viewed. Cinema has a large screen, being much bigger than the individual watching it, which provides a very large image of high quality with extensive detail. The size of the screen and the darkened conditions give rise to a more concentrated "gaze", with the viewer looking upwards. This takes place in a public space where the audience consists of strangers (apart from people you have gone to the cinema with) and conversation is discouraged. The only sound from the audience that is expected is laughter at comic moments, perhaps a shriek during a frightening moment, etc. The film is uninterrupted from beginning to end: the only exception being an intermission in a very long film.These conditions can allow the spectator to be overwhelmed by the image. Television is, therefore, often referred to as a "secondary medium". Film is therefore often referred to as a "primary medium". The relatively small size of the screen has implications for artistic choices, with the close-up being used so that expressions and objects can be clearly seen. Editing tends to be fast, with the image held on the screen just long enough for the information value to be exhausted. The aspect ratio is 1:1.33 (which was the norm for cinema until the 1950s) which makes certain kinds of composition more difficult. Acting styles tend to be more restrained, even in very dramatic moments in, for example, soap operas. Sound is as important as image. The large screen allows the director to emphasise the mise en scene; close-ups are used more sparingly. Takes tend to be longer, with the image held on screen long enough for its aesthetic potential to be realised. Since the 1950s, films have been shown on the wide screen (anything from 16:9 to as wide as 2.35:1.) This allows the director to use the wide screen to emphasise visual aspects such as composition and framing Chapter 1: Categories 13 iii. Single versus Multiple Cameras Multiple cameras are used in the studio. Lighting has to be versatile so that the subject is lit simultaneously from different camera positions. Much of the editing is done simultaneously with the action which saves time. Technical crews specialise in fast, economical programme making. This is more economical in time and money; television budgets are so much lower for every minute shown The single camera is almost always used, even when shooting in the studio. Each camera set up needs to be lit for that position. This is very expensive as it takes a long time to set up. Cinema shots are fragmented and joined together after the event in editing. Each reel of film has to be sent to the lab before the previous day's filming can be viewed. There is a much higher ratio of footage shot to footage finally shown; for example, a 90-minute feature comprising about 8,000 feet of film may have been edited from 500, 000 feet of film 2 - a very expensive process. iv. Film or Video Most television is shot on video tape, which is cheaper and much quicker to work with, although film has been used for larger budget projects (for example, Dallas, back in the 1980s, had a budget of $1,000,000 per episode) Film uses a chemical process in which light is reflected on a roll of film and is subsequently developed making it slower to work with and more expensive. However, film is now frequently edited digitally and the timecodes transferred to film indicating where the cuts etc are to be made. v. Length Television programmes usually last for less than an hour. Films are usually about two hours long. vi. "The Flow" versus Discrete Viewing Television viewing is less to do with viewing discrete programmes; rather it consists of a "flow" of images constantly interrupted by advertising breaks. TV viewing is therefore fractured into a sequence of segments (within the drama, the news and especially the commercials.) In the cinema, films are preceded by adverts and trailers but once the film has started it is viewed without interruption. vii. Audience Reception Audiences, therefore, glance at the TV screen …. … while they gaze at the cinema screen Has much changed over the twenty-odd years since Ellis There is still a tendency in television to shoot more made these observations? It remains true that the close-ups and for the visuals to be less important than cinema screen is bigger than the television screen and the sound. This is partly a function of the economics of has a higher quality and more detail but there has been television which has less money than cinema films and a degree of convergence which is likely to continue as close-ups involve less time to set up the scene and the technological developments and falling prices make lighting. Nevertheless, in modern TV drama, many shows large screen, HDTV (high definition television) available are shot in a highly cinematic way, using film rather than to large numbers of viewers. Modern television screens video and shot with a single camera. This is more tend to be widescreen and films, for example, are now expensive than traditional TV production and it means frequently shown in their original aspect ratio rather that the shows have to deliver a large audience from the than the "panning and scanning" procedures which start or they will be cancelled by the network. chop off the ends of a wide-screen film to squeeze it into the 4:3 ratio adopted by television early in its And while television is still primarily viewed in a history. Not only films are affected: it is now routine to domestic environment, many viewers choose to view have studio-based television shows made for both their favourite shows in a way that is not so different widescreen viewing and the traditional aspect ratio. from the cinema, in the dark, with a television set (There is, of course, a conter-tendency: television capable of high-quality images, and "gazing" as much programmes can be downloaded to ipods and such like as "glancing". Of course, this depends on the kind of to be viewed, time-shifted, on a very small screen. It will programme being watched. Television is still on in the be interesting to see how these tendencies affect the background in many homes and what is happening on content and style of future programmes). the screen frequently prevents steady concentration: the lines of text, scrolling news and the interactivity of satellite television allowing viewers to click on the button 14 Chapter 1: Categories to find out more about the programme, enter effects and hit-parade soundtracks. . . As you're sitting watching, the living-room TV experience, with giant plasma screens, HDTV and Dolby Surround Sound systems, is looking more and more like a serious improvement on the tatty old fleapit and sterile multiplex. 3 competitions and even choose different camera positions. And the sheer number of channels now available allows far greater temptation for those who want to channel-hop. Nevertheless, audiences can adopt different viewing Joss Whedon has stated that he was striving to achieve strategies for different programmes and can therefore "cinematic television" rather than "radio with heads”. 4 view particular shows with a cinematic intensity which is Like other large-budget American series, such as The catered for by producers and directors providing a more X-Files, West Wing and 24, (but unlike American sitcoms cinematic experience for television viewing. In the USA, such as Friends which are shot on video tape on certain programmes - mainly drama, including serial multiple cameras), Buffy is shot on film before being drama - are referred to as "event television", "must-see" transferred to video for broadcasting. Celluloid film is television or "quality television" (although it is much more expensive than video and takes longer to edit but more likely to be applied to programmes, such as The the finished product is of a higher quality. The first Sopranos and The West Wing, on the more prestigious - season, which only had twelve episodes instead of the and advert-free - cable subscription channels, twenty-two of the subsequent seasons - it was still "on particularly Home Box Office.) trial" by the network - was shot on 16mm film, a cheaper process which has traditionally been associated with While much of the consideration of the differences documentary or low-budget films. From Season Two between cinema viewing and television viewing is rooted onwards it was shot on 35mm, the standard for all but in the technology used and in the way audiences the largest budget Hollywood blockbusters. The makers consume television, there are other factors in addition to of the series have been at great pains to try to emulate the technological developments referred to above (if not surpass) the technical standards of cinema film, affecting the situation in the last 30 years. The first of with close attention to aspects of mise en scene (see these was the VCR which enabled audiences to "time- Chapter 2: Language) such as lighting, costumes, make- shift" - to choose when they wanted to watch up etc. There are certain limits, however, brought about programmes; and using the fast-forward button allowed constraints in budget and time. For example, the idea of audiences the ability to skip the adverts. More recently vampires turning into bats and flying (a standard feature the DVD came along which allowed fans (and given the in gothic horror) was abandoned because of costs. 5 cost of a whole series box-set, it would have to be fans rather than the casual viewer) not only to avoid the For many of its fans, therefore, Buffy, despite its being advertisements and watch when they pleased but to interrupted every 10 minutes or so for an advert break, is watch the "extras" including the directors' and writers' consumed in a very different way from the casual, commentaries. The internet took off as a mass frequently interrupted "glance" which was held to phenomenon at the time of Buffy's first broadcast and differentiate the television audience from the dedicated that gave a boost to an attitude towards shows which "gaze" of the cinema audience. was much more dedicated than casual viewing, with numerous websites devoted to shows and opportunities for fan activities which bind audiences to shows in a way that was not possible before. According to John Patterson in “The Guardian”, the technological gap between cinema and television is narrowing all the time. . . . television has become infinitely more cinematic, just as audiences have progressively become more cine-literate. Gone are the allover lighting and static cameras of the old made-for-TV movie, to be replaced, often, by superbly kinetic and inventive film-making, shot on film, often in wide-screen formats and on 1.2 Genre 1.2.1 The Repertoire of Elements The word genre means sort, type, kind and genre is one of the most important way of categorising media texts. It is a term which is applied to groups of texts with essential similarities in setting, plot, character types, themes and style (camera technique, editing, props, lighting, sound, music etc). These elements are repeated from text to text and allow audiences to place programmes and allow producers to attract their target audiences. Programme makers rely on the audience's familiarity with these conventions which have been used repeatedly in the programmes they have watched. location, using big budgets (Lost's opener, for example, cost a record-breaking $10m), special Chapter 1: Categories 15 Genre is a far from precise concept, some generic terms 1.2.2 being established by the industry and others by critics, Thomas Schatz has suggested in “Hollywood Genres” Some genres depend on setting and subject matter, that genres tend to go through four stages of evolution: such as the western; some on character types and their occupation, such as the gangster genre. The musical is recognisable by the formal organisation of the text - the way the narrative is carried by music; and horror and thriller are based on the intended effect on audience. One particular genre, film noir, was labelled as such only years after it first appeared though some would argue that film noir is a combination of stylistic and thematic features which go across different genres (cf. the comments on semantics and syntax below). Generic hybridity an experimental stage, during which its conventions are isolated and established, a classic stage, in which the conventions reach their "equilibrium" and are mutually understood by artist and audience, an age of refinement, during which certain formal and stylistic details embellish the form, and finally a baroque (or "mannerist," or "self-reflexive") stage, when the form and its establishments are accented to the point where they "themselves become the "substance" or "content" of the work. 6 Television and film genres overlap to a large extent except that film is almost wholly fictional (despite the Several genres, including horror, are well on the way to recent successful cinematic releases of documentaries their baroque stage, of which the highly self-reflexive such as Fahrenheit 9/11, Etre et Avoir/To Be and To Scream is a good example of this process. One aspect Have and Supersize Me) whereas television is a mixture of this stage in a genre's evolution is the way in which of factual programming and fiction. Almost all film one genre combines with other genres, a process known genres have made their way to television: for example, as generic hybridity (hybrid, a term derived from biology, The Godfather/The Sopranos (crime/gangster): Saved being a combination of different elements). The term by the Bell/ Clueless (also a film)/Cruel Intentions) (teen can be applied both to texts which have elements of drama). And indeed Buffy the Vampire Slayer itself separate genres coexisting (and which are sometimes started off as a cinema film before the television series referred to as "hyphenates") and to those where the was commissioned. hybrid produces a new generic category - such as cyberpunk, a hybrid of science fiction and film noir of One important aspect of genre is that audiences watch a which Blade Runner is the best known example. programme with knowledge of other programmes and films, either ones they have seen or ones they have Of course, genre films and programmes have always heard about. This is an aspect of what is known as been to some degree cross-generic; even during the intertextuality in that knowledge of the conventions of a Classic Hollywood Era (from the late 1920s until the genre sets expectations for the audience. Programme 1950s) there were rarely "pure" horror, western or makers can therefore use genre to signal to the gangster films. There were even films that combined audience what to expect - or they can mislead audiences western and musical - "the singing cowboy" films. by introducing unexpected elements. Genre therefore Indeed, Hollywood has always been keen to attach as involves a combination of the familiar and the original, many generic labels to a film as possible in order reach repetition and innovation. For audiences, part of the the widest possible audience. pleasure of genre is in recognising the conventions of the genre; audiences feel the pleasure of the familiar as Star Wars is a good example of such generic hybridity: well as the thrill of the new. although it is clearly a science fiction film, being set in the future with space ships and advanced robots, it has Of course, genres do not remain static: they change and elements of the western. For example, Luke, Hans and develop, with new conventions being added and others Chewbacca go into a saloon which belongs in a western, discarded. One way of looking at genre is the idea the with its swing doors and even western character types "repertoire of elements" - sets of conventions and (though in this case they are aliens). Joss Whedon's first expectations shared by the filmmakers and audience project post-Buffy - Firefly - is another example of a sci- such as character types, narrative, themes, iconography fi/western hybrid; the title sequence ends with a shot of etc. The programme makers will draw on some of the horses (=western) with a spaceship (=sci-fi) flying over. conventions of a genre while discarding others. In a Even a film such as The Untouchables (1987), clearly a television series, the greater expanse of time will allow gangster film set mainly in Prohibition-era Chicago, has more aspects of a genre to be explored than in a film. elements of the western: the federal agents appear at one point on horseback against a typical western 16 Chapter 1: Categories landscape and a soundtrack of neighing horses and a Princess; the teen/high school drama, such as Saved by large, heroic score more typical of the western than the the Bell, Pretty in Pink and Clueless; the fairy tale, gangster genre. This generic hybridity is typical of what particularly, "The Gentlemen" in Hush [4.10] and "Der has become known as postmodernism - one of the Kindedstod" in Killed by Death [2.18]; martial arts films, features of Buffy which will be explored later in this such as Crouching Tiger, Hidden Dragon; science fiction chapter. (especially The Initiative arc in Season 4); and screwball comedy, a style of comedy popular in the 1940s The most prominent genres present in Buffy are (gothic) involving wisecracking women, for example, His Girl horror, comedy and high school/youth drama; indeed, Friday. In individual episodes, such as Hush [4.10], Joss Whedon has summed up Buffy as My So-Called Primeval [4.21] and The Body [4.16], there are also Life meets The X-Files. For its horror elements, elements of the art film, a category of film that is difficult throughout its seven seasons, the makers of Buffy have to define precisely but is more experimental than selected elements from the repertoire of horror and its mainstream films and which does not adopt the main various sub-genres. Gothic and vampire in particular are conventions of the Hollywood of industry. to be expected from the title but many different types of horror appear such as slasher (eg, Nightmare on Elm 1.2.3 Street), and zombie and other body-horror genres (eg. A useful way of looking at generic hybridity is the The Return of the Living Dead). semantic/syntactical model developed by Rick Altman in A Semantic/Syntactical Model of Genre “Film/Genre”. 7 In the grammar of written language, Fantasy is another genre which is prominent in Buffy. semantics concerns the meaning of particular words Fantasy involves magic and the supernatural and whereas syntax is concerned about how words combine overlaps considerably with certain types of horror and (in words, clauses and sentences) to make meaning. even science fiction. Indeed, fantasy, horror and science Altman uses this distinction as an analogy to describe fiction are sometimes grouped together as “speculative specific elements in a text, such as character-types, fiction”. Fantasy is even more loosely coded than horror. iconography and props characteristic of a particular Films as different as Edward Scissorhands, Ghost, genre. These he defines as semantic; and elements that Groundhog Day, The Indian in the Cupboard, Lord of work across the whole text, such as narrative structure the Rings, the Harry Potter films and The Sixth Sense and theme, which he defines as syntax. If we look at could reasonably be considered as examples of fantasy. the western, a well-established genre in both film and Because they overlap so much, a generic classification is television, we can identify particular signs - six-guns, often attributed on the basis of vaguer criteria such as horses, spurs, wagons, towns, saloons with swing doors, mood and tone rather than by their use of the dramatic landscapes, or even the western stars such as repertoires of elements. The X-Files, for example, John Wayne or Clint Eastwood. Altman would label dealing with alien invasions and phenomena these the semantic elements. But there are also unexplained by current science, could be considered elements that work across the text, such as narrative. science fiction but there are probably more moments of The narrative in westerns, for example, is frequently pure horror, in the sense of creating a mixture of dread based on the conflict between settlers and native and disgust, than in Buffy. For example, the second peoples ("Indians") or between different economic episode of the first season, Squeeze, involves a very interest groups such as cattle ranchers and small scary character called Tooms, a100-year-old genetic farmers. The narrative in the western is typically resolved mutant who can manipulate his body so that he can by the arrival of the cavalry at the last minute to save the squeeze through incredibly tight spaces to attack his day, or a ritual shoot-out on the main street. The victims, requiring their livers to sustain him during narrative can be seen as an aspect of the syntax of the decades of hibernation. There is little in Buffy that western. compares to this in terms of horrifying or terrorising the audience. The same process can be seen at work in other traditional genres, the gangster and the horror film. In A long-running series has space to indulge in all sorts of the former, there was frequently a rise-and-fall structure generic influences. Buffy shares many features with the showing the gangster rising from the gutter to a position action genre, such as Bruce Willis vehicles like Die Hard of power only to end in death and failure. (The Hays and the Mel Gibson Lethal Weapon films. It also has Production Code, which the American studios observed much in common with superhero films, such as from 1933 until the late 1960s, insisted that crime should Superman, Batman, Spiderman, Xena the Warrior not be seen to pay). These narrative structures can Chapter 1: Categories 17 therefore be seen as syntactical elements, with the which provides the core of the show. Once More with semantic ones being, for example, the cars with white- Feeling, [6.7] is an episode given over to the musical wall tyres, the flash suits of the gangsters, the gangsters' genre (the rationale being that a spell causes everyone "molls", the illegal drinking club or speakeasy (for films in Sunnydale to break out spontaneously into song and set during the Prohibition era). In the horror genre, a dance). Another episode, Spiral [5.20], has elements of syntactical element might be the elimination of victim the historical drama as well as the swashbuckler: a group after victim until the "final girl" - usually the "virtuous" of mediaeval knights track Buffy and the Scoobies in one - manages to escape or kill the monster. 8 The order to kill Dawn. This episode also references another semantic elements, on the other hand, might include the famous John Ford western, Stagecoach, as the knights monster, low-key lighting, the creepy castle, the POV chase the group who are travelling in a Winnebago (point-of-view) camerawork, the atmospheric organ camper, with arrows penetrating the interior, and knights music etc. leaping from their horses onto the vehicle as Buffy, up top, tries to repel the attackers. Altman argues that genre theory needs to keep the distinction clearly in mind if it is to come to terms with The Initiative arc which dominates Season 4 allows the issues such as generic evolution, and cross-genre show to employ semantics of science fiction - cold, hybridisation in particular. To use once again the gleaming metallic surfaces, secret underground science example of Star Wars, it is a good example of a generic labs with scientists in white coats. The headquarters in hybrid, despite being clearly identifiable as science which the Initiative is installed resembles the fiction, as it borrows some elements, both semantic and underground lair which serves as the HQ of the villain in syntactical, from the western; indeed, it contains a Bond films. It also uses the syntax of the genre, the mad "hommage" (a French term meaning a reference to an scientists who go too far and exposes themselves and earlier made in homage to the original) to a classic the community to danger. In The Initiative story arc, western, John Ford's The Searchers. Luke Skywalker there is even an allusion to that earlier horror-sci-fi leaves the ranch where he lives with his aunt and uncle hybrid, Frankenstein, since Adam is made from parts of and when he returns he finds them slaughtered, clearly humans, demons and monsters. (Goodbye Iowa [4.14]). an allusion to The Searchers where John Wayne's Ethan is lured away from his brother's ranch by a group of 1.2.4 Horror raiding Comanches who slaughter his family. Despite the As stated above, instances of "pure" genres have always elements borrowed from the western, the audience been rare, as producers try to attract as wide an approaches Star Wars as science fiction rather than audience as possible, even if this process of western, because science fiction semantics predominate. hybridisation has become much more widespread in recent years. Nevertheless, some genres are more clearly In most generic hybrids, one of the generic elements coded than others. If the western is a good example of a tends to predominate. For example, The Rocky Horror genre which is easier to define and delineate, horror is Picture Show (1975) is a hybrid of horror and musical. an example of one where the boundaries are much But as Brian Dunbar points out: looser and overlap with several others. Horror can be To answer this question [which is it, horror or musical?], one should take Altman's advice and examine the syntax or structure of the film as opposed to the semantics which refer to the visuals and sound elements of the film. In this case, a film like The Rocky Horror Picture Show belongs more properly to the musical since it is structured around the need to have songs and dances every so often. In addition, the film does not set out to scare so fails on this account as well. 9 loosely defined in terms of the intended effect – a mixture of fear, revulsion and a sense of the uncanny on the audience. It can include various types of supernatural drama where the normal rules of nature don't function, films such as Carrie, The Nightmare on Elm Street films, Halloween and its sequels, The Amityville Horror, The Shining, The Exorcist, not to mention the various films dealing with vampires, werewolves and other monsters and demons. But it also includes films where the normal rules governing the universe prevail but create their effects by showing Although in Buffy the horror and teen comedy semantics extremes of human behaviour, films such as The Texas predominate, the fact that it is a television series rather Chainsaw Massacre, The Pit and the Pendulum, Straw than a film provides opportunities to have particular Dogs and I Spit on Your Grave. episodes (or even several episodes within a season) devoted to a particular genre apart from the main ones 18 Chapter 1: Categories There is no clear dividing line between horror and other The vampire film, whether we refer to it as a genre or genres such as thriller and suspense, genres which sub-genre, is an example of gothic that established its Alfred Hitchcock is associated with. Two of Hitchcock's own particular repertoire of elements. Based on legends most famous films, Psycho and The Birds (the former about a mediaeval knight, Vlad Dracul, also known as "natural" and the latter "supernatural") could usefully be Vlad the Impaler due to the way he dispatched his categorised as horror. Carol Clover, in "Men, Women victims, Bram Stoker's novel, "Dracula" (1897) was and Chainsaws" makes the valid point that there is " a particularly influential in establishing vampire lore. It tendency to classify a plot as "horror" when it is low involves a Central European Count in a gloomy gothic budget and "drama" or "suspense" when it is highly castle who avoids daylight, doesn't have a reflection in a produced" 10 For example, Don't Look Now, a film mirror, can be warded off with garlic and crucifixes, can't adapted from a Daphne du Maurier story and directed cross a threshold uninvited and can be destroyed by by Nicholas Roeg, might easily come into the category decapitation, running water and a stake through the of horror, thought its art-film aura would make it less heart. He has human accomplices (such as servants and likely to be considered as such. the fly-eating Renfield), sexy female vampire minions, and a hypnotic sexual power. Stoker also established a The term sub-genre is often used when a body of films model, in Van Helsing, for Dracula's antagonist who within a genre display similar characteristics. Gothic and fights vampires with a mixture of spiritual and scientific vampire films (see below) might be considered sub- power. genres of horror, just as is slasher (or stalker) of which the classic example is Halloween. but it is possibly There were several vampire films made during the first easier to define the characteristics of these sub-genres three decades of the cinema, the most notable being than the looser category of horror. However, a Les Vampires, a ten-part silent serial made by French characteristic of all horror films is the presence of a director Louis Feuillade and starring Musidora who monster, whether non-human or human, which ranges played Irma Vep (an anagram for "vampire") as an evil from the psychopathic Michael Myers in Halloween and but sexy creature, the first screen "vamp", a word used sequels, the vengeful Freddy Kruger in The Nightmare for a woman who uses her sex appeal to entrap and on Elm St and sequels, the creature in Alien (a exploit men, thereby establishing a strong connection sci-fi/horror hybrid), the chainsaw killers in Texas between vampires and eroticism. However, the most Chainsaw Massacre, and a host of others, and a hero or influential vampire film of the silent era was the German heroine who has to confront and defeat the monster. film, Nosferatu - A Symphony of Terror, directed by FW The narrative is typically resolved by a confrontation, Murnau in 1921 starring Max Schreck as Count Orlok. It allowing the audience a sort of catharsis, that purging of was based on Bram Stoker's novel but the name-change powerful emotions that allows the audience to cope with was an unsuccessful attempt to avoid copyright their fears. restrictions. Schreck's vermin-like vampire was truly hideous, with protruding fangs and long prehensile 1.2.5 Gothic and Vampire fingers. The Master, the "big bad" of the first season of Gothic is another important element in the horror genre Buffy, was clearly based on Nosferatu; indeed, the and its various sub-genres. This refers to narratives of unaired pilot for the series ends with Buffy, having terror and suspense usually set in gloomy old castles or accepted her role as slayer, throwing a knife into an monasteries (the term gothic referring to the mediaeval image of the vampire on a poster advertising Murnau's architecture). In literature, gothic originated in the 18th film. century. The term was extended beyond works with a medieavalised setting but which shared a sinister, The next significant portrayal of Dracula was by the grotesque or claustrophobic atmosphere. The best Hungarian actor, Bela Lugosi, who established a known example in the 19th century was Mary Shelley's template for the count which was to be influential in novel, "Frankenstein" (1818) which included a theme representing Dracula until the present day (and is the important in certain science fiction works: the scientist model for Dracula in the Season 5 episode, Buffy Versus who "plays God" by attempting to bring the dead back Dracula [5.1]). His English was heavily accented and sexy; to life, with fatal consequences. There are several the image was exotic, suave and sophisticated, an image important American tales and novels with strong gothic confirmed by his evening wear, including the famous elements, particularly works of Edgar Allen Poe such as cloak. His combination of repulsion and attractiveness “The Pit and the Pendulum”, several of which have been (to women) has persisted in subsequent portrayals of the adapted as horror films. count. Chapter 1: Categories 19 Christopher Lee, in the cycle of Dracula films made for develop and grow in the same way that human the British production company Hammer Films in the characters do. 1960s and 70s, was the next major portrayal of Dracula. It owed much to Lugosi's, in terms of clothing and dark 1.2.6 sexuality, but he also brought something of Max Schrek's Despite the various generic labels that can be applied to animal-like intensity to the part. The Hammer films, such Buffy, the hybrid of horror, youth film and comedy is the Youth/Teen/High School Drama as the 1958 film Dracula, directed by Terence Fisher, most prominent. The horror has been dealt with above also added some of the elements that have become but what of youth film? This is a loosely coded genre, established in the public imagination, including such defined partly by content and partly by the audience to conventions as surly Carpathian villagers crossing which they appeal, teen to early twenties. Adolescence themselves in fear at the name of Dracula and warning is a significant stage in human development in every sceptical travellers to go nowhere near the castle, culture but only with the post-Second World War especially after sunset, advice the urban sophisticates affluence did the teenager come into being, firstly in the always ignore. The Hammer films also established USA and then in Europe. Youth cults arose, from rockers, Christopher Cushing as Dracula's arch-nemesis, bikers, teddy boys, mods, punks to today's moshers and Professor Van Helsing. Other actors to attempt the role goths. The music industry was marked particularly by a of Dracula include the American actor Frank Langella new kind of youth music, rock and roll, but the film and the French actor Louis Jourdain who reprised the industry wasn't far behind in chasing the new spending Lugosi's style of portrayal for television in the miniseries power of adolescents by making films targeted at this Count Dracula (BBC, 1977) with Jourdain as a very suave, demographic. very Gallic vampire in a version very faithful to Bram Stoker's original novel. Gary Oldman's portrayal in The rise of the teenager came at a time of decline for Francis Ford Coppola's Bram Stoker's Dracula the Hollywood studios, affected by the extension of combined elements of Schreck's portrayal with an almost leisure opportunities and the advent of television and, 1960's hippy image. although it was some years before films were heavily marketed towards particular audiences (and only with A further development in the vampire genre came from the rise of the multiplex in the 1980s could this tendency the pen of Anne Rice, American author of the best- reach maturity), the film industry did attempt to target selling "Vampire Chronicles". In her novels, Rice creates films particularly at youth, such as rock and roll films, vampires who are closer to us, more human, more where pop stars featured, and films around the theme of understandable for us than remote Central European youth rebellion. A classic example of the youth film was aristocrats. Her vampires are sophisticated and erotic Rebel Without a Cause (1955) which made a star of its (Tom Cruise and Brad Pitt star in the film adaptation of lead actor, James Dean. It was typical of the genre in Rice's novel “Interview with the Vampire”) and often that it challenged adult authority, both parental and successfully masquerade as humans. In the first book of institutional, such as school authorities, police and the series, the vampire Louis Lestaat is tormented by politicians. The high school setting was particularly guilt, comes to hate being a vampire and refuses to important in the genre (more so in American films than feed on humans - an obvious model for Angel in Buffy. British) and a familiar repertoire of elements was The Lost Boys also puts a modern spin on the genre and established for the genre, such as character types (jocks, involves a group of vampire juvenile delinquents who nerds and eggheads, cheerleaders and home-coming terrorise a small Californian town before being queens, coaches and authoritarian school principals), destroyed by a group of youths who have learned their and events (graduation ceremonies and the all- vampire lore from comic books. Vampires also became important prom), locations (lockers, classrooms, the gym popular on the small screen by the 1990s, such as the and playing fields, cars and school grounds where Canadian TV series Forever Knight which followed an students could lounge in the sun - Southern Californian ancient vampire seeking redemption for his past was a frequent location for obvious reasons). misdeeds (which are shown in flashback) by working as a detective in modern-day Toronto, Nick Knight being The process of generic hybridity is even more typical of another obvious forerunner of Angel. Many of these the youth film than other genres and many of the most vampire characters provide models for the vampires in popular youth films are hybrids. One popular sub-genre Buffy, especially the one who aren't simply one- is the reworking of classic literary or theatrical texts, such dimensional models but complex personalities who can as Clueless which reworks Jane Austen's "Emma", 10 Things I Hate About You, based on Shakespeare's "The 20 Chapter 1: Categories Taming of the Shrew", and Cruel Intentions, adapted can exist even in the darkest, most tragic texts, perhaps from Choderlos de Laclos' novel, "Dangerous as "comic relief" (eg, The Searchers, "Macbeth") but Liaisons", which stars Sarah Michelle Gellar. But horror is also because, even when the main thrust of the whole perhaps the most frequent hybrid with youth and high text is to make people laugh, the texts can be organised school film, with such films as Halloween, Carrie, Friday in many ways; indeed, because of its sheer diversity, the 13th, and Nightmare on Elm Street. More recent term "mode" is often preferred to genre when dealing examples are the Scream films, I Know What You Did with comedy. Last Summer and The Faculty. Perhaps the purest comedy, generically speaking, is Youth films have their equivalents on (mainly US) where the film's main character is a comedian (and well television, with a high school setting used in such shows known in other media such as television or the stage) as Saved by the Bell, My So-called Life and the and the film consists largely of opportunities for seeing television spin-off of Clueless. Buffy uses many of the the comedian perform gags and stunts without the need elements of the repertoire of the genre, especially for a coherent plot, examples such as The Nutty during the first three seasons which were set in Professor and other Gerry Lewis films and, more Sunnydale High School. The character-types are well recently, many of Jim Carrey's films; and from an earlier represented, with the cheerleaders, geeks, nerds and period, the Marx Brothers' films. Films with a more jocks. Cordelia is the archetypal cheerleader as well as structured narrative tend to be hybrids such as the being the queen of the popular social set. Willow is "teen comedy" (which has its own sub-genre in the nerdish in the extreme, at least until she starts going out highly successful films and cycles of films such as There's with Oz, lead guitarist of a rock band. Xander is also Something About Mary and the American Pie films). thought (by Cordelia and her crowd) to be a bit of a nerd but his most consistent role is that of class-clown. Comedy is one of the dominant tones throughout Buffy. Various jocks appear at different times in the show, (The Body, [5.16], where Joyce Summers, Buffy's mother, including the member of the successful swimming team dies of an aneurysm, is exceptional in that comedy is who expects to be "rewarded" with Buffy who rejects his more or less limited to a flash-back sequence before advances and ends up getting the blame by the school Joyce' death). The humour goes from slapstick to irony, principal because of the way she dresses. (Go Fish from dreadful puns, such as in the following exchange [2.20]). Willow is expected to tutor another sporting jock from A New Man [4.12]: (Dopplegangland [3.16]) and, in her role as temporary relief teacher is expected to let him pass no matter how weak his grades are. The settings are also the familiar ones of the genre: students hanging around lockers between classes (occasionally finding a corpse in one); the classroom; the Maggie Walsh: So, the Slayer. Buffy: Yeah. That's me. Walsh: We thought you were a myth. Buffy: Well, you were myth-taken playing fields and the gym. There is also the allimportant prom, the homecoming queen, graduation to the most subtle wit. ceremony etc. And the narratives deal with peer-group rivalry, romance, and getting into trouble over school Buffy frequently dispatches her demon foes with James work. When the Scoobies leave school, the Sunnydale Bond-like quips. As she says to one startled vampire: campus of the University of Southern California plays a "We haven't been properly introduced. I'm Buffy, and similar role in terms of familiar settings, with the lecture you're . . . history!" (Never Kill a Boy on the First Date, theatre, the fraternity and sorority houses and the dorms [1.5]) She confronts a demon who has been kidnapping taking the place of the high school settings as more young people and making them slaves in his hell adult themes are explored. dimension. Wielding hammer and sickle, she asks him if he wants to see her imitation of Gandhi. After smashing 1.2.7 Comedy the demon's brains in, she says to her bewildered It is difficult to classify comedy as a genre as it appears companion, "Well, you know, if he was really pissed off" in many different genres such as horror and melodrama. (Anne, [3.1]). Buffy is more of an action-gal than an Comedy is classified on the basis of its intended effect intellectual, and much of the show's comedy derives on its audience but it is even less easy to define than the from Buffy's lack of scholarship. When Xander asks Buffy teen/youth/high school genre, not only because comedy if she's "up for a little reconnaissance", she (thinking he Chapter 1: Categories 21 is referring to the Renaissance) responds, "You mean and upper with that nancy-boy accent. You Englishmen where we all sculpt and paint and stuff?" Buffy, are always so... (pauses) Bloody hell! Sodding, blimey, quarrelling with Angel, says, "I don't trust you. You're a shagging, knickers, bollocks, oh God! I'm English!" Giles vampire" and when he looks hurt goes on, "Oh, I'm and Spike assume that, being English, they are father sorry, was that an offensive term? Should I say 'undead- and son. Spike examines a suit which he had borrowed American'?" (When She Was Bad [2.1]). This verbal and finds a label on the inside of his suit jacket, which agility extends to the other characters. In the same says, 'Made with care for Randy' and angrily accuses his episode, When Buffy (for once) behaves badly, even "father" of lumbering him with an embarrassing name: bitchy Cordelia thinks she is going too far and tells her, "Randy Giles? Why not just call me 'Horny Giles,' or "Whatever is causing the Joan Collins 'tude, deal with it. 'Desperate-for-a-Shag Giles'? I knew there was a reason I Embrace the pain, spank your inner moppet, whatever, hated you!" but get over it," thereby showing her familiarity with both American soap and Californian psycho-speak. Some characters are present mainly for their comic function. Xander is full of quick one-liners and self- In Buffy Versus Dracula [5.1], the prince of darkness deprecating wit but is too central to the show's different himself makes an appearance and the Scooby gang are moods and situations to be as one dimensional as star struck. Buffy is flattered, "I mean, can you believe simply a comic character. The main comic characters are that? Count Famous heard of me." " What about that Cordelia in the first three seasons and Anya in the last thing where he turned himself into a bat?" gasps Willow. four. Cordelia's humour derives from her total self- "That was awesome!" Xander calls Dracula "the Dark absorption and complete lack of tact. She is at a history Master - bator" (a line edited out of the episode when it lesson on the French Revolution (where the French appeared on the BBC - see Chapter 6: Institutions) and Queen, Marie-Antoinette, was supposed to have said makes fun of him: "And where'd you get that accent, about the poor who had no bread to eat: "let them eat Sesame Street? [imitating the Count on Sesame Street] cake", showing how detached she was from everyday Vun, two, three -- three victims. Mwa ha ha!" But Xander problems). Cordelia has her own take on these events: soon falls under his power, playing the Renfield role and even starts eating flies. Sending up its own improbabilities, this episode has the Scoobies track Dracula to his dark mediaeval castle causing Riley to remark," I've lived in Sunnydale a couple of years now. Know what I've never noticed before? A big honking castle". The straight-laced Giles is trapped by the three sexy female vampires (like the ones who captured Jonathan Harper in Bram Stoker's "Dracula") and when he escapes he is teased:" At least you weren't making time with the dracu-babes like Giles here", to which Giles replies: "I was not making time! I, I was, uh, just about to kill those, uh, loathsome creatures when Riley interrupted me", to which Riley replies, "You were gonna nuzzle 'em to death?" Characteristically, Buffy overcomes Dracula not simply because of her slayer powers but because of her media literacy: Dracula disappears but when he reappears she is ready for him: "You think I don't watch your movies? You always come back," she says as she stakes him into dust. The interaction of the English characters frequently provides comic opportunities. In Tabula Rasa [6.8], Willow makes a spell that goes wrong and everyone loses their memory. Giles reassures everyone, "We'll all get our memory back, and it'll all be right as rain" to which Spike (not realising he himself is English), retorts, "Oh, listen to Mary Poppins. He's got his crust all stiff 22 Chapter 1: Categories Cordelia: I just don't see why everyone's always picking on Marie-Antoinette. I can so relate to her. She worked really hard to look that good, and people just don't appreciate that kind of effort. And I know the peasants were all depressed... Xander: I think you mean O-pressed. Cordelia: Whatever. They were cranky. So they're like, 'Let's lose some heads.' Uh! That's fair? And Marie-Antoinette cared about them. She was gonna let them have cake. Anya arrives at the end of Season 3, just before Cordelia's departure to the spin-off show, Angel. She has spent a millennium as a vengeance demon, acting on women's wishes when they have been badly treated by men. Much of the humour derives from the fact that, not having been human for long, she hasn't learned tact and just blurts out what she feels like. In The Prom [3.20], for example, she asks Xander to take her to the prom: Anya: You know, you can laugh, but I have witnessed a millennium of treachery and oppression from the males of the species and I have nothing but contempt for the whole libidinous lot of them. Xander: Then why you talking to me? Anya (averting her eyes); I don't have a date for the prom. Xander: Well gosh. I wonder why not. It couldn't possibly have anything to do with your sales pitch? Anya: Men are evil. Will you go with me? show we're keeping to the original formula. We take our horror genre seriously. We are not doing spoof. It's larger than life but we are very much involved with these characters... The description I like best is My So-Called Life meets The X-Files 11 If the comedy and the horror are to be taken seriously, it will involve rapid transitions in tone between the two. In The Harsh Light of Day [4.3], she develops her direct Buffy requires its audience to be able to follow these approach to relationships: rapid transitions, what Jim Collins refers to as "tonal (To Xander): I like you. You're funny, and you're nicely shaped. And frankly, it's ludicrous to have these interlocking bodies and not... interlock. Please remove your clothing now. variation" (or “shift”) which is a feature of much recent television drama: At one moment, the conventions of a genre are taken 'seriously,' in another scene, they might be subjected to [a] sort of ambivalent parody . . These generic and tonal variations occur within scenes as well as across scenes, sometimes oscillating on a line by line basis, or across episodes. 12 The comedy in Buffy ranges widely from verbal comedy, including subtle wit, to slapstick, which is a boisterous physical comedy with chases and collisions and practical jokes characterized by horseplay and physical action. In The Initiative [4.7], Harmony, once Cordelia's bitchy sidekick in Sunnydale High School, has become a vampire A good example of tonal shift occurs in The Initiative and Spike's much put-upon girlfriend. Badly treated [4.7]. Spike escapes from the Initiative's laboratories and once again by Spike, she is burning all of his things tries to track down Buffy to kill her. He reaches her (including his beloved Sex Pistols records) when she bedroom in the dorm but there is only Willow whom he confronts Xander and what follows is pure slapstick. decides to kill anyway. The tone is one of fear and terror, Harmony "bitch-slaps" him and he retaliates by kicking created by the lighting, the non-diegetic music and the her on the shin, evoking Harmony's indignant shriek: fact that Spike's face is transformed into its "game" "Ow! You sissy kicker!" and then there ensues the most version, indicating he is ready for the kill. There is a cut 'girly' fight ever on Buffy as they paw at each other and to increase the tension (and a commercial break). When circle each other in a menacing manner as the we return, Spike is sitting crestfallen on the edge of the soundtrack has mock-heroic action-genre music, bed: he can't "perform". (We, and he, learn later that slapping without contact, and end up tangled up pulling the Initiative has inserted a chip in his brain that prevents each other's hair. him from harming humans. As he later puts it, 'Spike had a little trip to the vet and now he doesn't chase the 1.3 Tone Tone is the attitude adopted toward the subject as shown in the language and other signs. The tone of any given text can be serious, humorous, romantic, angry, bewildered. Which tone is adopted will depend on purpose and genre; the generic mix of Buffy the Vampire Slayer is likely to reflect this variety. Comedy and horror are elements which are difficult to combine without becoming a spoof. Spoofs are about making fun of some aspects of a genre and horror spoofs such as Love at First Bite, The Young Frankenstein and Carry on Screaming abound. Buffy has aspects of spoof but Joss Whedon, the main creator of the series, would deny this as a definition of the show as a whole. In the [Buffy the Vampire Slayer] movie, the director took an action/horror/comedy script and went only with the comedy. In the television other puppies anymore'). The tone has changed from horror or terror to comedy as his inability to bite Willow is treated as if it is sexual impotence, with Willow playing the sympathetic woman who tries to make him feel better. Spike: I don't understand. This sort of thing's never happened to me before. Willow: Maybe you were nervous . . . Maybe you're trying too hard. Doesn't this happen to every vampire? Spike: Not to me, it doesn't! Willow: It's me, isn't it? Spike: What are you talking about? Willow: Well, you came looking for Buffy, then settled. I... I... You didn't want to bite me. I just happened to be around. Chapter 1: Categories 23 Spike: Piffle! Willow: I know I'm not the kind of girl vamps like to sink their teeth into. It's always like, "ooh, you're like a sister to me," or, "oh, you're such a good friend." unlikely pairing) when Andrew says, "Wheelchair fight?", plunging the scene into slapstick comedy as the pair cavort around the empty ward. As Carl Wilson puts it: The moment is gloriously senseless. Yes, it shows the two are not mature enough to rush back to the injured girls, as they ought to. And it sends up the point about how inane people can be . . . On most programs, with the core characters in conflict and innocent bystanders dying, a wheelchair fight would be no-go. Indeed, the tonal shift would be out of bounds in most films, literature or theatre. On Buffy, the shifts are the tone. The first rule of the Buffyverse is that there are no rules. Horror slides into humour, psychodrama into the surreal, pop-culture pastiche into thriller, domestic verisimilitude into sexual fantasy, from After a few minutes of this comic banter, the tone shifts back again as Willow crashes a light on Spike's head and makes her escape. Even in one of the darker episodes, Lie to Me [2.7], there is an example of this tonal variation. A boy called Billy Ford has a terminal illness and wants to become a vampire to cheat death. He gathers around him a group of young people who romanticise about vampires and second to second, line to line. 13 want to join "the misunderstood", the "lonely ones". Ford intends to sacrifice these to vampires in return for his becoming one of them. Xander, Willow and Angel go to a club where vampire worshipers congregate. The atmosphere is tense. Angel comments: "I've seen enough. I've seen this type before. I mean, they're children making up bedtime stories of friendly vampires to comfort themselves in the dark... These people don't know anything about vampires. What they are, how they live, how they dress..." Then a young man dressed exactly like Angel comes down the stairs behind him and looks him up and down before continuing on. Angel clears his throat and leaves in embarrassment. In the same episode, Buffy tries to convince the vampireworshipers they are in serious danger from the very vampires they worship: I am trying to save you! You are playing in some serious traffic here! Do you understand that? You're going to die! And the only hope you have of surviving this is to get out of this pit right now, and. . ." [as catches sight of the "vampire" outfit worn by one of them, the tone changes to the comic] ... my God, could you have a dorkier outfit? 1.4 Postmodernism Tonal shifts are characteristic of postmodernism, a term that is difficult to define exactly but it is to describe aspects of the culture in recent times. One of the main features is its eclecticism - the mixing and matching of different stylistic elements. Some who use the term welcome it as liberation from the ideas of and reverence for "high culture" (for example, opera, ballet, painting, classic literature, etc) and the disparaging of "low culture" (television, popular cinema, comics, etc). Others see postmodernism as a trivialisation of culture by irresponsible academics caught up in admiration for the glitter of consumer capitalism and its moral emptiness. The term is used to describe conditions prevailing in the last three decades of the twentieth century, especially in the production of media artefacts, where there is a superabundance of images and styles - in television, pop videos, film, advertising, etc - which are readily available for recycling. The traditionally valued qualities of coherence, meaning originality and authenticity are replaced by a random swirl of empty signs to produce a culture of disposable imitations, superficiality, "simulacra" (copies without originals), style valued over In End of Days [7.21], Andrew the super-nerd and Anya, substance, surface appearance over depth, a mixing and the ex-vengeance demon, are in a deserted hospital matching of diverse styles. looking for medical supplies for the impending apocalypse. Andrew asks her why she doesn't flee as she Postmodernism adopts the view that it is no longer did once before (in Graduation Day Part One [3.21]). possible to have general theories - referred to as The tone is serious, almost solemn as Anya replies that, "grand narratives" or "metanarratives" - which attempt since then, though, she has gotten to like how to explain how history and society function (for example, "amazingly screwed-up" human beings are, to respect Marxism which explains historical development in terms their "insane" will to carry on. She has developed as a of the class struggle). Used in this sociological way, the character and is about to become heroic (she dies in the term “postmodernity” is sometimes used, with final confrontation). They gaze into each others' eyes, postmodernism applying to stylistic tendencies in there is a pause, the kind that usually precedes a kiss (an 24 Chapter 1: Categories cultural products such as film, television, advertising and expressing the same regret and they approach him architecture; this is the way it is being used here. As such seductively, we realise we are in Xander's fantasy as the postmodernism has a number of distinctive features, door to his room swings open and we see feathers flying including: everywhere! Girls in skimpy nighties and underwear jump and bounce, flinging pillows at each playfully. The 1.4.1 Intertextuality and Pastiche pillow fight in slow motion appears to be a hommage to Intertextuality involves referencing not just different the anarchic slow-motion pillow-fight in Jean-Vigo's Zero genres but the way in which specific texts are "quoted" de Conduite/Zero for Behaviour - albeit involving in other texts. One aspect of this is generic hybridity (see rampaging schoolboys in a French boarding-school Genre above) - an eclectic mixing of styles from different rather than pubescent slayers-in waiting! (The title of the times and places, recycling of images, mixing and episode comes from the misogynistic fundamentalist matching, and intertextual references. Buffy is very much preacher Caleb who considers all women dirty, rather a generic hybrid but it is its intertextuality which is even than the cavorting slayerettes). more marked. According to Robert Stam, (using the analogy of STD prevention), "Any text which has slept Shakespearian allusions abound, from the first season with another text has necessarily slept with all the texts when the head vampire, the Master (based on Murnau's the other text has slept with 14;" what David Lavery refers to as "textually promiscuous” 15, which Buffy vampire in Nosferatu), echoes Salanio in "The Merchant of Venice" in asking, "What news on the Rialto" (The certainly is. Intertextual allusions range widely through Wish, [3.9]); and the English vampire Drusilla, Spike's both pop and highbrow culture. For example, in one paramour, playing a variation on Othello, declares, "We early episode, Buffy replies to a sceptical Giles," I cannot can love quite well. If not wisely." (Crush [5.14]). Quoting believe that you of all people are trying to scully me" from the same play, Spike declares about the Slayer, "I'll (The Pack, [1.6]), a reference to Fox Mulder's FBI partner, chop her into messes" (School Hard [2.3]). When the Dana Scully, in The X-Files. When Xander dresses as a Scoobies go off to confront hell-god Glory in the Season Western hero for a fancy-dress party, he claims to come 5 finale, The Gift [5.22], and Buffy declares, "Everybody from "the country of Leone. It's in Italy, pretending to be knows their jobs. Remember, the ritual starts, we all Montana." - a reference to Sergio Leone's" “spaghetti” die," “Henry V”'s St. Crispin's Day speech, where Henry westerns which were set in the USA but actually made in rallies his troops on the eve of battle ("once more into Europe (Inca Mummy Girl [2.4]). Principal Snyder tells the breach, dear friends... we few, we happy few, we Xander that everything from his mouth is "an airborne band of brothers"), provides the comic interchange toxic event" (What's My Line, Part 1, [2.9]), a reference between Giles and Spike: to Don DeLillo's novel, "White Noise". Rogue-slayer Faith is so late in arriving that she "makes Godot seem punctual", a reference to Samuel Becket's play, "Waiting for Godot" (Enemies [3.17]). When Tara says, "Things fall apart, they fall so hard", the Irish poet, WB Yeats's "Second Coming" is the source (Entropy [6.18]). Ingmar Bergman's film, The Seventh Seal, which features the character of Death which plays a game of chess with a knight, is alluded to in this exchange between the Scoobies in Killed by Death [2.18]: Cordelia: You saw death? Willow: Did it have an hourglass? Xander: Ooh, if he asks you to play chess, don't even do it. The guy's, like, a wiz. Spike: Well, not exactly the St. Crispin's Day speech, was it? Giles: "We few, we happy few . . ." Spike: “ . .. we band of buggered." Despite the generally negative representation of religion in Buffy, the Bible is not neglected as a scource of intertextual allusion, as in Amends [3.10]. Angel has been returned from the hell-dimension Buffy had sent him at the end of Season 2 but, in despair at the evil side of his character, and encouraged by the promptings of the spirit that is “the First Evil (“Big Bad” of the final Season 7), he has a death-wish. As he tells Buffy, “It’s not the demon in me that needs killing, it’s the man.” And, referring back to his pre-vampire existence as a drunken In Dirty Girls [7.18], one of the slayers-in-waiting who are lout in Ireland, he asks, “Am I a thing worth saving? Am I billeted with Xander in preparation for the final battle a righteous man.” Buffy answers (echoing the words of with The First Evil comes into his bedroom to confide Jesus in “Matthew 25.40): ”Inasmuch as ye have done it her fears and her regret that she might die without ever unto the least of these, ... ye have done it to me”), “I "being with" a man. By the time another one comes in know everything that you did because you did it to me”. Chapter 1: Categories 25 Super-hero texts provide another rich source of occasionally talk directly, or wink, to the audience, this intertextual reference. When Buffy says, "my spider direct address breaking the "fourth wall"; however, it sense is tingling", (I Robot, You Jane, [1.8]) it is clearly a wasn't significant in non-comic films until the French reference to Spiderman. In Hush [4.10], a soldier in a Nouvelle Vague (New Wave) films of the late 1950's/early secret government underground organisation bemoans 60s and it is to be found even more so in the 1990s and the fact that he can't reveal his identity to impress girls later. 17 It can be a risky strategy because there is a pact but has to "Clark Kent [his] way through the dating between producers and audience, the latter enacting a scene and never use this unfair advantage," a reference "willing suspension of disbelief" (to use the term coined to Superman's mild-mannered alter ego. The superhero by the 18th century poet and critic, ST Coleridge) which references abound, typical of the self-referential process allows drama to work emotionally on the audience. This in Buffy which frequently draws attention to its own is perhaps more necessary in a fantasy genre where that constructedness. suspension of disbelief has to take account of a world where the laws of motion are somewhat different from Pastiche is a form of intertextuality where one work those we are used to in our everyday lives. However, imitates another, paying homage to another writer or modern audiences (or segments of them) have shown filmmaker's style (hence the French term "hommage" themselves prepared to accept the fact that certain texts which is also used in English to describe such allusions). draw attention to themselves as texts; indeed, part of It differs from its stable-mate, parody, in that parody the pleasure for audiences may be this flexible response tends to poke fun at the work it is imitating whereas which allows them to inhabit the world of the text from pastiche - sometimes referred to as "blank parody" - the inside, becoming involved and sharing the emotions expresses admiration for the work being referenced. In which the drama creates, while simultaneously seeing postmodernist texts, the hommages are not always there things from the outside, fully aware that what they are to make a thematic point: they are there to give pleasure seeing is not real and enjoying the text's playfulness. to a section of the audience - the "cineliterate" or "film buff" viewers – by allowing them to recognise the Buffy frequently draws attention to its own references. At the same time, the allusions are usually constructedness. A minor example of this self- such that they do not confuse the more "naïve" referentiality occurs in Once More with Feeling [6.7] members of the audience. A good example is to be when Buffy utters the remark, "Dawn's in trouble, it must found in Goodbye Iowa [4.14] where Giles and the be Tuesday", drawing attention to itself as a TV show Scoobies are hiding in Xander's basement. The males with a particular slot in the schedule, Tuesday being the are separated from the females by a carefully-placed evening the show was broadcast in the USA. Another curtain, a reference to the 1934 film, It Happened One way it draws attention to its own status as a "superhero" Night, directed by Frank Capra and starring Clark Gable TV show is to acknowledge the existence of other and Claudette Colbert. The function of this reference is fictional superheroes. Again, this risks interfering with not thematic: it is simply there for the pleasure of the "suspension of disbelief" - you don't get references recognition to the film-buff segment of the audience. to Eastenders in Coronation Street! - but the (Just to balance things out, it is followed by a reference postmodern audience seems to take it in its stride. For to the Roadrunner cartoon which is showing on example, in Halloween [2.6], when a spell cast by Ethan television, leading to an interesting discussion between Rayne (another English villain) turns everyone into the Willow and Buffy on genre, about the difference persona reflecting their Halloween costume, Willow between cartoon and documentary; a reference which bemoans the fact that Buffy has dressed up as a terrified, would be much more recognizable to most of the Buffy simpering, eighteenth-century noblewoman and wishes audience than the Capra allusion). she had picked a Xena the Warrior Princess costume instead. There are frequent references to Superman, 1.4.2 Self-referentiality and self-reflexiveness This is when a work of fiction openly refers to and such as Xander's occasional use of the expletive "Merciful Zeus"; and Giles is sometimes referred to as reflects upon its own process of production and its own Alfred, after Batman's prissy butler. In Enemies [3.17], fictional status and is one of the features Thomas Schatz Faith refers to the Scoobies as Buffy's "Superfiends", a identified 16 as being symptomatic of a genre's reference to a group of cartoon superheroes; and the "baroque" phase. It is not a totally new phenomenon. Scooby Gang itself comes from Scooby-Doo, a Hannah- Indeed, it can be found in some of the most mainstream Barbera cartoon series in which a group of friends and comedies of the 1940s and 1950s such as the Bob Hope- their dog (Scooby Doo) travel in a van solving strange Bing Crosby Road to ... films where characters would mysteries. 26 Chapter 1: Categories A much bolder example of self-reflexivity takes place in producers and writers admitted to frequenting and Normal Again [6.17] 18 where there are two levels of sometimes contributing to, pushing the self-reflexivity of reality within the diegesis, a "normal" one where there the episode to a new level. are no such things as vampires and demons, and the Buffyverse, where they are everyday fact of existence. Later, in a scene set in the Sunnydale of the The explanation is that Buffy is affected by a demon's "Buffyverse", Buffy describes her 'nightmare' to Xander: venom which causes her to hallucinate that she is in a "They told me that I was sick, I guess crazy, and that psychiatric hospital where she is being treated for the Sunnydale and all of this - none of it was real", to which schizophrenia, which makes her imagine there are such Xander replies, "Oh, come on. That's ridiculous. What? things as vampires and demons. In this reality, Buffy still You think this isn't real just because of all the vampires, lives with her family in LA, Buffy's mother is still alive and and demons, and ex-vengeance demons, and the sister still married to her father Hank, she has no little sister, that used to be a big ball of universe-destroying and she making an effort to "get well" by rejecting the energy...?" It is perhaps another example of the tonal fantasies about vampires and being a slayer (the shifts referred to earlier but it also draws attention to the premise, of course, on which the whole show is based). episode's fictional status by playing with the absurdity of When the doctor asks her, "Do you know where you the whole premise of the series. are?' and she replies "Sunnydale", the doctor says, "None of that's real. None of it. You're in a mental 1.5 Auteurism institution. You've been with us now for six years" (six In the 1950's, a group of French film critics around the years being the length of time the show had been journal, "Les Cahiers du Cinema" (Cinema Notebooks) running). The sequences in the hospital are given equal developed the idea that certain directors were the status as representing the episode's reality, and Buffy's "auteurs" (authors) of their films whereas others were return to the world of the Hellmouth is represented as if simply good craftsmen serving the needs of the script she has lost the battle and has totally succumbed to her rather than creative artists. An "auteur" would stamp illness. their style on a film, even while working in the highly controlled conditions of the Hollywood studio system, The doctor in the psychiatric hospital explains Buffy's and have a certain consistency of style from film to film, state of mind to her parents: as well as exploring similar themes and motifs across She's . . . created an intricate latticework to support her primary delusion. In her mind, she's the central figure in a fantastic world beyond imagination. . . She's surrounded herself with friends, most with their own superpowers ... who are as real to her as you or me. More so, unfortunately. Together they face ... grand overblown conflicts against an assortment of monsters both imaginary and rooted in actual myth. Every time we think we're getting through to her, more fanciful enemies magically appear . . . A magical key. Buffy inserted Dawn into her delusion, actually rewriting the entire history of it to accommodate a need for a familial bond. (To Buffy) Buffy, but that created inconsistencies, didn't it? . . . Your sister, your friends, all of those people you created in Sunnydale, they aren't as comforting as they once were. Are they? They're coming apart . . . Buffy, you used to create these grand villains to battle against, and now what is it? Just ordinary students you went to high school with. No gods or monsters ... just three pathetic little men ... who like playing with toys. different films. This theory had the effect of putting much emphasis on the film's mise en scene as opposed to the script; it also allowed people to take film especially popular film for a mass audience such as Hollywood's product - much more seriously. These critics (the best known of whom were François Truffaut and Jean-Luc Godard) used the theory as a way of getting to make their own films and winning attention for those films at the expense of an older generation of filmmakers and as such they were very successful. The theory itself was exported to Britain and to the USA and, while it no longer has the same influence it had among critics and academics, sidelined as it was by the "death of the author" theory developed by the French academic Roland Barthes, 19 it was used by the industry in marketing and passed over to some extent to the general public. In the 1960s, Alfred Hitchcock was one of the few directors known to audiences and that was largely due to his appearances introducing his TV series. Nowadays, many filmgoers are familiar with the names of Steven Spielberg, George Lucas, Francis Ford Coppola, The doctor's reference to "three pathetic little men" Martin Scorsese, Tim Burton and Quentin Tarantino etc., might well be an allusion to some of the criticisms made and many films open with the words, "A film by on the fan sites on the internet, sites which the [director]", even though the director may have had little Chapter 1: Categories 27 to do with writing or developing the script. Whereas Don't give people what they want, give them what they need. What they want is for Sam and Diane [in the US sitcom Cheers] to get together. Don't give it to them. Trust me . . People want the easy path, a happy resolution, but in the end, they're more interested in . . . No one's going to go see the story of [Shakespeare's] “Othello” going to get a peaceful divorce. People want the tragedy. They need things to go wrong, they need the tension. In my characters there's a core of trust and love that I'm very committed to. These guys would die for each other, and it's very beautiful. But at the same time, you can't keep that safety. Things have to go wrong, bad things have to happen. 22 genre is often thought to emphasise what is typical, general, conventional and average in film, auteurism emphasises what is unique, distinctive, inventive and challenging. One effect of the writings of Godard, Truffaut and others was to cause the study of popular, particularly Hollywood, film to be taken more seriously; nevertheless, it was some time before television was accorded similar status. However, a number of American television writers/producers are sometimes referred to as "TV auteurs", such as such as Steven Bochco (Hill St Blues, NYPD Blues), Chris Carter (The X-Files), David Chase (The Sopranos), Aaron Sorkin (The West Wing) and Joss Whedon. Perhaps the first one to be thought This statement perhaps explains Whedon's propensity to of in these terms was the late Gene Roddenbury (Star kill off sympathetic characters, from Jenny Calendar in Trek). Season 2 to Joyce Summers in Season 5 to Tara in Season 6. David Fury, executive producer/director/writer, Given that it takes a large number of people to make a commented: television series, it may seem perverse to single out an Losing these characters is what gave the show its weight. The fact that we were willing to take characters that we loved, that the fans loved and, for the purposes of the story, take it to darker places. 23 individual for auteur status and television is an area where it has been even more difficult than cinema for writers or directors to establish an individual presence. However, if such a term can be applied to television, Whedon's role would make him a prime candidate. 20 He wrote twenty-three episodes of Buffy and (despite never having directed before his involvement on the show) directed twenty-one episodes, including some of the most original, such as Hush, The Body, Restless and Once More with Feeling, for which he also wrote the music. But his influence is not limited to those episodes where he writes or directs; as he informed an interviewer for ET Onion on 5 September 2001: I have control over all the shows. I'm responsible for all the shows. That means that I break the stories. I often come up with the ideas and I certainly break the stories with the writers so that we all know what's going to happen. Then once the writers are done, I rewrite every script . . . Then I oversee production and edit every show, work with the composers and sound mixers. Inevitably every single show has my name on it somewhere and it is my responsibility to make it good. 21 Just as the theory of auteurism started with critics but was used in the industry as a marketing tool, so this "authored" status of a television programme is not simply a way of looking at the role of an individual within the collective production practices of a US network series: it also involves how it is marketed and one way of differentiating a show from the many that surround it. The idea of Buffy being an "authored" text could also be a way of making it stand out from the crowd of television programmes that jostle for space on the highly competitive network. 24 1.6 Cult The term cult can be defined in many different ways but cult usually involves a strong loyal audience that thinks intensely about a show, or a film, or a band. Another characteristic of a cult film or television show is that its most loyal and involved fans do more than just sit and watch it: they carry on their fandom to other activities. If, in the auteur theory, auteur status is conveyed not just One such activity, particularly in science fiction, is on directors who happen to be skilful in their craft but attending Conventions. One of the earliest such shows on "artists" with a "vision" who explore certain thematic was Star Trek, but the UK productions, Dr Who and Red concerns from film to film, what are Whedon's concerns Dwarf (which could count Andrew and Jonathan from as expressed through Buffy? One of these is for Buffy to Season 6’s nerd troika of villains among their fans) had a be something of a role model in terms of young female significant following, especially in the UK. In cinema, Star empowerment. Another might be what David Lavery Wars had a substantial cult following which created an calls Whedon's "religion" of narrative: 28 Chapter 1: Categories audience base for the trilogy of prequels beginning with The Phantom Menace in 1999. The Star Wars films were very successful at the box office but cult films and television shows more typically have a moderate level of popularity rather than a large one. Indeed, a degree of obscurity can make shows more popular with intense fans. Blade Runner, a science fiction film directed by Ridley Scott, was not particularly successful at the box office when released in 1982 but its subsequent cult following led to a “director’s cut” being released ten years later, followed by a Director’s Cut DVD and constant rumours of a subsequent release with restored footage. The Internet gave a great boost to cult activity and Buffy’s appearance coincided with the enormous expansion of the Internet. Online communities not only debated aspects of the show but took part in other activities such as writing fan fiction, costume creation, replica prop and model building, and cult fans would even create their own productions based on the formats and characters. (One video which parodied and pastiched Buffy is Fluffy the English Vampire Slayer and it even has its own fan site! 25) Thousands of such sites existed during the show’s first run and many continue their existence even after the series came to an end. Buffy conventions 26 were a major feature of fan activity and continue to draw large attendances after Buffy’s demise. The Internet also created a direct conduit between the fans and the producers. Joss Whedon spoke of how close this connection was: We have a connection with the Internet fan base… we sort of worship at the same altar. Me and my staff are the biggest Buffy nerds alive. It’s a kind of home to us too … when we could, we would get together and watch it together as a bunch of fans. 27 Chapter 1: Categories 29 Notes 1 Ellis, John, Visible Fictions. London: Routledge (1982). The extent to which Ellis’s observations are still valid are discussed in McQueen, David. Television: A Media Student’s Guide. London: Oxford University Press, 2001, pp 7-10; and Lacey, Nick, in the picture, issue 40, (Autumn 2000 Keighley); pp 6-7. 2 Bordwell, David and Thomson, Kirstyn. Film Art: An Introduction. Reading, London, Amsterdam: Addison-Wesley, 1979, p.18. 3 Patterson, John, “Move Over Hollywood”, The Guardian (supplement), Saturday May 20, 2006, p 59. 4 Whedonesque web site: http://whedonesque.com/comments/11496 (Retrieved 13 Dec 2006) 5 Lavery D “Emotional Resonance and Rocket Launchers”: Joss Whedon’s Commentaries on the Buffy the Vampire Slayer DVDs*http://www.slayage.tv/essays/slayage6/Lavery.htm [10 October 06) 6 Schatz, Thomas Hollywood Genres (Random House, 1981; cited by David Lavery : Coming Heavy in http://www.poppolitics.com/articles/2001-03-03-heavy.shtml (Visted 9/08/06)] 7 Altman, Rick, Film/Genre, (BFI, London, 1999) pp. 207 – 225 8 Clover, Carol, Men. Women and Chainsaws (BFI, London, 1993). 9 Dunbar, Brian, Comedy Films. (2002,Auteur, Leighton Buzzard, p. 77. 10 Clover, op.cit p.5. 11 City of Angels website: http://www.cityofangel.com/council/joss. html [16/10/06] 12 Collins, J, cited in Lisa Parks, “Brave New Buffy: Rethinking ‘TV Violence” , , in Quality Popular Television, ed Jancovich, and Lyons (London, BFI, 2003), p123 13 Evalu8.Org website: http://www.evalu8.org/staticpage? page=review&siteid=2092 (Retrieved 2 August 2006). 14 Stam, Robert, cited in “Buffy the Vampire Slayer As Quality Television” by David Lavery in Rhonda V Wilcox and David Lavery, (eds). Fighting the Forces, Rowman and Littlefield, 2002, p.xix 15 ibid, p.xxiv 16 Schatz, Thomas cited in Lavery, op.cit 17 South Park and The Simpsons both acknowledge their existence as shows with an audience but animations are already operating at a considerable distance from ‘reality’ (cf modality in Glossary of Media Terminology – Appendix 4.) 18 For an insightful discussion of this episode, see Thomas, Deborah "Re-reading Buffy: Normal Again", in Close-up, issue 01 (London, Wallflower Press, 2006), pp 214-234, 19 Barthes, Roland,The Death of the Author," in Image/Music/Text, trans. Stephen Heath, (Glasgow: Fontana-Collins, 1977) 20 Much of this section is based on Lavery, D, "A Religion in Narrative: Joss Whedon and Television Creativity", paper given by at the Blood, Text and Fears conference in Norwich, England, October 2002; http://www.slayage.tv/essays/slayage7/Lavery.htm] (Retrieved 10 October 2006) 21 AV Club website, http://www.avclub.com/content/node/24238 [Retrieved 9 October 2006] 22 Quoted in Lavery, op.cit. 23 Life is the Big Bad – season 6 Overview on season 6 DVD 24 Branston, Gill and Stafford, Roy: The Media Student’s Book, 3rd ed., Oxford: Routledge, 2003, pp 82,83. 25 www.fluffytheslayer.com (Retrieved 28 November 2006) 26 For accounts of Buffy fan activity see: Zweerink, Amanda, and Gatson, Sarah N, “www.buffy.com: Cliques, Boundaries and Hierarchies in an Internet Community” pp 239 -250 in Wilcox, Rhonda V and Lavery, David (eds) Fighting the Forces, Lanham, Boulder, New York and Oxford: Rowman and Littlefield, 2002, pp 239 - 250; and in Thomas, Deborah, “Specialness and Buffy fandom: a person footnote”, in “Reading Buffy”, Close-Up, issue 01, London: Wallflower Press, 2006, pp 235-241 27 It’s always been about the fans, Season 7 DVD featurette; quoted in, Close-up, op cit., p237. 30 Chapter 1: Categories Activities l Consider your own television viewing habits. Are there programmes you watch in darkness while concentrating on what is on screen? Are there others which you watch with lights on, perhaps while doing other things (chatting, homework, surfing the web on a laptop)? Discuss the advantages and disadvantages of each. l l l l l l Take a film or a television drama that you know well in an established genre and list the features that belong to the ‘repertoire of elements’. Are there any of the elements of the repertoire that are missing? Think about the term ‘gothic’ and see if you can identify elements of the gothic in any horror film or TV drama or in any episode of Buffy not dealt with in this chapter. Try to find a film or television drama that appears to be a generic hybrid. List the genres you can identify and the elements that indicate the genres. Look for films and television programmes (including adverts) which have aspects of intertextualty. What is the effect on you of this intertextuality? Humour? Pleasure in recognising the intertext? Irritation? Others? From a film or television drama you know well, see if you can identify sudden shifts in tone. Consider the effect on you of this shift. Look again at the characteristics of postmodernism in this chapter and then see if you can identify any features associated with postmodernism in any film or television programme you know well (including episodes from Buffy the Vampire Slayer not mentioned in this chapter). Chapter 1: Categories 31 32 Chapter 1: Categories Chapter 2: Language THIS CHAPTER AIMS TO EXPLORE FILM LANGUAGE IN BUFFY, IN PARTICULAR: l l l l l mise en scene and cinematography technical and cultural codes, polysemy and anchorage editing sound application to specific sequences Language is generally thought of as verbal 1 language but in the study of media, visual language (including non-verbal language such as gesture, stance and mannerisms, which are referred to as body language) is just as or even more important. Film and television share a common visual language using conventions established in the early years of cinema and codified during the Classic Hollywood Era (roughly, the late 1920s - early 1950s). The main elements of film language are mise en scene (what is captured on film), Figure 2.1 cinematography (how it is filmed), editing (how the footage is selected, joined and re-ordered) and sound. The light was used in different combinations depending 2.1 Mise en scene and Cinematography on the desired effects. Most films would use “high key” lighting where the fill light is bright enough to soften the harsh shadows made by the key light and would tend to Mise en scene refers to the image, to what is in the connote normality. An alternative combination would frame, how it is composed. This includes colour, lighting, give rise to low-key lighting where the fill-light is the illusion of depth and space. It also covers design insufficiently bright to soften the shadows made by the elements such as locations, set design, make-up, and key light, producing light and dark areas on the face and props. Performance is also an aspect of mise en scene, set. This would make the mood and tone of the film including actors' movement and body language, the more expressionist. It would often carry connotations of delivery of dialogue and blocking (the positioning of the danger, mystery, the threat of the unknown. actors in relation to objects and other actors). Some theorists 2 consider mise en scene - what is Lighting is one of the most important aspects of Buffy’s captured on film - to include cinematography - how it is mise en scene. Lighting in film has been based on the filmed - while others treat it separately. Cinematography tripartite (or three-point) lighting system developed in refers to the placement of the camera (camera angle, the classic era. It involved: movement and distance), the choice of lens and the way - - key light: back light: the main source of light, from the lenses are adjusted, and the choice of film stock. the front of the actor(s) and at a These are essential to the creation of meaning in the slight angle film, with long shots used to set the scene (referred to as from the rear and above, used establishing shots), close-ups to highlight emotion and to highlight and differentiate the medium shots for a variety of purposes. actor(s) from the background - fill light: low and near to camera, used to The angle of the camera in relation to the subject is also soften the shadows created by important, the convention being that a high-angled shot the key lighting. suggests vulnerability and powerlessness and a low- (See Figure 2.1 below) angled shot suggests power, threat, nobility etc (although these conventions must not be used mechanically: the context has to be taken into account). Chapter 2: Language 33 The camera also moves, whether by being mounted on the meaning so that the audience will read the signs in a little vehicle called a dolly and pushing it along rails to the way that the makers want (a “preferred meaning” – produce a smooth movement (a tracking or dolly shot), see Chapter 4: Audience), a process known as or on its axis, either sideways - known as a pan (left-to- anchorage. (This is a metaphor, linked to the way an right or right-to-left) or up and down which is known as a anchor limits the way in which the tide can move the tilt. The camera can be mounted on a vehicle (trucking position of a stationery ship). In print, anchorage often shot), on a helicopter (an aerial shot) or on a crane which takes the form of a caption to tie down the meaning of a allows the camera to swoop up or down while moving photograph. In film and TV drama, sound – particularly forward or back. The camera can also be hand held or non-diegetic music – often fulfils this function (see attached to a Steadicam which is camera attached to a below). camera operator via a mechanical harness which reduces or eliminates the unsteadiness of the operator's motion. It is frequently used on locations where the ground is not smooth enough for tracks to be laid or where the director wants to give an impression of excitement, of being in among the action. In films made for the cinema, the single camera is almost always the norm, with the same scene being shot several times from different camera positions. This is a very time-consuming process, as the lighting etc has to be set up for each camera placement. Most television, including news, game-shows, chat-shows and sitcoms, tend to favour a multi-camera setup, with the action being recorded simultaneously by different cameras and the most appropriate shot being selected at the time for live broadcast or recorded (on video tape as opposed to film) for broadcast later. This is much less expensive than the single-camera setup but does not give the same look to the programme. Single-camera is also used in television for one-off drama or mini-series (but not soap). The expenditure has to be justified by an increase in audience and advertising revenue which is why many series, even those with a reasonable audience base, are pulled before the end of the season to be replaced by other shows which, the networks hope, will win a bigger share of the audience. 2.3 Editing: the Continuity System When shooting has finished, it has to be edited - cut and joined with other footage - for the film to make sense. The editor, working with the director, will have a number of choices to make which is allowed by the footage taken from different angles etc. In television, the ratio of unused film to finished film will be lower than in a film made for the cinema, not only because of the expense of the film stock which has to be developed but also because of the time available. An American network series lasting 22 weeks will have an extremely tight work schedule as they have to produce the equivalent of about eight feature films in a year. This pressure on production is eased by using the same locations repeatedly, but an expensive series has to look expensive and this requires considerable skill from the creative and technical personnel. Most film and television drama use a set of conventions which were developed from the early years of film making. At first, scenes were shot with a static camera with the actors moving in and out of the space in front of the camera. As cameras became smaller and more mobile, shots were taken from different angles and distances which created the need for a set of rules which allowed the audience to make sense of the nowfragmented sequence of images. The system that 2.2 Technical and Cultural Codes, Polysemy and Anchorage became dominant in Hollywood and eventually in most filmmaking is called continuity editing, a set of Mise en scene, cinematography and sound are used in conventions designed to make the editing "invisible" film to create meaning, ie they give rise to codes and and so draw the audience into the drama and helping conventions which audiences have learned to decode. the process of "suspension of disbelief" that most Technical codes refer to meaning created by the drama depends on. technical apparatus of filming such as camera angle, lighting etc. Cultural codes refer to the meaning a One of the main conventions is the 180° rule (or 180° culture gives to particular signs, such as colour, clothing, axis of action), where the camera can be positioned at objects etc. various points on one side of an imaginary line drawn between the main actors in the scene, but could not Not everyone reads or decodes signs in the same way, "cross the line" until the main characters had an idea referred to as polysemy (“poly” = many; “seme” significantly changed position, for fear of disorienting = sign). The makers of films and other media texts often the audience. Another of these conventions is the eye- seek to limit the scope of polysemy and so “tie down” line match where a character looks out of the space and 34 Chapter 2: Language the next shot is of whoever or whatever the character is become more cinematic in style, in line with the desire supposed to be looking at. Conversations between two of Whedon (a former Film Studies student) to get away characters are filmed observing this convention, with the from the “radio with pictures” approach he felt same scene shot from different camera positions, going dominated much of television. from one character to another. Typically, the scene begins with an establishing shot which would be a long One of the most noticeable aspects of Buffy's mise en shot to take in both characters and their surroundings. scene is the way that light and darkness alternate. Night The camera would then come in closer with a two-shot has connotations of darkness and evil, when the (a medium close-up of both characters' heads) followed vampires and demons come out to play. In the first by a shot over the shoulder of one character giving a episode, Welcome to the Hellmouth [1.1], for example, close up of the other, and then the positions would be a scene begins with a dissolve from Buffy talking to Giles reversed so that we have an over-the-shoulder close-up in the school library ("Come on - this is Sunnydale. How of the other character. This is followed by a bigger close- bad an evil can there be?") to a shot of a typical yellow up of the first character filmed at an angle and filling the school bus, with its connotations of everyday normality frame, followed by the same shot of the other character and security, passing by the entrance to the school. The from the opposite angle. From time to time there is a re- camera descends slowly behind some bushes and establishing shot, a long-shot reminding us of the seems to sink through the ground into the underground characters' situation, with the process beginning over catacombs which provide the lair where the Master, the again if the length of the scene justifies it. ancient vampire who is the "Big Bad" of Season 1, is trapped. It is very gloomy, being lit by ornate candles (a 2.4 Sound Sound is the other main element of film language and consists of diegetic and non-diegetic sound. Diegetic sound arises directly from the story events (the word comes from the term diegesis, a word of Greek origin denoting the world of the story). If the characters can hear it, it is diegetic sound. It is not necessarily recorded on the set: it can be added in post-production). Nondiegetic sound is added for atmosphere and mostly consists of music. (These are critical terms rather than ones used in the industry where "scource music" is used for for diegetic music and "background music" for nondiegetic music). Non-diegetic sound is particularly important in the horror genre where it is used to create an unsettling atmosphere punctuated by moments of sheer terror. The famous shower scene in Hitchcock's Psycho would have been nowhere near as effective without Bernard Hermann’s score, particularly the screeching strings which accompany the climax of the scene, the brutal murder of Marion Crane (Janet Leigh). A feature of non-diegetic sound frequently used in action genres is the stinger chord, a strongly accented chord with a sudden sforzando (increase in volume) used to register shock or surprise. typical gothic trapping) whose flickering light illuminates only briefly what is in shadow. We then see a couple of vampires, one carrying a flaming torch. The camera pans from right to the left and back again, not stopping long enough to allow us to identify the sinister-looking objects lying around. We hear one of them, Luke, chanting: "The sleeper will wake. The sleeper will wake. The sleeper will wake. The sleeper will wake, and the world will bleed." and we cut to a medium close-up on Luke, revealing his vampiric features. He looks upward as he chants "Amen!, as the scene fades to black on a stinger chord. Another notable segue, this time from darkness to light, occurs in Hush [4.10] where Buffy and Riley have been battling against the Gentlemen, fairy-tale monsters who steal human hearts. The battle takes place in a clock tower at night and when they succeed in destroying the Gentleman there is a dissolve to a wide overhead establishing shot of Sunnydale campus in sunshine, connoting that the danger of the darkness is over as we return to the light. In narrative terms this indicates the return to equilibrium after the disruption caused by the Gentlemen's arrival (see Chapter 3: Narrative). Camera angle, with low angled-shots connoting a sense 2.5 Film Language in Buffy In the first season of Buffy the Vampire Slayer, 16 mm of power and authority, and high-angled shots used to connote powerlessness and vulnerability, is used film cameras were used. This is most often used in low- frequently in Buffy. For example, the title sequence budget films and documentaries. When a second which consists of a montage sequence of around fifty season was commissioned, 16 mm cameras were seconds of rapid cuts varies from season to season but replaced by 35 mm cameras which are used by most always ends on a low-angled shot of Buffy. In Season 4, films destined for the cinema. This allowed the show to for example, the sequence ends on a shot of Buffy taken Chapter 2: Language 35 from Anne [3.1] where she is framed at first from a high they languish on the floor drinking and listening to rock angle, perhaps to make clear that she is wielding a music. Camera angle, then, is used to suggest role hammer and sickle used for its symbolic value 3 but then the camera swoops down before settling on a low- reversal, with the responsible Buffy filmed from a low angle and the irresponsible adults filmed from high. angled shot of Buffy preparing for battle and which suggests that she has regained her power after a period Buffy also uses editing as an expressionistic device of uncertainty. In Hush [4.10], a high angled shot is used while, by and large, sticking to the well established rules to suggest the powerlessness of the university wicca of continuity editing. The fact that most films and almost group that Willow and Tara are attending for the first all network television drama adhere to this system does time. The group are sitting in a circle chanting, not necessarily mean it is rigid and predictable. Within suggestive of magic; in the dialogue there is an abrupt the continuity system individual directors and editors can transition of register, from ""We come together, achieve subtle and original effects. A director has the daughters of Gaia, sisters to the moon we walk with the choice of privileging editing over mise en scene by the darkness, the wolf at our side through the waterfall of use of lots of rapid cutting or privileging mise en scene power to the blackest heart of eternity. . ." to "I think we and cinematography by using longer takes with variety should have a bake sale", after which the meeting being provided by camera movement and constant descends into bickering and Willow is criticised for the reframing. In action sequences, including the fight idea that a wicca group might actually attempt some scenes in Buffy, editing is to the fore, with rapid cutting spells. The scene begins with an overhead establishing giving a sense of energy and dynamism; in quieter shot taking in the whole circle, the high angle scenes there tend to be longer takes. The longer takes suggesting the powerlessness of the group of "wanna often set up the audience for the surprise of the sudden blessed-be”s, as Willow later describes them to Buffy. cut. Editing and cinematography are equally important in creating meaning and it is by alternating the rhythm Another episode in which camera angle is used of editing between fast and slow that a scene can be expressively is Band Candy [3.6]. In this episode, Mayor most effective. Wilkins plans to steal babies and offer them in sacrifice to a demon to whom he is indebted and, in order to Unlike a film, which normally has one director and editor, create a diversion, an accomplice puts a substance into television is likely to have several different directors, band candy (a confectionery used to raise funds for the editors, writers etc. However, the freedom of these school band) which makes adults behave like individuals is likely to be limited by the need for a adolescents. This episode is largely comic in tone, "house style" with a consistent look from episode to particularly in the scenes involving Giles and Joyce, episode. Given Whedon's importance to the show, the Buffy's mother who end up having sex (twice) on top of a house style will be one that owes much to film as police-car, having knocked out a policeman and stolen opposed to televisual style. Whedon, for example, is his handcuffs. (Buffy thinks she has got to them in time fond of the long take and for directors like Max Ophuls to stop anything happening. It is not until several (La Ronde) who, according to Whedon, " use the frame episodes later that Buffy finds out that they had had sex cinematically". 4 when she, temporarily able to read minds, discovers their secret, much to Joyce's mortification). Before this In Hush [4.10], for example, there is a scene where particular scene, the band candy is beginning to make Giles's girlfriend, Olivia, gets out of bed and walks its influence felt and Buffy discovers Giles and Joyce in downstairs towards the window where she is about to be her house discussing Buffy's behaviour and what they terrified by one of the Gentlemen going past the are going to do about it (dramatic irony in view of what window. Typically this would be shot with several cuts follows). The scene starts on a low angle on Buffy, then with camera positions in the bedroom and then cutting to a high angled shot of Joyce while the camera downstairs. By using a single take, however, Whedon on Giles is level. It then cuts to the same low-angled creates a fluidity which will be shortly interrupted by very close-up on Buffy. This is followed by a high angled shot short takes when she goes to the window and discovers of both Giles and Joyce sharing the frame. A close of the Gentlemen. Giles and Joyce and allow us to see a conspiratorial smile develop between them, suggesting they are up to Music is also central to the film language used in Buffy. something. After a cut to Buffy in close-up, we return to There is much diegetic music, mainly from the many a high-angled shot of the couple. Buffy goes and we cut "indie" bands which play in the Bronze but, as is to back to the couple, who are framed from a high angle as expected from a series which aspires to a cinematic 36 Chapter 2: Language style, and from the horror genre, non-diegetic music is sense of loss, and continues over the dissolve which to the fore. A particular use of non-diegetic sound is the takes Buffy back home, walking sadly in the night. There first few bars of Neff Herder's title music. It starts with is a brief interlude while Xander expresses his organ music and a wolf's howl, connoting gothic and unconditional love for Anya before we return to the horror, but quickly segues to rock music, connoting forlorn Buffy arriving home. There is a close-up of Buffy youthful energy and modernity and establishing from the on the right of the frame looking left, followed by a outset the generic hybridity which will be such an dissolve (which lasts about 9 seconds) to a close-up of important feature of the series. Riley in the helicopter, on the left of the frame looking right, in a graphic match which for a second has them Much of the non-diegetic music is typical of the horror both in the frame, their faces close and facing each genre, with the sound of the organ and shrieking strings other. During this dissolve the theme is played once prominent (as in the example below of the opening more but slowly and melancholically on a piano, before sequence of the first episode). A particular technique the screen fades to black. involving non-diegetic music is the use of letmotifs. These are musical themes involving particular characters, for example, the ominous theme used at the entry of Darth Vader in Star Wars, and used with variations throughout the trilogy when he appears. Christophe 2.6 (i) Specific Sequences Opening scene of first episode: Welcome to the Hellmouth Beck's Buffy-Riley leitmotif in Seasons 4 and 5 is very Since this is the first scene of the whole series it is worth effective (and one which Joss Whedon preferred to the examining in detail to see how film language is used to Buffy-Angel theme). 5 Buffy and Riley are clearly create atmosphere. This is achieved through a attracted to each other from when they first meet but a combination of mise en scene: the dark building, the certain awkwardness between them prevents the unsettling objects in the science room, the relationship from developing. In Hush, however, the transformatiom of the girl into into vampire; couple meet on a street in Sunnydale where the town cinematography: the camera, constantly moving and has been struck dumb. They embrace for the first time reframing, going from long-shot to medium shot to and the romantic theme swells on the soundtrack. It is close-up; editing: the series of dissolves, the long take used on numerous occasions later but with variations. (another example of Whedon's fondness for the The relationship is doomed because Riley doesn't think technique) followed by a sudden cut; and the sound, Buffy can love him given that she is much more powerful both diegetic - the sound of breaking glass - and non- than him, especially after he loses the special power diegetic - the eerie music on the soundtrack with lots of Maggie Walsh had implanted in him. In Into the Woods shrieking string sounds and the general mood of [5.10], he gives her an ultimatum - to meet him before he uncertainty. takes off on a military mission and try and persuade him to stay, or he goes. She rejects his ultimatum but, after This scene of approximately 2 minutes and 12 seconds Xander persuades her to swallow her pride, she runs to takes place - characteristically - at night. There is what where the helicopter is taking off. However, she is too appears to be a point-of-view shot of the front entrance late: Riley can't hear her cries as her voice is drowned of Sunnydale High. (POV is a common device in horror; out by the noise of the helicopter. in this case, no character's POV is established, suggesting that the device is used just for its unsettling The Buffy-Riley leitmotif gets its final airing during this quality). Later in the many episodes to come we will scene but the orchestration changes from romance to often see this building in the bright sunlight but at night pathos, marking the end of their relationship. The the shadows give it a sinister air. A series of dissolves leitmotif is first hinted at discretely during the scene and tracking shots takes us inside the school building where Xander is persuading Buffy to go after him. As she and through the corridors to a science classroom with gets nearer the rendezvous place, whole bars of the close-ups on a table where a number of sinister-looking theme can be heard. Buffy is too late and, although objects add to the sense of unease. This atmosphere of Buffy shouts at him as the helicopter taking him away tension is suddenly increased by the violent sound of a ascends, the noise of the helicopter drowns out her window breaking. We see a leather-jacketed arm voice and he leaves. Here the theme becomes much violently entering the frame to smash the window and more pronounced but, unlike in its original airing where we cut to a smug young man accompanied by a pretty, it is lush and romantic, here it is orchestrated in a much blonde, anxious-looking student ("Are you sure this is a more poignant way, anchoring both Buffy and Riley's good idea?"). Clearly they are sneaking into school for a Chapter 2: Language 37 "make-out" session. The frame goes black, filled by the with an alternation between the two main genres - young man's jacket as he leads the girl into the building. gothic horror and high school/youth - as well as There is a cut to a corridor in the building and we follow introducing us to the main characters. (Not all the shots the young couple through the shadows. The shot in the sequence are described below). continues uncut for one minute and, by camera movement, reframing and blocking, a whole variety of The sequence starts with the sound of a wolf howling shots, from long-shot to close-up, is achieved. They stop and an organ playing, both having connotations of the and there is a two-shot in close-up which allows us to horror genre, especially in its gothic form. A number of see the contrast between the smugness of the boy and rapid images are flashed onto the screen, including the anxiety of the girl. As they are about to kiss, they are upside-down gothic lettering, to be replaced by the startled by a noise. Once again we hear the high-pitched word "Buffy" against the background of a full moon, strings. The man teases her about the sound's possible which also has connotations of horror. However, the supernatural origin. In reply to her "maybe it's word "Buffy" is in a modern, almost hand-written font, in something . .", he replies, "Maybe it's some THING!" contrast to the gothic font used for "The Vampire and his fingers enter the frame showing a "creepy" Slayer" which immediately follows. This keys us once gesture. The camera follows him to the right, in medium again into the gothic horror and high school/youth shot, as he checks the corridor and assures her they are genres. alone. She walks in front of him into close-up, allowing the anxiety clearly to register on the young woman's The moon gives way to diabolic imagery from an ancient face as she asks him if he's sure. She is looking out of book, followed by a close-up of such a tome with the the frame as she says "ok" and seems to be turning title "Vampyr" (note the ancient spelling) held in back to face the boy and resume their embrace but someone's hands. Just as we have a quick close-up of a when she turns towards him she is transformed into a crucifix - the religious symbol signifying good and hideous vampire. (Traditional vampire films emphasise protection against evil - being taken out of its box, there the vampire's fangs; Buffy adds a feature involving the is a rapid segue with the organ music being replaced by complete transformation of the face - known as the raucous rock music, with drums and guitar to the fore. "game" look - when the vampire is ready to kill.) The Again, the combination of rock music and organ music shock of the transformation is accentuated by the cut, all anchors the generic hybridity, the organ music relating the more noticeable in that it is the first for a minute. to horror while the rock music connotes youth. This She sinks her fangs into his neck and she drags him segue takes place over a rapid montage of demonic down, out of the frame where she completes the kill. images, with slam zooms (ie extremely fast zooms) of There is a sudden fade to black before the credit eyes and fangs, a close up of a vampire's face, a crucifix, sequence fills the screen. a leather-bound book, another vampire with a hideous grin. Then there is a cut to Buffy fighting a vampire in The opening sequence, therefore, sets up the medium shot, followed by a cut to a long shot of the atmosphere of the horror and high-school genres (which fight which allows us to see it is in a graveyard at night, will dominate the first three Seasons) as well as indicate and another cut to an example of Buffy's martial arts that there will be surprises in store. If Whedon's mission acrobatics. This is followed by a close-up of the vampire statement about gender role-reversal applies to the Darla (whom we encountered in the opening sequence), diminutive blond victim turning the tables on the a cut to the iron gate of the graveyard with some sort of monster, it also applies to the gender relationships gargoyle carved into it, a shot of Buffy in medium close- between female vampire and male victim. up and another one of her seeming to fall backwards. All these shots have been crammed into the first three (ii) Title sequence 6 seconds of the sequence. The title sequence of the first episode consists of a rapid montage which lasts about 48 seconds and has The horror shots of this sequence alternate with high- approximately 65 shots, giving an average length of shot school shots. We see a close-up showing the trainer-clad per second around 0.7 and, given that some of the shots feet of several students in a gym and then we cut to are a bit longer, such as the ones introducing the main Buffy practising her cheer-leader routines. This is characters, many of the shots are so short - half a dozen followed by a shot of the front of Sunnydale High in frames (the PAL system used in Europe runs at 25 frames bright sunshine, followed by a close-up of Buffy smiling, per second) that their effect is almost subliminal. The perhaps in class. This is followed by a close-up of a sequence prepares us for the hybrid nature of the series green-eyed kitten (cats have traditionally been 38 Chapter 2: Language associated with witchcraft) as Sarah Michelle Gellar's angle medium close-up of Buffy, her crucifix prominently name appears on screen. There is a low-angle shot on displayed, the angle again connoting power and Buffy, connoting her power and authority, followed by a authority. The words "Created by Joss Whedon" appear shot of her once again fighting demons, followed by a and the sequence ends with fade out. shot of a demon made to look even more sinister by the low angle key lighting. Then we have a shot where the This rapid montage of shots gives a good idea of the only thing showing in the black frame is the key-lit face content and style of the episode: fast-paced, full of of Buffy, followed by one that seems to come from the action, with both work (fighting demons) and leisure bottom of the stairs leading to a cellar, with Willow's represented, and the alternation of day and night, high face appearing behind the slightly-open door. Then we school and graveyard. see a couple of tarantulas - often used in horror because the combination of the crawling and the hairy texture is (iii) very effective in giving the audience "the wiggins" - This scene begins with a dissolve from a wide shot of crawling over some books. Then there is a big close-up Sunnydale to a close-up of the clock on the tower where of Buffy from a low angle. Similar images are repeated the Gentlemen are holed up. The gothic lettering, with a throughout the sequence. spider’s web-like design, has connotations of the Hush: The Gentlemen at work macabre and this is anchored by screeching violins. We The shots where the characters, and the actors who play cut to long-shot taking in the whole tower, the slow them, are introduced are slightly longer than the other tracking shot from a low angle suggesting the power clips. There are a couple of shots of Xander with the and danger that lies within it. The frame is canted (a name of the actor, Nicholas Brendon, on screen. We are “Dutch angle”) connoting that something is wrong. We introduced to an anxious-looking Willow behind a cut to a medium close-up of a door in the tower but we computer. Just as the book represents tradition so the see only the bottom half. It swings open, the creaking computer symbolises modernity, and Willow's skill with sound connoting menace, and then we see one of the the computer often combines with Giles's learned tomes Gentlemen but only from the knees down. He is floating as they try to solve problems to aid Buffy in her duties. about two feet above the ground, quickly followed by The actress's name, Alison Hannigan, appears on screen another of the Gentlemen, followed by another creature and continues as we cut to a close-up of a smiling but who is walking on the ground though crouching low. Willow. There are four shots of Cordelia with the name We cut to a lateral tracking shot which allows us to see of the actress, Charisma Carpenter, on screen, the first two of the Gentlemen (there are five in total) and their three close-ups of her in class and the last at night minions, whose arms rotate manically, in contrast the dancing in The Bronze night-club, one of the key Gentlemen’s smooth, stately movement. They are settings for the series. We then see an action shot of wearing straightjackets, very grubby-looking Buffy landing from the ceiling, and a close up of Angel straightjackets, but with the arms untied, suggesting who seems only to be lit by backlighting. A close-up of madness and mayhem unleashed. Giles in dark surroundings, the light shining on his glasses (an important prop in his early characterisation) This is followed by a wide shot of four Gentlemen with the name of the actor, "Anthony Stewart Head as flanked by two of their minions. The Gentlemen’s shiny Giles" on screen (the name of the character as well as shaven heads appear skeletal and they are grinning the actor perhaps suggesting a certain status for the diabolically through metallic teeth, connoting a ferocity character and actor), a cut to a shot from behind Giles behind their civilised air. We can now see their clothing. showing him in close up turning round to face the They are dressed in pin-stripe suits like City gentlemen camera, again the light being very noticeable on his and are carrying what at first appears to be typical City glasses, a shot of the Master, the Big Bad of the first briefcases but are actually doctors’ bags with the season, then a cut to a guillotine, Buffy with a cross-bow medical instruments for removing hearts. Not only their (in addition to her wooden stakes, a key item in her attire but also the fact that they are floating above the armoury), another action shot of Buffy, a return to the ground gives them a haughty, patriarchal air, in contrast upside down and gothic lettering from the start of the to their crazed minions who do most of the dirty work sequence intercut with Buffy, Giles, Xander and Willow in and whose arms almost drag along the ground. the library (another key location of the first three seasons) getting ready to go out and confront evil. The We cut to a shot of the Gentlemen from behind heading scene ends with a repeat of the words "Buffy" and through the main street of Sunnydale, suggesting the "Slayer" with the camera tilting up to accentuate the low terror in wait for the sleeping citizens. We then cut to a Chapter 2: Language 39 long shot of the outside of a house, the battered Citroen frantic, preparing us for the incision he is about to effect. car telling us it’s Giles’s place. We cut inside to see Giles, In the final moments of this grisly surgery the non- asleep, and Olivia, awake, in bed. In a long take of 32 diegetic music combines with the diegetic squelching seconds we see Olivia put on her dressing gown and go sound, indicating that the incision is being made. downstairs. The atmosphere of tension is anchored by the continuation of the non-diegetic music, string The sound stops as we cut back to inside the clock instruments but played at a lower volume, which allows tower where a close-up of a jar between the hands of us to hear the diegetic sounds. We cut to a close-up of one of the gentlemen indicates that the operation has Olivia allowing us to detect the anxiety on her face. She been successful and it is placed alongside another five. opens the curtains and we see Olivia’s point-of-view shot The camera pans across and tilts up to reveal one of the – one of the Gentlemen floating by in the depth of the Gentlemen in medium close-up looking very pleased frame. There is a cut to Olivia who seems to be trying to and proud of his night’s work, then we cut to his four make sense of what she has seen and a sudden cut to a colleagues, again from a low angle, applauding politely big close-up of one of the Gentlemen floating by, and grinning inanely. We then cut back to the first grinning diabolically outside the window. We cut to a Gentleman gesturing modestly, as if to say “it was close up showing the terror in Olivia’s expression, the nothing really”, the excessive politeness and formality, shock being anchored by a stinger chord followed by a contrasting with the grisly deed just accomplished and number of high-pitched violin notes in quick succession reinforcing the horror of the act. as Olivia recoils in horror. Here the move from long takes to very short takes emphasises the shock. (iv) A cut then takes us to the exterior of the student hall of was also the final few seconds of the end of the previous residence where Buffy and Willow live. A wide tracking episode and so viewers were to some extent prepared shot emphasises the white picket fence, frequently used for it. The mise en scene and cinematography are used in American films as a symbol of suburban normality, expressively to underline the pathos of Joyce’s death safety and ordinariness – a normality which is about to and Buffy’s reaction to its discovery. It begins with a be shattered. One of the gentlemen comes into the medium close-up of Buffy coming in the front door and frame but only the middle third of his body is shown, discovering flowers which had been sent to her mother. emphasising his white, bony, veiny hands twitching in A close up gives us Buffy’s point of view of the writing on anticipation of the work they are about to perform. He the card and then back to Buffy for her comment, is joined by one of his colleagues as they float through “there’s still a couple of guys getting it right”. There is a the gate towards the building. cut to a mid-shot of Buffy from another angle and as she The Body The first scene takes place at the start of the teaser but approaches the foot of the stairs and shouts up to her After following the Gentlemen inside the building (and mother, we see into the living room where Joyce is at one point we are tricked into thinking that it’s Buffy sprawled across the couch. The shot is in shallow focus and Willow’s bedroom they are heading for), we stop at so we can’t quite work out yet that she is dead. We see a bedroom door where one of the minions knocks on it before Buffy does which makes it more effective as we the door. Inside a young man gets out of bed and goes can anticipate Buffy’s shock before it happens. to the door which opens to reveal, in medium close-up, the terrifying faces of two Gentlemen. We cut to a Buffy then discovers her mother and we cut from a reaction shot of the terrified young man an then cut medium close-up of Buffy and her eyeline match leads back to the doorway through which two of the minions us to Buffy’s point-of-view shot of her mother and we can enter the room and drag the young man (who, of course, see from her open, fixed eyes that she is dead, even if cannot shout out as he has lost his voice like everyone Buffy is not yet prepared to accept it. The teaser ends else in town). The two Gentlemen then float into the on a medium close-up of an even more alarmed Buffy room, framed at a low angle to emphasise their power saying “Mom? Mom? Mommy?” (the latter expression, and the danger they represent, and by the end of the being more child-like, stressing her fear and inviting shot they are hovering right above the petrified student. greater sympathy for her) before we cut to the credit One of the Gentlemen opens his bag to remove a sequence. scalpel, and we cut back to the terrified victim trying to struggle free, and then back to another low-angled shot After the credit sequence we go to a short scene from of the other Gentleman as he politely accepts the earlier in the season, Christmas dinner at Joyce’s with scalpel. The music on the soundtrack becomes more Giles and the Scoobies present, a scene that could 40 Chapter 2: Language temporarily lull us into the feeling that things might work conversation between Dawn and a boy in her art class out all right. (This scene is the only one in the episode who sympathises with her recent emotional problems. where the tone is at all humorous; in the rest of the The Art room has glass walls and so we are able to see episode it is sad and full of pathos). A sharp cut from a Buffy’s entry in the background. At first we can’t see her smiling Joyce to a close-up of her clearly dead clearly but when she crosses from right to left behind expression takes us back to reality. Buffy’s panic at Dawn (who is in close-up), there is a rack-focus where finding her mother like this is expressed through the Dawn goes out of focus and Buffy into focus, which hand-held camerawork as she rushes around, phones an allows us to see the dread in Buffy’s expression at having ambulance and tries to administer mouth-to-mouth to break the news to Dawn. The camera cuts back to resuscitation. This is one very long take lasting 2 minutes close-ups of Dawn and her friend before a cut to Buffy, 24 seconds and is mostly in medium shot or medium again in the depth of the frame, entering the classroom, close-up. The take ends with a big close-up of the and back to Dawn and her friend. Dawn has not yet seen keypad on the phone as she dials Giles’s number. As she Buffy and carries on her conversation (in shot/reverse- phones Giles her actions become more mechanical, shot) about “crucial stuff” going on in her life. suggesting a sense of numbness from the shock, and this is expressed in the camerawork which becomes Buffy gradually comes closer to where Dawn is but Dawn more slow and steady. still hasn’t seen her, the delay increasing the viewer’s sympathy for Buffy in the task she has to carry out. There There is another shot which temporarily misleads us is a close-up with Dawn smiling and Buffy out of focus, in where Joyce is shown responding to the paramedics’ the middle pane of the glass wall, a frame within a treatment; she speaks to Buffy and we cut to an frame, as she says “Dawn”. We cut to a close-up of the ambulance where a paramedic says” it’s a miracle”, surprised Dawn, followed by medium close-ups of Buffy making us think she’s somehow survived, followed by a trying to decide how to begin. There is a cutaway to the cut to a hospital bed, where Joyce says to Buffy. “thank student’s drawing, followed by a medium close-up of the God you found me in t…” before an abrupt cut to a art teacher whose expression indicates that she realises close-up of Buffy, showing that it had been the it must be something serious. A number of reaction dramatisation of Buffy’s wishful thinking. Joyce is well shots, Dawn’s and her classmates’, occur before Dawn and truly dead and has been for some time. leaves the room with Buffy. The role of silence is particularly effective in this scene Buffy and Dawn are at first in medium shot then the and elsewhere in the episode which is particularly camera gets closer, framing them together in a two-shot unusual in that there is no non-diegetic sound as Buffy is still trying to find the right words for her throughout the whole episode. There is, instead, a very bewildered sister. There are occasional cutaways to other effective use of diegetic sound and, indeed, total silence students in the vicinity and Dawn’s bemused classmates. on occasions. In the opening sequence, when the A shot/reverse-shot sequence of close-ups allows us to paramedics leave after examining Joyce and while Buffy see both Buffy’s pain and Dawn’s bewilderment (with is waiting for Giles to arrive, she throws up and then further cutaways to the now more-concerned classmates) goes to the window. The lack of non-diegetic music and then Buffy finally tells Dawn about their mother’s makes us all the more aware of the diegetic sounds, death. We don’t hear the actual words because it is shot including the delicate tinkle of wind chimes. She looks from the back of the classroom and we can’t hear the out the door and we hear signs of life in the distance. words from behind the glass walls. This more effectively There is a big close-up of Buffy, her face seemingly conveys Dawn’s shock at the news than if we were to devoid of colour (this effect intensified by over-exposing hear her actual words, silence once again connoting the the shot), as we hear the faint sounds of the distant shock and feeling of numbness; we only hear, faintly, traffic and a far-off musical instrument playing. This Dawn’s muffled cries and the occasional “no!” as she uncanny atmosphere is emphasised when the spell is takes in what happens as she collapses. The scene ends broken by Giles’s sudden arrival. The use of diegetic on close-ups and medium close-ups of her classmates sound in this scene effectively conveys the sense of and teacher reacting to what has happened, with a numbness and unreality which Buffy feels. close-up of the drawing Dawn had been working on. Another scene from The Body where film language is Complete silence is very unusual in film, and in even the used effectively is where Buffy goes to break the bad quietest scenes there will be some ambient sound, news to Dawn. Buffy’s entry is preceded by a however sleight. Total silence on the soundrack is very Chapter 2: Language 41 rare and disquieting.. A scene where silence is used effectively in The Body is the one where Xander and Anya are going to meet Willow and Tara in the dorm, before going together to the hospital. We see Willow, in shock, trying to find the most appropriate thing to wear. We then cut to Xander and Anya heading towards the hall of residence and on the soundtrack the silence is total, without even the far off ambient sounds Buffy hears in the earlier sequence. It is through this silence that Xander’s feeling of numbness at the news of Joyce’s death is expressed. 42 Chapter 2: Language Notes 1 This study does not dwell in any great detail on the language of the script which is dealt with in depth in Michael Adams’ Slayer Slang: A Buffy Lexicon (opus cit). 2 For example, Kawin, B (1992), How Movies Work, Berkley, Los Angeles and London: University of California Press; cited in Lacey, N, An Introduction to Film, London: Palgrave Macmillan, 2005, p 6. 3 See Chapter 4, Representation. 4 Whedon, Joss, Commentary to Season 4 DVD - episode 4. 10: Hush 5 Ibid. 6 For an even more detailed analysis of the title sequence, throughout the whole seven series, see Kociemba, David, “Actually, it explains a lot”: Reading the Opening Title Sequences of Buffy the Vampire Slayer, htttp://www.slayageonline.com/essays/slayage22/Kociemba.htm (retrieved 20 November, 2006) Activities Deconstruct another scene from Buffy – no more than 5 minutes – and pay particular attention to: l l l Cinematography: camera angle, camera distance, camera movement (tracking, Steadicam shots, panning tilting. Mise en scene Look at setting, set design, make-up, colour, props and costumes; blocking of the actors within the frame; lighting - light/dark contrasts. How does the lighting express mood? Editing: How is the overall feel and mood of a film affected by the editing (eg pace, rhthm, transitions). Joss Whedon has expressed his liking for long takes. Is this a feature of the sequence you have chosen? Chapter 2: Language 43 44 Chapter 2: Language Chapter 3: Narrative THIS CHAPTER AIMS TO EXPLAIN AND APPLY TO BUFFY l l l l l l diegesis, plot and story, and chronology narrative structure – equilibrium and disruption series and serial, hybrid long-form narrative and narrative arc the four-act structure the narrative theories of Propp (Narrative Functions) and Campbell (the Monomyth and the Hero’s Journey) The narrative theories of Levi-Strauss (Binary Oppositions) and Bathes (Narrative Codes) Narrative is about story telling and involves a chain of their presumed causal reactions, chronological order, events in a cause-and-effect relationship occurring in duration and frequency whereas plot is the way these time and space. In film and television drama, the events are presented to the audience. To make sense of director, scriptwriter, cinematographer and editor make the narrative, we often need information about what has careful decisions which will affect how events and happened before the start of the film. In literature and characters are presented; stories are therefore highly the theatre this is called exposition; in film, as well as constructed events. A number of scholars have exposition, the term back-story is often used. The story investigated stories and how they work (a field of study is the totality of the narrative, all the events leading up known as "narratology") and have derived theories of to where the narrative begins, including any necessary narrative to make sense of stories and the hold they exposition. The word plot is often used just as an have had over the human imagination since time alternative to story but there is an important distinction: immemorial. the plot is the selected version of events as presented to the viewer in a certain order whereas the story is the full 3.1 Diegesis sequence of events as we imagine them to have taken This is a term used to denote the world created by the place in their natural order and duration. The story can story as it emerges from season to season. The diegetic be thought of then as the "raw material" of events which world of Buffy the Vampire Slayer, therefore, consists of the viewer reconstructs as the finished product of the the fictional Sunnydale (and the other settings of the plot. (Another set of terms more widely used in film and show). It has similarities to the everyday world we live in, media studies in recent years, devised by a group of with recognisable characters and locations, but it has its scholars known as the Russian Formalists, is fabula, own rules, laws, mythology and logic which have which corresponds to story and sjuzet which become known as the "Buffyverse". However, the corresponds to plot). audience's view of the Buffyverse is different to that afforded the characters, as we have access to trailers, The distinction can be very important in certain kinds of teasers ("Recently on Buffy the Vampire Slayer"), and narratives which involve keeping the audience ignorant titles - not only the credits but indications that we are about certain events till near the end when all is going into a flashback, eg "China, 1900". The term used revealed, such as the identity of the murderer in a to describe these aspects that are external to the story detective story. David Bordwell, in "Film Art", uses the but shape how we view the story, is non-diegetic. The following diagram to explain the distinction: most influential non-diegetic element is music; not the music which is supposed to be created from within the story, such as the sound of the bands in the Bronze which is clearly diegetic, ie coming from the world of the story, but the music which is external to the story, and is there to create or anchor a particular mood or atmosphere, such as suspense or romance. 3.2 Plot and Story Story consists of all the events we see and hear, plus all those we infer or assume to have occurred, arranged in Chapter 3: Narrative 45 A murder has been committed. That is, we know the effect but not the causes - the killer, the motive, perhaps also the method. The mystery tale depends strongly on curiosity, our desire to know events that have occurred before the plot action begins. It is the detective's job to disclose, at the end, the missing causes-to name the killer, explain the motive, and reveal the method. That is, in the detective film the climax of the plot line (the action that we see) is a revelation of prior incidents in the story (events which we do not see). 1 Kalderash tribe: he is given a soul which gives him a conscience so that he feels remorse for all the evil deeds he has done. The final flashback takes place in Los Angeles in 1996 where Angel, living like a tramp and feeding off rats, is given a chance to regain his dignity. The (non-evil) demon Whistler shows him Buffy being briefed by her first watcher (an event from the 1992 film which preceded the series but not the actual footage), telling him she will need his help. Thus, by the use of flashbacks, we are brought up to date with Angel's past just at the time when, having lost his soul after his night of bliss with Buffy, he is again evil and dangerous. Bordwell and Thomson's description of how, in the narrative, information is withheld has a certain similarity In that episode the use of flashback is fairly conventional to Barthes' hermeneutic/enigma code which will be but in Fool for Love [5.7] there is a much more considered later in this chapter. innovative way of presenting flashback. Buffy is trying to come to terms with her fate as slayer and by this time 3.3 Chronology The distinction between plot and story is particularly marked when the plot is presented to us out of its normal chronological order. The simplest form of story telling is to begin at the beginning and go on until you reach the end but, as far back as the ancient world, storytellers have noticed that interesting effects could be achieved by deviating from chronological order. The classical epic typically began in medias res (in the middle of things); for example, Homer's "Odyssey" begins half way through the hero's journey home from the Trojan War, goes back to describe his earlier adventures and then follows his story through to the end. The advantage of this technique is that it allows us to make causal connections, often ironic ones, between widely separated events. This shifting of chronology is known as analepsis but more commonly in film as flashback. The purpose of flashback is frequently for exposition or back story, giving us background information about characters and events. Spike, having had a chip put in his brain by the Initiative, is no longer a threat to humans. Buffy is paying him to tell his story which includes the killing of two slayers, so that she can better prepare herself for the trials to come. In this flashback, we learn that, before he was a vampire, Spike was a very different character as a human. He is awkward and rather pathetic, without Spike's confidence and swagger. (The irony in the transition from present to past is in Spike's words: "I've always been bad.") His nickname "William the Bloody", far from being a reference to his nocturnal activities, is actually a short form of "William the Bloody ... Awful Poet". He is deeply unhappy due to his unrequited love. As he says to Cecily, his muse, "I know I'm a bad poet but I'm a good man." She responds by telling him "You're beneath me" – ironically, the same words used by Buffy at the end of this episode. He bumps into Drusilla who follows him and "sires" him, not entirely against his will as he is so miserable with his life. In subsequent flashbacks we see him undergo the transition that will lead him to his persona as Spike, killer of two slayers. The first killing takes place during the Boxer Rebellion in China in 1900 Buffy is mostly arranged in chronological order but occasionally flashback is used to tell us something about the characters' past and, since the major characters who and this gives him the power and confidence to stand up to Angelus, up till then the acknowledged leader of the "family". have much of a past are vampires, it is with the characters of Angel and Spike that it is used most tellingly. For example, in Becoming Part 1 [2. 21], we learn in flashback about Angel's past. After the "Previously on Buffy the Vampire Slayer" sequence and before the title sequence, we are in Galway, Ireland, in 1753, where the vampire Darla "sires" Angel. The episode is punctuated with a number of other flashbacks, such as, in London in 1860, when Angel tortures, torments and finally sires Drusilla; another one where he receives the gypsy curse for killing a girl of the 46 Chapter 3: Narrative His second killing of a slayer takes place on a train in New York in 1970. His recounting of the incident to Buffy involves him trading blows in an alley with Buffy in order to demonstrate the moves in the earlier fight, intercut back and forth several times, with match cuts giving the impression that the two time periods are fused into one. The innovative aspect is that, at the climax of the fight with the second slayer, Spike continues to address Buffy from within the flashback ( an "hommage" to Quentin Tarantino's Reservoir Dogs where Mr Orange [Tim Roth] praying mantis in the form of a substitute teacher : also narrates from within a flashback). Teacher's Pet (1.4); a grotesque demon which is invisible This is a risky strategy and one which would not have Killed by Death (2.18), a demon which passes on a been attempted on network television ten or twenty contamination to Buffy which makes her hear people's years earlier as it risks breaking the illusion of reality on thoughts (Earshot, [3.18]). The rest of the narrative which even fantasy genres depend. However, by this concerns how this state of disruption is dealt with. time audiences were more open to this and other self- Occasionally the disruption will not be a result of to adults but preys on children :"Der Kindestod" in reflexive techniques (cf Postmodernism in Chapter One: supernatural activity as in Ted [2.11] where a robot Categories). But, while Reservoir Dogs was an "indie" programmed by a dead scientist attempts to seduce and (independent) film whose audience would be open to to kill Buffy's mother. Whatever the problem that has stylistic innovation, indeed would expect it, Buffy was resulted from the disruption, the hero, Buffy, will attempt prime-time network television, traditionally a much more to repair it, ie deal with the problem (the demon or conservative medium, both thematically and stylistically. whatever is causing the disruption). This culminates in a This suggests both a shift in audience sensibility in resolution, a critical point when the agent of the general and also that a significant segment of Buffy's disruption is confronted by the slayer, leading to a return audience had a lot in common with the more avant- to equilibrium,where a new equilibrium is established garde audience for independent cinema (cf Chapter 5: but not necessarily a return to the former one. Audience). 3.4.1 3.4 Narrative Structure: Equilibrium and Disruption (Todorov) The most basic pattern is that a narrative will have a beginning, a middle and an end - but not necessarily in that order, as the renowned French film director, JeanLuc Godard, has pointed out and the examples of flashback described above confirm. However, in addition to this basic shape, it is possible to see more complex structures and how they hook their audiences into the diegesis. Bulgarian narratologist Tvetan Todorov observed 2 that most popular narratives have a basic shape, a causal transformation with a clear pattern: 1 A state of equilibrium at the start 2 A disruption of the equilibrium by some action (and an awareness of the protagonist that the disruption has taken place) 3 An attempt to repair or deal with the disruptive force culminating in a resolution 4 A return to a state of equilibrium (which might well be different from the initial equilibrium) The narrative usually starts with a situation of equilibrium where things are normal, the story not yet properly started. In the earlier seasons of Buffy the Vampire Slayer, this often takes place in the grounds of Sunnydale High where Buffy, Xander and Willow are chatting, joking and planning social events, sometimes interrupted by Cordelia and the "Cordettes" (Cordelia's followers) making sarcastic comments. Then an event occurs which sets off the story, an event which disrupts this equilibrium. It will probably be to do with the action of a vampire or other demon, (such as a virgin-devouring Todorov and an episode of Buffy: Inca Mummy Girl (2.4) Inca Mummy Girl is a good example of the "standalone" episode (see below)which conforms to Todorov's model. (i) EQUILIBRIUM The episode begins, as they often do, in the grounds of Sunnydale High where Willow, Xander and Buffy are chatting about a student exchange programme. Buffy is going to have a male foreign student staying at her house for two weeks. Later they are on a school trip to Sunnydale Museum of Natural History where there is an exhibition of Inca artefacts. A 500-year-old mummy has a cursed seal on a tomb warning anyone against interfering with the tomb. (ii) DISRUPTION (AND AWARENESS THAT THERE HAS BEEN A DISRUPTION) When everyone leaves, dim-witted student Rodney tries to take the seal. It breaks, and the mummy arises, grabs him, kisses him, causing his flesh to atrophy. When they realise Rodney is missing, Buffy, Giles, Xander and Willow go to the museum to look for clues and find his remains. Giles tries to decipher what's left of the seal but they are ancient pictograms. It transpires that the killing was done by Ampata, a 500year old mummy, transformed into a beautiful 16-yearold Peruvian girl who also kills Buffy's exchange student and takes his place. Only by kissing the life out of people can she survive. Xander falls for her and takes her to the dance where Ampata is starting to turn back Chapter 3: Narrative 47 into a mummy. In the meantime, Buffy discovers the adaptation of the literary classics such as Middlemarch, disintegrated remains of the exchange student in Pride and Prejudice and Bleak House. Ampata's trunk and she and Giles realise she is the mummy and realise that Xander is in danger. Both the serial and the series usually have narrative closure - whether at the end of an episode or the end of (iii) RESOLUTION a whole serial - where the central disruption is resolved Ampata must quickly kiss someone or it will be too late and loose ends are tied up. Soap operas, however, are but she declines to kiss Xander as she has fallen for him, serial narratives that resist narrative closure and, while She runs away from Xander to the museum to try to some episodes are dominated by particular characters break the seal that Giles is about to restore. Buffy arrives and problems, they normally have several plot lines in time to save Giles before Ampata kisses him, but gets running simultaneously, each lasting only a few minutes thrown into the tomb. When Willow tries to help, Xander before the switch to one of the other plots, with abrupt intervenes and offers his own life instead. Buffy escapes transitions from one to the other. It also uses the from the tomb just in time to pull the now-mummified convention of the cliff-hanger, usually from whatever plot Ampata off Xander as Ampata - literally - falls to pieces. line is dominating the programme at the time. Some of these narrative strands are related to others: some are (iv) RETURN TO EQUILIBRIUM not. While individual narrative strands can eventually Next day in Sunnydale High Xander and Buffy discuss reach closure, other ones are continually opening up. the events. Buffy has some sympathy for Ampata who The plots are potentially never-ending (though the was only 16 - the same age as Buffy - when she was example of Eldorado and Brookside show that soaps do chosen for human sacrifice to defend her people. Buffy sometimes come to an end). refers back to the prophesy of her own death (1.12 Prophesy Girl) "when I wasn't exactly obsessed with doing the right thing." Xander reminds her that she did the right thing in the end - she gave up her life, to which Buffy replies "I had you to bring me back". The narrative is complete: it has achieved closure as there are no loose ends and no consequences. It does, however, develop one of the longer narrative arcs (see below): Oz, lead guitarist with the band, "Dingoes Ate My Baby", notices Willow for the first time, leading to a romance that will last until near the end of Season 4. 3.6 Hybrid Long-form Narrative Most US TV drama series, especially if strongly genrebased, have tended to sacrifice longer-term narrative development in favour of strong one-off episodes with a mixture of the regular cast and guest stars (who rarely reappear in later episodes). Most episodes don't, therefore, have to appear in any particular order. However, since the mid-1980s, the networks have been developing hybrid narrative structures, combining elements of the series, serial and soap. This development has been largely as a result of the networks trying to achieve greater audience involvement 3.5 Long-form Television: Series and Serial and make continued viewing more likely by learning from the narrative strategies of day-time soap. In soap, Todorov's model best fits single, complete narratives the plot lines tend to be based on character such as feature films. Television allows for longer forms development and relationships and it is this element of narrative, such as the series and the serial, which which television series began to employ, especially in dominate the television schedules and where Todorov's Buffy. model has to be modified. A series consists of a number of self-contained narratives, with the disruption being resolved by the end of the individual episode. The serial, on the other hand, even where it consists of many episodes and has numerous sub-plots, normally deals with a central, overarching narrative which runs through all the episodes. (The term narrative arc is used to denote a longer-term linear development of the narrative.) Care is taken to shape the narrative so that that each episode ends on an exciting event or cliffhanger. The disruption is resolved by final episode. Examples include Murder One, 24 and the television 48 Chapter 3: Narrative As Sue Turnbull observes: 3 Buffy is a hybrid long-form drama series. In other words, Buffy combines the episodic narrative structure of the television series (featuring a regular cast of characters engaged in a different adventure/problem every week with little or no ongoing development of the characters - such as in the A-Team [NBC, 19831987] or The Rockford Files [NBC, 1974-1980]), with the ongoing narrative of the never-ending soap. ... While each episode of a new hybrid drama series might deal with one or two finite stories ... beginning and ending in that episode, attention would also be given to the ongoing characters and their relationships across the episodes. Thus in Hill Street Blues (MTM/NBC, 1981-1989) the policemen on the street would address a different crime every week, while romance and conflict waxed and waned between the regular cast of characters across episodes and even across seasons. Buffy, in common with many popular TV drama series then and since, makes good use of this hybrid narrative structure, marrying the high-school serial drama of unfolding relationships as in Beverley Hills 90210 (US, 1999-2000), to the 'monster of the week' scenario employed by the early X-Files (Fox TV, 1993-2003). Drusilla and was such a success as a character that he became an integral part of the long-term development of the show. He combined (and competed) in Season 2 as "Big Bad" with Angelus. By the third season, the affable Mayor Wilkins III, actually preparing his "ascension" to the state of demon, took over. In Season 4 it was Adam, a hybrid of human, robot and demon, created by the Initiative, a shadowy government agency headed by Buffy's psychology professor, Maggie Walsh, which was undertaking experiments to harness demon power for military ends. In Season 5, it was the "hellgod", Glory, banished from her own dimension by her fellow gods because of her disruptive nature. Season 6's "Big Bad" was reduced to a trio of geeky fan-boys from Buffy takes the process of narrative hybrid further than Sunnydale High - Warren, Jonathan and Andrew - whose most, with narrative arcs continuing across episodes and knowledge of scientific gadgets gave them a dangerous across seasons. As each season reaches its climax, the power. And in the final season, the First Evil - the source standalone episodes give way to "arc episodes" (that is, of all subsequent evil - came close to defeating Buffy episodes dominated by the main conflict with the "Big and destroying the world (again). Bad" of the particular season), usually ending in a seasonal climax where evil is defeated and the problems Some of the narrative arcs, however, go beyond a single are resolved. Even where the episodes are "standalone", season. Events and characters can carry over in to later "monster-of-the-week" episodes, developments of plot seasons. Buffy's temporary death at the end of Season 1 and character take place. The show, therefore, while gave rise to a replacement slayer, Kendra, whose death operating mainly as a series, becomes more serial-like as in turn brought the rogue-slayer Faith, who becomes a the season gets into its stride, becoming more or less a major player in Season 3, returns in Season 4 and (after serial for the last few episodes of each season. In the turning up in the spin-off show Angel), returns to play a case of the seventh and final season, dominated by the major role in the final season, 7. Buffy's mysterious sister, struggle against “The First Evil”, the serial aspect was Dawn, who suddenly turns up at the start of season 5, dominant from early on. was referred to by Faith as far back as Season 3. Arcs are not necessarily consecutive episodes. The story Many of these cross-season arcs are to do with arc may reach a point where, although closure has not relationships. Buffy's relationship with Angel continues been achieved, it is left unresolved for the moment, thus from the first to the end of the third season, although he allowing a standalone, non-arc episode to be inserted, makes intermittent appearances until the final season. perhaps in order to feature a character not involved in Buffy's relationship with Spike starts in Season Two when the arc or to introduce a lighter mood during a dark he is determined to kill her, having tasted Slayer blood story arc. For example, Season 2 becomes very much a almost a century before. They form a truce in order to serial in that the last few episodes are dominated by the defeat Angelus at the end of the season as he is jealous Angelus (evil Angel) arc, with Passion [2.17], Killed by of Angelus's relationship with Drusilla. He makes the Death [2.18], I Only Have Eyes for You [2.19] and occasional appearance in Season 3 but becomes a Becoming, Parts 1 and 2 [2.21 and 2.22]. But positioned regular from Season 4 onwards. His relationship with between I Only Have Eyes For You and the two-part Buffy changes from arch enemy to reluctant ally. After he finale, Becoming, is the standalone episode Go Fish becomes harmless to humans, having had a chip is [2.20 ] which has virtually nothing to do with the Angelus implanted in his brain by the Initiative in Season 4, he arc. frequently fights on Buffy's side, undergoing torture for her and goes into battle with her against Glory in the 3.7 Narrative Arcs in Buffy The seasonal narrative arcs tend to be dominated by the struggle against a particular villain. In Season One it was The Master, a hideous vampire who resembled Count Orlick in Nosferatu; in Season Two, the English punk- Season 5 climax. In Season 6, after she returns from the dead, they briefly become lovers. Likewise, Willow and Xander's relationship, Xander's relationships with Cordelia and Anya, and Willow's with Oz and Tara are cross-season relationships. vampire Spike came rolling into Sunnydale with girlfriend Chapter 3: Narrative 49 The central relationship in Buffy is that between Slayer typically, 60 pages of screenplay; then the screenplay has and Watcher, between Buffy and Giles. That relationship one final act, the resolution, where the problem develops throughout the whole seven seasons. In established at plot point A is resolved. Kirstin Season One Giles is the fussy overprotective father Thompson 6 finds a four-act structure, based on four figure, constantly reminding Buffy that her duty lies in more or less equal parts - setup, complicating action, slaying and patrolling rather than cheer-leading and development and climax/epilogue - more useful, being hanging out in the Bronze. In Season 3 he is sacked by more solidly based on character motivation. the Watchers' Council for being over-paternal towards Buffy. In Season 6 he feels he must leave her so that she While such dramatic segmentations may operate in can fully develop but he is always available to come back cinema film, a crucial commercial reality of television - when needed. He returns at the end of Season 6 to help the advert break - determines a different sort of four-Act deal with the Dark Willow, and in the final season he is structure. Television drama of one hour's duration is there to help fight "The First Evil". typically divided into four acts, each separated by an advert-break. The writers are forced, by the commercial Such narrative development, where the audience is structure of network television, to break the action at required to remember plot lines from earlier seasons, certain intervals and put in something important - a could have had he effect of reducing the potential cliffhanger or twist in the story - at each commercial number of viewers. However, the advantages of break to keep the viewers from flipping channels. (NB developing the ongoing relationships between the timings refer to the original US broadcast: in the UK, characters probably outweigh the disadvantages in that the timing of advert breaks is totally different. And in the viewer involvement and loyalty is maximised. Although US there is usually an extra, short comercial break just the television networks seek to attract the greatest before the credits). number of viewers in order to deliver them to their advertisers, it is not simply a question of numbers. Some Jane Espenon, one of the main writers in Buffy, demographics (for example, viewers in their twenties describes these moments as follows: and thirties) have considerable spending power, and advertisers have a much more carefully targeted demographic for their products. Furthermore, a loyal fan base is more likely to buy ancillary products (books, posters etc and especially DVDs) than a bigger but more casual, less committed audience. (This will be further developed in Chapters 5 and 6: Audience and Institutions). Narrative arcs may cause problems when it comes to syndication, where the broadcasters find it more convenient to show episodes in more or less any order; but in a series which is trying to attract a more homogeneous (albeit smaller) audience to deliver to its advertisers, the narrative arc is a way of hooking that audience, making them less casual and more dedicated viewers. These are big moments right before the commercial. They are the most crucial points of the story. They are tent poles that hold up the story. They have to be big and suspenseful and generally Acts 2 and 3 have to turn the story. So you have to think where the story is going and then it turns. 7 If the amount of screen time within a 60-minute slot tends to be 43 or 44 minutes, the rest being for adverts and trailers, this suggests a commercial break about every ten minutes or so. In reality, there is a degree of variation as to the exact point when the break comes but it still requires considerable care from the writers to avoid a distribution of commercial breaks that is too uneven, while allowing for a strong narrative hook to keep viewers watching after the break. 3.8 The Four-Act Structure 4 Many mainstream feature films are constructed around The first act will begin with a "teaser" to hook the a three-act structure of set-up, conflict, and resolution, audience from the start. This is a mini-act of between a structure that is reinforced in Hollywood by the one and five minutes which occurs before the main plot influence of screenwriting manuals such as "The gets under way. It includes a title sequence consisting of Screenwriter's Workbook" by Syd Field. 5 The idea is a montage of short clips from previous episodes that a typical film moves to major plot point A, about 30 ("Recently on [title]) " and a "lead-in" or prologue which pages into the typical 120 page script (on average, one introduces some of the plot lines that will dominate the page of a screenplay represents one minute of screen episode. This is usually followed - though sometimes it is time): the set-up. After the first major plot point, we are preceded by - the title sequence which is likely to last in the act commonly referred to as the conflict until plot less than a minute and to have very fast cutting, with point B, the climax of the film, this act representing, each shot lasting less than a second on average, 50 Chapter 3: Narrative involving the main characters and with the names of the not to let on that this process doesn't normally involve actors on the screen. The credits will continue into the memory loss. teaser or even into the first Act. The episode will sometimes end with a "tag" of one or two minutes The following examples show how Buffy follows the four- (although it occasionally extends to five minutes) before Act structure to a large degree but also shows the end credits. It is a sort of epilogue used to show the considerable variation. effects or aftermath of the episode, (and indicate a return to equilibrium as in the Todorov model as (i) described above) and occasionally to extend one of the The episode begins with a voice-over spoken by Giles ongoing narrative arcs, not necessarily the main one of (Anthony Stewart Head): "In every generation there is a the episode. Chosen One. She alone will stand against the vampires, SCHOOL HARD [2.3] the demons and the forces of darkness. She is the A typical breakdown of the four-Act Structure might be Slayer." This was done regularly in the early seasons to as follows: establish the overall premise of the show. Later series 2-5 minutes (including the title sequence Teaser and lead-in/prologue) Act One: 10 minutes Act Two: 10 minutes Act Three: 10 minutes Act Four: 10 minutes Tag: 1-2 minutes Obviously, the greater the length of time taken by the teaser and the tag, the shorter the acts will be. The third and fourth acts are frequently shorter than the first two and might even be thought of as a third act broken in the middle, without any other logic than the need for a commercial break. 3.8.1 4-Act Structure in Buffy This pattern is generally followed in Buffy the Vampire Slayer, although there is considerable variation. The "Previously on" montage is not always there, and sometimes the order of events within the teaser changes. It will be clear from the examples below that the writers attempt to build in a cliffhanger or dramatic event, even where the final two acts are fairly short. Tags were typical of the early seasons of Buffy, often being set in the grounds of Sunnydale High where the sunshine and palm trees suggest that the immediate danger is over. For example, in Out of Mind, Out of Sight (1.11) Marcie, a girl who has become invisible because no-one notices her, attempts to cut up Cordelia but Buffy comes to the rescue. In the tag, it is the next day in school and they discuss how twisted Marcie had become. Cordelia joins them and is pleasant for a while until her friends arrive, after which she reverts to her normal bitchy self. We cut to an FBI building where learn that Marcie is being trained to be a secret agent, her ability to be invisible making her an ideal assassin. Another example is the tag in The Pack (1.6) where Xander claims not to remember his bad behaviour when under the influence of a hyena spirit and Giles promises dropped this, presumably because the premise had been solidly established. The teaser dispenses with the "Previously on" feature to go straight into a prologue concerning Buffy and a school delinquent, Sheila, being given an punishment by the unsympathetic school principal Snyder who forces them to decorate the school for a parents' evening. This is followed by the arrival of Spike, the new vampire villain who was to become a major character for the remaining seasons. The short title sequence follows and we are straight into the first act. Act 1 lasts about eleven and a half minutes, giving us the first commercial break at about 16 minutes into the episode. The Act ends on a dramatic high point: Spike's first meeting with Buffy and a threat to kill her the following Saturday. The second Act ends with Spike and his gang breaking into the school during the parents' evening, with Spike declaring that he couldn't wait till Saturday. The next two Acts (arguably, one act of about 15 minutes with a dramatic break in the middle) follow. At the end of Act 3, Sheila, now a vampire, is about to strike Buffy with an axe. Act 4 resumes with the action as it was at the end of Act 3. Frequently, acts end on a fade out with the same scene resumed in the next act with a fade-in (a practice carried on in the DVD version despite the fact that this is no longer needed for a commercial break). Buffy defeats Shelia and organizes the defence of the students and parents and Spike is forced to retreat, having lost a good number of his gang members. This is the resolution in Todorov's terms. The return equilibrium consists of exchanges by groups of characters and the post-confrontation shots of police patrol cars with flashing lights typical of many a police-procedural film. Joyce, having been disappointed by Buffy's negative school report, recognises another side of her daughter, her courage and leadership qualities. (Joyce does not yet know Buffy is the Slayer). The act ends comically with Willow and Cordelia, still in hiding not having realised Chapter 3: Narrative 51 the battle is over, with Cordelia praying but in her usual outwitted Spike, managing to lead the group - apart egotistical way. from Ford - out of danger. She returns once the vampires have left to see Ford's corpse. Acts 3 and 4 There is a tag of about two minutes involving Spike and together last about 14 minutes and, again, are like one "The Anointed One" (or the "Annoying One" as Spike act with a break in the middle. calls him), the child-vampire who becomes the leader of the Sunnydale vampires due to his being the last link The episode ends with a tag of just over two minutes with the Master of Season One. The Annointed One where Buffy and Giles discuss how difficult life can be as tries to reprimand Spike for his impatience which led to you get older and face moral choices - a conversation by their defeat but, with the memorable lines, "From now Ford's grave and which is interrupted by Buffy almost on, we're gonna have a little less ritual and a little more casually "spiking" the vampire that Ford has become. fun around here," he hoists The Anointed One up to The scene is very much a return to equilibrium. expose him to the sunlight and destroys him, ending with the invitation to Drusilla: "Let's see what's on TV." (iii) This tag serves less as a summing up of the episode The teaser begins with a "Previously on" montage of itself as than as a prologue to the rest of the Season, just over a minute which shows how Faith is becoming a suggesting that Spike will be the Season's "Big Bad" but bad influence on Buffy, introduces the new Watcher, one who, with his wit, his punk-rock style and his Wesley Wyndham-Price, with whom the Watchers' swaggering bravado, will be a villain more in touch with Council has replaced Giles, and shows us Faith a younger audience than the ancient Master of the accidentally killing a human being. The lead-in takes previous season. place before the title sequence and involves Buffy CONSEQUENCES [3.15] having a nightmare about the dead man. Following the (ii) LIE TO ME [2.7] The "Previously on " sequence is omitted from the title sequence we go straight into Act One, with the credits continuing on the screen. The Act lasts just over teaser, in this case perhaps because it has a particularly six minutes taking us to the first commercial break at strong prologue. It is a very spooky sequence which about ten minutes into the episode. It ends with the starts by showing Drusilla singing sinister lullabies and major villain of Season 3, Mayor Wilkins, being cheered menacing a young boy until Angel intervenes. Given his up at the prospect of Buffy being charged with first- guilt at having "sired" Drusilla he gives her the chance degree murder. to get out of town. Meanwhile, Buffy is spying on them from a rooftop and her angle of vision makes it look as if The second Act, a little longer at just under 12 minutes, they are embracing. This prologue is followed by the ends with Giles and Buffy concerned about losing Faith title sequence of about 47 seconds and then we are to the dark side and keeping the news about the killing straight into Act 1. The teaser and first Act take us to the from the Watchers' Council in London. We then realise first break after about thirteen and a half minutes. that Wesley has been listening and he does in fact phone the Council. The third Act is just over 7 minutes The episode involves the arrival in Sunnydale of Billy long and ends with Wyndham-Price and the Council's Fordham ("Ford") a former school friend of Buffy from henchmen capturing Faith to take her back to London LA who, it turns out, has a terminal illness and is for an investigation. The final Act shows Faith's escape prepared to sacrifice Buffy as well as a group of young but before she disappears she spikes a vampire who was and naïve vampire worshippers to Spike in return for about to sink his teeth into Buffy, suggesting Faith may being made immortal as a vampire. Buffy's jealousy at not be totally lost. This Act lasts not much more than 5 what she thinks she has observed between Angel and minutes and, with the previous Act being short, Acts 3 Drusilla in the prologue makes her more amenable to and 4 could be once again considered, as one act split the attentions of Ford. The Act ends with Ford lip- into two to accommodate the commercial break. synching to a television version of Dracula, showing his total devotion to the vampire cause. The episode ends with a tag where Buffy and Giles discuss Faith's situation and ends with Faith arriving at The second Act lasts about 12 minutes, ending with Ford Mayor Wilkins' office to apply for the job vacated by making a deal with Spike to deliver Buffy to him. The vampire henchman Trick whom she has just killed. She third Act ends on a cliffhanger - Buffy and the young has clearly crossed the line and subsequent episodes of people in the vampire club waiting for Spike and his the season show her further descent into evil until she gang to arrive. The final Act ends with Buffy, having eventually achieves repentance and redemption, first of 52 Chapter 3: Narrative all in Angel and finally at the end of the seventh and they have to talk but being unable to do so. These all final season of the Buffy. relate to ongoing narrative arcs. The narrative resumes where it left off at the start of the following episode. (iv) HUSH [4.10] In the teaser to this episode there is no "Previously on . . It can be seen, then, from the episodes above, that Buffy ." It goes straight into a Lead-in or Prologue. The first adheres to the standard pattern of the four-act structure part involves Buffy falling asleep at her Psychology for US TV drama - though the last two are often one act lecture and dreaming that Riley is kissing her in front of split in the middle - and that it tends to end each act on the class. The sun goes down and she hears a little a high point before the commercial break. However, blonde-haired girl (a younger Buffy?) singing a nursery within the strict boundaries enforced by the commercial rhyme about the evil Gentlemen who come to town and break, it uses considerable variation in the pattern, take people's hearts. The dream ends with one of these especially with teaser and tag. hideous creatures touching her on the shoulder. She wakens up, chats to Willow, then to Riley. Buffy and Riley are attracted to each other but haven't been able to get together and as they are about to kiss, they start to "babble". This sequence lasts almost five minutes and is followed by a 50 second title sequence with over 50 cuts. Act 1 begins with a conversation between Giles and Buffy about her dream of the Gentlemen, Spike has been staying with Giles and complains that Giles has run out of Weetabix, and Anya and Xander discuss their relationship. Giles wants Xander to take in Spike for a few days. Willow goes to her university wicca group and meets a shy student called Tara. And Olivia, Giles's friend, arrives. We see Riley and his friend Parker in the Initiative's underground complex. By the end of Act 1, we have had scenes from all the major arcs of the season. Firstly the Gentlemen story, which is resolved at 3.9 Propp and Narrative Functions A more elaborate analysis of narrative structure than the one analysed by Todorov has been associated with the work Vladimir Propp whose study of Russian folk tales ("The Morphology of the Folk Tale", published in English in 1968) led him to discover a common underlying "deep structure" which ran through the stories irrespective of variations in plot and character. He called these narrative building blocks "functions", of which he uncovered 31. Not all of the functions appeared in every tale but they always appeared in a certain order. Propp 8 groups his 31 functions into six groups: 1 Preparation: actions of the villain who prepares the end of the episode, the Initiative arc which will his evil plan (for example, the villain dominate Season 4 plus four arcs based on relationships: gets finds information about the Buffy/Riley, Xander/Anya, Willow/Tara (just beginning); princess to enable him to kidnap Giles/Olivia (an arc that is stopped in its tracks as Olivia her). is so freaked out by her experiences she doesn't come back). The Act ends with a commercial break after about 2 Complication: Actions which lead to a loss or a lack that must be put right (the princess 14 minutes including the teaser). is captured). The second Act lasts just under 12 minutes and ends with the Gentlemen about to cut out the heart of a 3 Transference: The hero begins the quest 4 The struggle: Hero and Villain Fight 5 Return: The hero has to get back unscathed 6 Recognition: The hero is rewarded, the villain student. The third Act lasts just over 8 minutes and ends with Buffy and Riley facing each other in the tower as they confront the Gentleman; and the fourth Act lasts just about five and a half minutes, with Buffy's scream putting an end to the Gentlemen. These two Acts, lasting about thirteen and a half minutes, are, once again, like a third Act with a commercial break in the punished. middle. The tag, which lasts about three minutes, begins with a dissolve from the previous scene to an Another aspect of Propp's schema was his delineation of establishing shot of a sunny UCLA Sunnydale campus, character-types, which Propp referred to as "spheres of indicating a restoration of equilibrium, followed by three action". This approach allows us to see characters not scenes, one seeming to end the Giles-Olivia just as individuals which have their specific relationship, another suggesting one between Willow characteristics as they are in real life, but according to and Tara is about to begin, and Riley and Buffy agreeing Chapter 3: Narrative 53 what role or purpose they have in the narrative. Propp villain has a sphere of action involving evil deeds (in the identified seven of these functions: case of Buffy, feeding on humans or threatening the destruction of the world). The villain confronts the 1 The hero 2 The villain 3 The donor (or provider) 4 The helper 5 The princess (or sought for person) 6 The dispatcher heroine, opposing and fighting her and providing a focus for the action. The helpers are people who aid the hero in many ways, often making up for some lack in the hero. The Scooby gang are clearly the main helpers, especially Willow, with (There is a seventh sphere of action - the false hero - but this would seem to have a less widespread application to film and television than the other six). Narratives are frequently constructed around these roles, and one role may be fulfilled by more than one character (and one character can play more than one role). A good example is the original Star Wars trilogy: 9 her witchcraft and her computer wizardry, and the everdependable Xander. As far as the princess-and-herfather is concerned, it is a little more complicated. In the absence of Buffy's father, Hank, Joyce Summers plays the roles of both mother and father. Buffy, in her other role as schoolgirl and daughter, as opposed to her super-heroine persona, might be considered as the princess, ie the person to be protected and sought after. 1 The hero = Luke Skywalker And, of course, Giles's relationship to Buffy becomes 2 The villain = Darth Vader more and more paternal, something that caused the 3 The donor = Obi Wan Kenobi Watchers' Council to sack him as Watcher (Helpless, 4 The helper = Han Solo [3.12]). Giles is not only donor but the dispatcher who 5 The Princess = Princess Leia sends Buffy out on her quests, but as donor, it is he who 6 The dispatcher = R2-D2 frequently gives her the advantage over her opponents with his encyclopaedic knowledge of the demon world. Propp's findings were used decades after his original Clearly, then, these roles can be fluid in terms of which research and applied to completely different kinds of character actually fills them: the roles themselves, narratives, especially Hollywood films, such as North by however, are there. Propp, therefore, allows us to see Northwest, Sunset Boulevard and Kiss Me Deadly, as character functions as essential components of narrative well as to television series such as The A-Team. Some structure. writers have disputed the idea that these models have any value in film analysis and can only work by severely distorting the text to "squeeze" into the shape of the model but they have the value of making the analysis of narrative 'strange' and allow us to see them as constructions. Texts are so fully constructed to pull us into the narrative and relate to characters as individuals that it is difficult to stand back and see what is really going on. And Propp can be usefully employed, especially in narratives with a fairy-tale element such as Star Wars, Pretty Woman and, of course, Buffy, to see how the texts actually work. 3.9.1 Propp and Buffy the Vampire Slayer Applied to Buffy, the hero is actually a heroine, Buffy herself. The hero acts in a sphere of action - what he or she does. Buffy's role is to fight evil, going out on patrol (mainly in graveyards), in response to the promptings of the donor. The villain's function is carried out by the various vampires and demons which disrupt the life of Sunnydale in each episode or across an entire season, such as The Master in the first season, Mayor Wilkins in the third season or the hell-god Glory in Season 5; or across several seasons, such as Spike. For Propp, the 54 Chapter 3: Narrative 3.10 The Monomyth and the Hero's Journey As we have seen above, many writers on film have found in Propp a useful analytical tool for at least some narratives. Joseph Campbell, also a scholar of mythology, working independently of Propp, came to conclusions which were very similar to Propp's. In his 1949 book, "The Hero with a Thousand Faces" 10 , Campbell identifies common strains in the mythology of all world religions and cultures and concludes that all are different manifestations of one "monomyth", a universal story with roots in the universal human experience. Joss Whedon, Buffy's creator, stated that "the show is designed to...work on the mythic structure of a hero's journey..." 11 Campbell identified certain archetypes (a term coined by the Swiss psychologist Carl Jung) - patterns of personality that are the shared heritage of the human race, and as such, part of the universal language of storytelling, and these are to be found in Buffy. As in Propp's "spheres of action", the archetypes can be fulfilled by different characters at different times. These include the Hero, the Mentor, (an Old Man or Woman - following Angel into the spin-off series, Angel, where and if this is not an accurate description of Giles, it she transcends her earlier limitations. corresponds with the Scoobies view of him at times); the Threshold Guardian, the Herald, the Shapeshifter, the Another important archetype is the Shadow, Shadow and the Trickster. representing "the energy of the dark side ... the repressed monsters of our hidden world". 13 In Buffy, Buffy's role as hero has been discussed above in relation the shadows are the vampires and demons, dedicated to to Propp. As for the Mentor, Giles clearly plays this role death and destruction and the defeat of the hero. The in relation to Buffy. The hero-mentor relationship is dramatic function of the shadow is to challenge the hero common in mythology and in some respects it stands for and provide a worthy opponent, so bringing out the the bond between parent and child. The function of the best in the hero. Some shadows may be redeemed and mentor is to prepare the hero to face the unknown. They turned into positive forces, as demonstrated by the may give advice or some talisman or piece of narrative arcs of Angel and Spike who start off evil but equipment; for example, in Star Wars, Obi wan Kenobi eventually become good. Shadows can be humanised gives Luke the light sabre which belonged to his (Luke's) by making them vulnerable. Even from the start, long father. Giles's gift is his scholarship - his unrivalled before his "hero's journey" from evil to fighting on the knowledge of the dark world contained within his side of good, Spike's vulnerability is love. In Surprise weighty tomes. However, given that the same function [2.25], the Judge, a demon which detects humanity can be carried out by different characters, Angel wherever he finds it and burns it out, is brought back to sometimes plays this role in the early episodes, his gift life. The Judge notices this "weakness" in Spike's or talisman being a crucifix to protect Buffy. Giles also attitude to Drusilla. "You two stink of humanity. You functions as herald, the herald's function being to issue share affection and jealousy" he accuses. Even the challenges and announce the coming of significant powerful hell-god, Glory, has her vanity and absurd self- changes. Giles issues Buffy with her first Call to centredness. And shadows are not always out-and-out Adventure in the first episode and continues to do so villains: even Giles, the stable, reliable mentor, is throughout the show. From time to time, Angel also revealed as a dabbler in the black arts in his youth, as we functions as a herald figure, coming out of the shadows learn in The Dark Age [2.6]. and using his special knowledge to warn Buffy of The Shapeshifter is a common archetype in mythology dangers to come. and the most obvious examples in Buffy are vampires Once the hero sets out on the journey, she finds there who literally change shape, their faces taking on a are powerful Threshold Guardians placed to keep the monstrous appearance when going in for the kill. But unworthy from entering various places. Threshold Shapeshifters are often ambiguous characters whose guardians can pose problems for the hero but are not intentions are never entirely clear and may appear as an necessarily villains and certainly not the main villains; ally, an enemy or swing back and forth between the two. they can be overcome, by-passed or even turned into One form the shapeshifter takes is the femme fatale, a 12 woman whose allure can lead the hero to his downfall, allies. Christopher Vogler points out that the threshold is frequently a bar or watering hole of some an idea going back to Adam and Eve in the Garden of sort (as in the western-style bar in Tatoine in Star Wars). Eden. They frequently appear in thriller and especially in The dark noisy crowded world of the Bronze contrasts film noir, such as The Maltese Falcon and The Big Sleep, with the daylight world of Sunnydale High School and a and the neo-noirs such as the Linda Fiorentino character perfect hunting ground not only for vampires but the in The Last Seduction, shape-shifting women whose social monsters that inhabit the teenage world. In loyalty and motives are in doubt. In Buffy, with its episode one, Buffy encounters Cordelia and her coterie reversal of gender expectations, it is no surprise that we and is confronted with a choice: rescue Willow and have an “homme fatale,” whose shape shifting between sacrifice her social status (her "cool") or ignore her his evil side Angelus and his good side Angel represents calling and embrace the normal life of a high school a major problem for Buffy. Faith, the rogue slayer, might student. Cordelia here functions as a threshold guardian also represent an aspect of shapeshifting, fighting on the standing in the way of the heroine's passage, but not side of both good and evil, and also represents Buffy's necessarily an out-and-out villain. And in the course of shadow, what Buffy might have been if circumstances the series she gains redemption, becoming a semi- had been different. detached member of the Scooby gang and eventually Chapter 3: Narrative 55 Finally there is the Trickster. Tricksters are primarily Campbell's observations form the basis of Christopher clowns and comical sidekicks whose dramatic function is Vogler’s "The Writer's Journey" 16 Vogler, a story comic relief. According to Denise Yagel, “They cut big analyst working for Disney, reworked and made more egos down to size and bring audiences down to accessible Campbell's ideas, applying them to popular earth.”14 films - and his account of the theory is a lot more Xander is prime candidate, with his ever-ready quips and put-downs, especially to those in authority. readable than Campbell's. His version of the Hero's (And note his indignation at being passed over for the Journey is as follows: class-clown award in The Prom [3.20]). But Xander, like the others, can aspire to the role of hero, as in the end of Season 6 where it is he - by expressing unconditional love for Willow - brings back her humanity before her 1 2 power and strength of a Buffy, an Angel or (later) a Willow - can identify with more easily. But Xander is not the sole provider of humour. Buffy, Willow and Giles provide their share of laughter. A major source of comedy in the early seasons is Cordelia whose self- some problem. 3 the tactless one who will blurt out what she thinks, no become human after centuries as a vengeance demon Special World where 6 what's special about the Special World. 7 for a central battle of confrontation with the forces of failure, defeat, or death. Here they endure the SUPREME ORDEAL, the central crisis of the story in which the hero faces his Like Propp, Campbell's schema involves the stages of a Departure, Separation: Crossing a second threshold. they APPROACH THE INMOST CAVE, that phase when the hero prepares 8 journey: 15 they encounter TESTS, ALLIES AND ENEMIES situations and people that help the hero discover which requires tact and not always telling the truth. The Journey CROSS THE FIRST THRESHOLD at which time the hero commits to the adventure and enters the and hasn't yet learned the rules of social behaviour 3.10.1 are encouraged by a MENTOR, who is source of reassurance, experience, or wisdom, to 5 matter the occasion, is taken over by Anya. Anya's comedy comes from the fact that she has only recently They are RELUCTANT at first or REFUSE THE CALL, hesitating or expressing fear, but 4 centredness and lack of tact provide a constant stream comedy. After her departure to Angel, her function as They receive the CALL TO ADVENTURE, when the hero is challenged to undertake a quest or solve grief at the loss of Tara causes her to plunge the world into chaos. And it is a hero the audience - lacking in the Heroes are introduced in the ORDINARY WORLD (or "World of the Common Day") or her greatest fear and tastes death. 9 They take possession of their REWARD, the World of the Common Day moment in which the hero is reborn in some sense Call to Adventure and enjoys the benefits of having confronted fear Refusal of the Call and death, and Supernatural Aid 10 are pursued on THE ROAD BACK to the Ordinary Crossing the First Threshold World. where the hero commits to finishing the Belly of the Whale adventure and leaves, or is chased out of, the Special World Descent, Initiation, Penetration 11 They cross the third threshold, experience a Road of Trials RESURRECTION, and are transformed by the Meeting With the Goddess experience. a climactic test that purifies, redeems, Woman as Temptress and transforms the hero on the threshold of home. Atonement with the Father 12 They RETURN WITH THE ELIXIR, a boon or treasure Apotheosis to benefit the Ordinary World, where the hero The Ultimate Boon comes home and shares what has been gained on the quest, which benefits friends, family, community Return Refusal of the Return and the world. 17 The Magic Flight Rescue from Within Vogler has used this model to analyse not only the Crossing the Threshold product of his employer, Disney, where it might seem Return most suitable, such as The Wizard of Oz, but to films as Master of Two Worlds diverse as Beverly Hills Cop, Four Weddings and a Funeral and Pulp Fiction. 56 Chapter 3: Narrative Applied to Buffy the Vampire Slayer the journey might RETURN WITH THE ELIXIR look something like this for Season 1: The Master's plans are defeated and the End of the THE ORDINARY WORLD Buffy is introduced as a normal school girl. THE CALL TO ADVENTURE She is the chosen one. Giles presents her with a book on vampires. REFUSAL OF THE CALL Buffy runs off when the above happens, she just wants a normal life. THE MEETING WITH THE MENTOR Giles is clearly her mentor but that function is shared in the early episodes with Angel. She (reluctantly) accepts her role. CROSSING THE FIRST THRESHOLD Buffy saves Willow and Xander in the cemetery. TESTS, ALLIES AND ENEMIES She confronts more vampires. Willow and Xander form the core of what will be known as the Scooby Gang, an essential back-up which will ensure Buffy's survival on many occasions. APPROACHING THE INMOST CAVE The secret of the Hellmouth and the Master's plans to escape are discovered. A plan is drawn up, weapons are brought out. Buffy goes to rescue Xander's friend, but this is a trap for her. In the confrontation in the cemetery Buffy is nearly killed by Luke, a particularly powerful vampire. THE REWARD The reward is probably friendship; Buffy is different from the other two slayers we later come into contact with (Kendra and Faith) in that her friends are very important to her and frequently allow her to survive. THE ROAD BACK The trap mentioned above is in the sewers where the Master and other vampires live. The vampires and the recently "vamped" Jesse (Xander's friend) chase them out. RESURRECTION The showdown at The Bronze where Luke is destroyed. World postponed. Buffy has saved the world and it won't be for the last time. Many episodes of Buffy contain within themselves a hero's journey. According to ‘Rattletrap” on “The Annotated Buffy” website: “each season contains a longer adaptation of the journey and the entire series constitutes a journey.” 18 The idea of crossing a threshold is reinforced frequently in the Summers' house stairwell where pictures of thresholds are frequently shown. 19 There is particular emphasis on the ideas of resurrection and redemption throughout the seven seasons of the show. Buffy's resurrection occurs twice. The first time is in the final episode of Season One, Prophecy Girl [1.12], where Buffy momentarily forgets her inner strength, is bitten by the Master and thrown into a pool of water where she drowns. She is found by Xander in time to be resuscitated and refinds her strength which she uses to destroy the Master. The second occasion occurs at the end of Season Five, when she sacrifices herself to save her sister Dawn and the world. Willow brings her back from the dead with magic at the start of Season 6. Seasons 2, 3 and 4 might be said to correspond to the Descent, Initiation and Penetration stages in Campbell, where Buffy moves beyond the narrow world of the high school and into the town, and eventually in Season 4 into the new, more adult world of the Sunnydale Campus of the University of California. In the second season, the plot takes its severest turn with Surpise"/"Innocence", a two-part episode [2.13 and 2.14] where Angel "shape-shifts" back into his evil persona Angelus whose evil drives the confused Buffy into a process of self-examination, culminating in I Only Have Eyes for You [2.19] where she accepts what has happened and her duty to fix it - by sending Angel to hell to save the world. This is followed by her exile from Sunnydale at the end of the Season but she soon returns in Season 3 to make peace with her mother and friends, a key component of her hero's journey. In Season 3, called to action by the death of Kendra, Faith arrives in Sunnydale. Faith also embodies archetypes of both shapeshifter, in her move from good to evil, and Buffy's shadow. The temporary swapping of bodies in Who Are You [4.16] is a significant event for Faith which starts her on the long road to redemption. In the Season 3 finale, Graduation Day Part 2 [3.22] Buffy confronts and defeats a father-figure in the form of Mayor Wilkins III, a common occurrence in the hero's Chapter 3: Narrative 57 journey though it usually occurs at a later stage. In the literal, before resurrection or rebirth; Buffy's is literal: she next stage of her journey she confronts the shadowy sacrifices herself to save Dawn and the world in the government organisation known as The Initiative. climax to the season. Frequently along the hero's journey, a perceived threat turns out to be a competitor but one that shares a In the Return stage which might correspond to Season 6, common goal; in this case a common interest in demon the hero has to reintegrate into the Ordinary World. hunting but using different methods. The Initiative gives Buffy, forcibly returned to life by Willow's magic, is birth to the powerful figure of Adam, demonstrating that completely disoriented. She confides to Spike, and later, the journey is becoming increasingly difficult, and only in under the influence of a spell in the musical episode, reuniting with friends and allies can she continue her Once More with Feeling [6.7], to her horrified friends, journey by defeating Adam. The season ends, not with that she has been wrenched out of heaven to a world the usual climax - that was the penultimate episode, that feels like hell. Heroes are often reluctant to come Primeval [4.21] - but with an evening of video watching back to the World of the Common Day and find it (Restless, [4.22]) that provokes dreams in the main difficult to readjust as they have become so accustomed characters. Vogler points out that there is a stage before to the journey. 22 In Season 6, the "Big Bad" is a group the final battle where the hero and his allies gather of fanboy nerds and the main focus is Buffy's attempts at round the campfire to review recent events: "having reintegration. She has to deal with commonplace crossed the abyss of life and death... [these scenes] allow matters - finding a job, paying the bills, fixing the us to catch our breath after an exciting battle or plumbing and looking after Dawn. In the climax to ordeal." 20 The celebratory meal and story telling Season 7 which is also the climax to the whole seven prepares them for the battles to come. The Summers seasons, Buffy's Elixir is not only the realisation that she living room where the gang meet to have night of video- has saved the world (about which she must be a bit watching perhaps represents the modern equivalent of blasé by now) but the realisation that she is no longer on the campfire and their dreams finally serve to reinforce her own as slayer, that every girl with the potential to be the group and help them to prepare for the next stage. a slayer can now become one. The pattern of the hero's journey then recurs frequently throughout the whole The climax of the hero's journey occurs in Season 5, seven seasons of the show's existence. Buffy's Supreme Ordeal. Before that she receives 'the ultimate boon", some kind of reward for her efforts up till now. In Buffy's case the reward is the arrival of a mystically-created younger sister, symbolically named Dawn, creation of a new life in the middle of the journey. Her main adversary is the most powerful yet, the hellgod, Glory, the embodiment of a "mother-figure, recalling the countless spoiled, arrogant and evil goddesses of ancient mythology" 21 In much mythology, this meeting with a female adversary comes much earlier, with the battle with the father-figure being kept until the ultimate conflict but, as we have come to expect in Buffy, there is a gender reversal. Another experience common on this stage of the journey is a Reversal of Fortune. Buffy loses her boyfriend, Riley, who can't cope with fact that she is stronger than him, and two months later she loses her mother due to a brain aneurysm. Glory's capture of Dawn drives her into a state of catatonia which Willow manages to get her out of. The Hero often finds herself inadequate to the task and has to rely on allies, as she does in the final confrontation with Glory where Willow's witchcraft, Xander's skill as a building worker and Spike's fighting abilities augment her own power. All heroes experience some sort of death, either metaphorical or 58 Chapter 3: Narrative 3.11 Levi-Strauss and Binary Oppositions Claude Levi-Strauss 23 , a French anthropologist who also studied mythology, developed another influential set of ideas on narrative. For Levi-Strauss narrative is an essential property of the human brain and operates as an essential social function in human societies and the function of narratives is to resolve conflict. His theories have been carried over into the analysis of fictional dramas, particularly the use of "binary oppositions" to create meaning. For Levi-Strauss, one of the ways in which human beings understand the world is through dividing it up into opposites such as land/sea; male/female; adult/child; town/country; good/bad; us/them; public/private. We define things in terms of what they are not as well as what they are. 'Man' means 'not woman', ‘not boy' etc. Oppositions in traditional narrative, as we have seen in relation to Propp and Campbell, are usually structured in terms of the opposition between heroes and villains, representing good and evil. There are clear binary oppositions running through Buffy such as Good vs Evil and Humans vs Demons. In specific seasons there are oppositions such as Season 4's Initiative arc where the opposition might be expressed in terms of Humanity (i) versus Technology. These oppositions are embedded in The narrative poses questions - enigmas - to the The Hermeneutic (Enigma) Code the very iconography of the shows, for example, Light audience (hermeneutics means “interpretation ”) which versus Darkness. In the opening episode of Season 1, for is thereby made eager and will be in suspense to see example, there is the opposition between the bright their resolution - so we keep watching. It explains the sunny world of Sunnydale High contrasts and the ruins narrative by controlling what, and how much, and sewers beneath the surface which is the domain of information is given to the audience. This works by the Master and his vampire minions. constantly giving the audience puzzles to keep them "hooked" to the narrative, to make the audience "active As Buffy develops over the various seasons, the show readers" and to provide pleasure by avoiding a adopts a more complex attitude to the simple premature ending to the story. These enigmas which are opposition between good and evil, a change threaded through the narrative will be both minor - who foreshadowed by Giles's ironic words to Buffy at end of is this new character? - and major - how will the hero Lie to Me [2.7]: "... it's terribly simple. The good guys overcome all odds to win? (In the way that it delays are always stalwart and true, the bad guys are easily answers to enigmas, revealing things bit by bit only to distinguished by their pointy horns or black hats, and we set up a new enigma, it has been described as "narrative always defeat them and save the day. No one ever dies striptease"). This code can operate anywhere in the and everybody lives happily ever after." Not all demons narrative, but especially in the early sequences where we are evil, something it takes Riley a while to learn. Some are trying to make sense of the world of the narrative. are capable of the journey from evil to good, either by When the main dramatic questions have been answered the intervention of magic (the gypsy curse that gives by the end of the narrative, it is referred to as narrative Angel a soul) or by the power of love through which closure. In the mainstream classical narratives of Spike eventually gains a soul. Hollywood films, enigmas tend not to be left unsolved (unless to prepare the way for a sequel). In television This ambivalence extends to Buffy herself. Frequently in serial drama, however, there will be some unresolved narratives, the hero operates as someone who can narratives to make us keen to watch the next episodes. understand both sides of the opposition, and has some In the serial it will relate to the main plot; in the series it of the other side's qualities. Buffy is strong, not weak; will relate to ongoing narrative arcs. powerful, not helpless, and in her associations with vampires Angel and Spike, she has a strong contact with In the opening episode of the first season, Welcome to the other side of the opposition. When Dracula himself the Hellmouth, the code is activated from the start. The confronts her, he tells her: "Your power is rooted in night shot of Sunnydale High right away causes the darkness" (Buffy Versus Dracula [5.1]). audience to wonder what is about to happen (although our knowledge of the genre – see Cultural Code below - 3.12 Barthes' Narrative Codes The theories and models of narrative referred to above tend to deal with "macro-narratives" - longer-term structures that operate with individual episodes, whole seasons and the whole seven series. These are more effective in locating a deep structure to a film's narrative but are not particularly effective in analysing how we make sense of specific moments in the narrative. Roland Barthes suggested that readers make use (mostly unconsciously) of five different codes to make sense of a text. The codes are outlined below using the English translation of the Codes as Roland Barthes set them out in “S/Z” 24 , with more familiar terminology beside it where appropriate. Proairetic and hermeneutic codes are two of the codes Roland Barthes identified as explaining how narrative functions; they explain how readers and audiences are kept involved in the narrative. prepares us for something supernatural). When the young couple break into the school we wonder who they are and what they are doing there. Even if we know that something untoward is going to happen, we don’t know what it is or who is going to do it. And when it becomes clear that no-one apart from the couple is in the building and we expect one of them to do something, our traditional expectations of the genre make us think it will be the boy rather than the girl who turns out to be the vampire: Joss Whedon consciously attemps to undermine our expectations with regard to genre throughout the series. The above operates at the “micro” level of the text, applied to a particular stage in the narrative. The hermeneutic/enigma code is also activated at the “macro” level, covering the whole story, when we wonder who such and such a character is, what they will do and whether they will turn out to be good or evil. It Chapter 3: Narrative 59 operates over a wider expanse of narrative when we Xander walks in and sees blood on Spike's lips and Anya wonder how Buffy will manage to overcome the “Big lying apparently dead beside him. The proairetic/action Bad” of the season. Will she manage to defeat Angelus code prepares us for Xander's reaction as he attacks at the end of Season 2 and prevent the world being Spike and starts to beat him, only to stop when Anya swallowed up? Will they manage to overcome the stops him by indicating she is unharmed. apparently overwhelming power of Glory at the end of Season 5? Will Buffy return from the dead in Season 6? (iii) The Semic Code (Code of Signs) And how will she manage to overcome the seemingly Signs tell us about character and depict the atmosphere overpowering forces battling on behalf of “The First of the drama. It corresponds with what we would refer to Evil” in Season 7? The hermenetic/enigma code hooks as description in a novel – the significant details that us into the narrative, especially before the commercial give us an idea of a character, location or situation, how breaks and at the end of some of the more serial-like authors breath life into their fictions, by using adjectives, episodes where some plot-lines have not achieved adverbs verbs and nouns etc. In filmed drama the closure. equivalent is mise en scene, cinematography and sound. It is to do with the process of going from denotation (the (ii) The Proairetic (Action) Code While the Hermeneutic (Enigma) Code keeps us literal or primary meaning) to connotation (ideas or feelings invoked in addition to its literal or primary guessing what will happen next, the Proairetic (Action) meaning). In Hush [4.10] for example, the very low key Code gives us clues and indications about what is about lighting, creates an air of fear - as do the fixed grin, the to happen (proairetic meaning to “choose before”). We metallic teeth and the veiny hands of the Gentlemen. know from our experiences, both of life and from watching films and TV drama, that certain actions will Through the semic code we see how character is lead to other actions. We see actions and infer their constructed. For example, the way Spike is constructed meaning. During an argument, a woman pulls a suitcase on his first appearance in the series, School Hard [2.4], is from a cupboard and begins to pack: she is about to a good example of the semic code in operation. Just leave. In a western, the sherrif takes down his six-gun before the credit-sequence we see a shot of the and straps it on: there will be a gunfight. A close up of a “Welcome to Sunnydale” sign – representing small-town foot on the car's accelerator suggests the car is about to America, picket fences, apple pie - and then a car accelerate. A simple action can simplify matters for us crashing into it , suggesting recklessness on his part. and provide a narrative shorthand for the audience. There is a cut to the car door and then Spike is filmed from the feet upwards, leading to sense of anticipation This can be seen in the 2006 film, Pan’s Labyrinth/ El that the character will be formidable is some respect. Laberinto del Fauno, a film set in Spain in 1944 involving There is raucous rock music on the soundtrack (heavy a military post of the fascist army that was victorious in metal sometimes has connotations of the diabolic, and the Civil War but a group of guerrillas carry on the even the names of some of the bands eg Black struggle in the mountains. One of them is captured by a Sabbath). We see Spike’s boots – boots have heavier, brutal and sadistic officer. The action of unbuttoning his more powerful connotations than shoes, especially shirt (in preparation for strenuous activity) warns the when they are used as weapons, and, as he steps on the audience that he is about to torture the captive, an ground, a heavy drumbeat mimics his movements (an impression reinforced by a shot of his grisly instruments example of Mickey Mousing where diegetic music is of torture. Later in the film, the woman who runs his closely synched to the action) reinforcing the household, who is sympathetic to the guerrillas, is connotations of Spike as a ‘heavy’. As he walks away captured and it only takes a shot of the officer’s hand on from the car, the camera tilts up, allowing us to see what the button of his shirt to tell us she too is about to becomes his trademark long leather coat, which, again, undergo torture (though in fact she manages to escape). can carry connotations of streetwise toughness. These two codes run in a linear way throughout the The camera continues to tilt up until we see Spike at first narrative and are like the "twin engines" of narrative in half-profile. He has a cigarette in his mouth and we momentum, keeping us involved in the narrative through can see his peroxide-blond Billy Idol-style hair and enigma and causing us to anticipate actions. leathers (though he claims in Season 7 that Billy Idol got For example, in Hush [4.10], Spike has been drinking blood from a cup while Anya is lying asleep on the couch. This causes his "game" look to be activated as 60 Chapter 3: Narrative the style from him!) and, as he turns towards the camera, we can see his “game“ face. He lights the cigarette, inhales deeply and says “Home, sweet home” with a sarcastic grin on his face. These signs combine to the others, there is no difference between what she construct an image of Spike which is tough, cool, stylish thinks and what she says: and mocking. The low camera angle reinforces his sense CORDELIA (in voice-over): Whatever. I wonder when I can go. _ CORDELIA: Whatever. Can I go? of power. This image is taken into the post-credit sequence when Spike goes into a meeting of vampires preparing for a We are first introduced to Tara in Hush (4.10) as she sits massacre on St Vigeous Day. He swaggers in and in the university wicca group. Her lack of confidence is establishes himself as leader, mocks one of leading signalled by her nervous stuttering when she tries to vampires who had claimed to have been present at the make an intervention in discussion and her tendency to Crucifiction, and when the outraged vampire (whom hide behind her long hair, and is further signalled by her Spike refers to as a “nancy-boy”) attacks him from lowering her head and her apologetic eye movements. behind, Spike smashes him with his elbow without turning round and without breaking his stride, adding Through the semic code, therefore, the audience – by “Who do you kill for fun around here?” – the “fun” reading aspects of gesture, expression, clothing and being as important as the kill. All these traits build a speech etc - derives a sense of a ‘rounded’ character picture very different from the pompous archaic vampire and can accept (albeit suspending their ‘disbelief’) that from Season One, the Master. the characters are authentic and ‘real’. He tells the leader of the vampires, a child-vampire (iv) called “the Annointed One” (whom he later refers to as This code draws on the audience’s knowledge of the the “Annoying One”) that he will sort out their Slayer outside world - background information viewers need to problem by killing the Slayer. He informs them he’s know to understand what is going on. For example, in The Referential/Cultural Code already killed a couple of slayers. “I don’t like to brag” the film Casablanca, there is a flashback to Paris in 1940. he adds, followed by a beat before he bursts out The referential/cultural code is activated in that it laughing, saying, “Who am kidding. I love to brag.” All depends for effect on the knowlege of the audience that these signs reinforce the constructions of the previous Paris is about to be occupied by the German Army, scene and add up to a picture of Spike that is tough, leading to panic and a mass exodus - a very dangerous violent, skilful in the fight, mocking, swaggering, and place to be. fun-loving. In a fantasy genre, much of the audience’s knowledge is Following this exchange, we see Drusilla for the first about the codes and genres of film and television. This time and the other side of Spike comes into play. He depends on the (even unconscious) familiarity of the immediately loses his frightening “game” look and audience with conventions such as how a low camera becomes the tender lover, the “fool for love”. ( “I may angle can confer power, charisma, a sense of danger etc be love’s bitch” as he admits in alter episode, - Lover’s on the subject; how a fade-out followed by a fade-in Walk [3.8] - “but at least I’m man enough to admit it”). suggests some time has passed between the events on When Drusilla says she is cold, Spike takes off his coat either side of this technical code. The producers of a and wraps it around her and they babble in lovers’ baby- drama operating within a particular genre can rely on the talk. Meanwhile the semic code is being activated to audience’s knowledge of some of the conventions of the construct Drusilla as a Goth “princess”, with her pale genre. They are able to use what the audience know complexion, her black nail-varnish, her feline about horror to change certain aspects (eg that the movements, spooky airs, and slightly deranged voice. attacker is likely to be male) in order to create surprise when something different happens. Another example of this code is from Earshot [3.18], Buffy has contracted a substance from a demon which Given the density of intertextual allusion in Buffy, this allows her to read minds. She first realises this as she is code is likely to be activated frequently to make sitting in the library with Giles, the scoobies and Lesley complete sense of any given episode. Wyndham-Price and she realises she can read Xander's thoughts - all about naked girls and naked Buffy. They all realise with horror that she is reading their thoughts and try to hide them. Cordelia, however, is so self-centred and indifferent to how others feel about her that, unlike Chapter 3: Narrative 61 (v) The Symbolic Code This is the code which reveals the binary oppositions in the narrative e.g. right versus wrong, good versus evil, light versus darkness, youth versus age, innocence versus experience, individuality versus conformity, which are the deeper structures of the narrative. This code is frequently activated in Buffy, especially the light/darkness opposition (see the section on LeviStrauss above). Barthes was concerned about laying bare what remained hidden in “bourgeois” fiction, texts which tended to keep their processes of construction hidden. The codes can overlap: the same sign can be semic, referential/cultural and symbolic at the same time.They can be used as a problem-solving device, directing the user’s attention in investigating the inner workings of a film or TV text, as a means of making it “strange” and making us aware of texts as constructions. 62 Chapter 3: Narrative Notes 1 Bordwell, David, and Kristin Thompson. Film Art: An Introduction. New York: McGraw Hill, 1993, 69. 2 Todorov, Tristan, The Poetics of Prose, Oxford: Blackwell, 1977), p. 111. 3 Turnbull, Sue “Not just another Buffy paper’: Towards an Aesthetics of Television’ http://www.slayage.tv/essays/slayage13_14/Turnbull.htm (Retrieved 11 October 2006) 4 TV Tropes, cf http://www.gottapost.com/pmwiki/pmwiki.php/Main/AnArc. (Retrieved 7 October 2006). 5 Field, Syd, Screenplay, London: Dell, 1979. 6 Thompson, Kristin, Storytelling in the New Hollywood, London and Cambridge Massachsets: Harvard University Press, 2001. 7 City of Angel, http://www.cityofangel.com/behindTheScenes/bts/dragonCon7.html (Retrieved 28 December 2006) 8 Adapted from Lacey, Nick, Narrative and Genre, pp 46-53 9 Turner, G, Film As Social Practice, 3rd ed. London and New York: Routledge, 1999, p 82. 10 Campbell, Joseph, The Hero With a Thousand Faces, 2nd ed. Princeton, Princeton University Press, 1973 11 Whedon, Joss, on National Public Radio, quoted in Amazon review of Golden, Christopher, et al, The Monster Book, http://www.amazon.com/Monster-Book-Christopher-Golden/dp/product-description/0671042599 (Retrieved 27 December, 2006) 12 Vogler, Christopher, The Writer’s Journey, London: Boxtree, 1996, pp 162-3. 13 Ibid, p.83. 14 The Hero’s Journey; www.gsgis.K12.Va.US/facultyweb/kcrow/webpages/The%20 Hero%20weblink.doc (retrieved 5 Oct 2006). This article is also a useful summary of The Hero’s Journey. 15 Ibid., p16, 16 Ibid. 17 Ibid. pp 16-31. 18 Rattletrap, The Annotated Buffy, http://www.justinleader.com/annotatedbuffy/slayersjourney.html (Retrieved 11 October 2006) 19 Wilcox, Rhonda, Pain as Bright as Steel: the Monomyth and Light as Pain. Quoted in The Media Education Journal, Issue 35 Spring 2004), Aberdeen, Association for Media Education in Scotland, p.12 20 Vogler , opus cit., pp. 204/5. 21 Rattletrap, Season 5, opus cit http://www.justinleader.com/annotatedbuffy/slayersjourney.html (Retrieved 11 October, 2006. 22 Rattletrap, opus.cit. (Retrieved 11 October, 2006) 23 Summarised in Turner, G. Opus cit, pp 83,84. 24 Barthes, Roland. Image/Music/Text, (trans. Stephen Heath). Glasgow: Fontana-Collins, 1977. Activities l Consider the use of flashback in any film or TV drama you are familiar with. What reaction does the use of flashback have on your response/ Why do you think the narrative is structured in this way? l l l l l Apply Todorov’s equilibrium-disruption-return-to-equilibrium model to a fairy tale you are familiar with, and then to a recent blockbuster. Does the model fit the story and the film? Does the structure keep you involved in the story and the film? Apply Propp’s functions to a film of your choice. (If you can’t think of one, try Pretty Woman). Does it fit? Does it help you understand how the narratiuve works? Apply Campbell’s “Hero’s Journey” structure to a film or tv drama. (one possibility is the wizard of oz}. Look at a sequence in a sequence from Buffy and apply Barthes codes, especially the hermeneutic/enigma code, the proairetic/action code, and the semic code. Do the application of the codes help you understand how the narrative works? Look at an episode of Buffy and see if you can work out the four-Act structure. If you are watching on DVD you will not have advert breaks to guide you but the breaks are often noticeable by a long fade. (If you are watching on UK TV, the advert breaks will be different from the original US broadcast. Chapter 3: Narrative 63 64 Chapter 3: Narrative Chapter 4: Representation THIS CHAPTER AIMS TO EXPLORE REPRESENTATION IN BUFFY, IN PARTICULAR: l l l l l l l gender sexuality social class Englishness race religion Buffy and metaphor Everything we know (or think we know) about the world – cheerleader stereotype in the film and the first episode apart from what we experience directly – is mediated; of the TV show, Buffy progresses to being a strong that is, it comes to us through the media (including independent woman. However, she maintains her books). When we study media texts, it is important to "female" characteristics and challenges the typical remember that everything we see or hear is a representation of the successful female in a man's world representation (or re-presentation) of the authors’ or who adopts "masculine" characteristics. The show producers’ ideas and attitudes about how the world and depicts a number of models of traditional gender society function, codified into a series of signs and representation but challenges them by offering symbols which is decoded by the audience. This is alternatives to established depictions of characters of important when we experience the factual media such as each gender in other central characters. Xander's two news, documentary and current affairs where these closest friends, Buffy and Willow, are female which is media often claim to represent a direct view of reality, a itself a departure from conventional representations of “window on the world”. One of the functions of Media male social behaviour. He is clearly no match for them Studies it to go beyond surface appearance and attempt either in power (Buffy) or intellect (Willow) but he seems to examine the underlying reality (or realities) by totally comfortable with this (except occasionally for demonstrating that all texts are constructed. comic effect as in The Zeppo [3.13] where, goaded by his Cordelia, his ex, he feels the need to assert his However, representation has an important role in masculinity). fictional texts. Fictional characters can be seen as individual creations but they often have a Giles could be seen as representing patriarchal power representational function in that individuals can be seen (that is the traditional dominance of the male in power as representative of the groups they belong to – in terms structures) and, indeed, in the early episodes he is very of gender, nationality, ethnicity, generation, occupation much the authority figure. However, as Buffy gains more etc. Our perception of particular groups in society can confidence in her power, he becomes more of an equal be affected by the way they are frequently represented with other members of the gang rather than the sole in fiction. This is particularly the case where a dramatic fount of authority and wisdom. He has his own "crisis of shorthand known as stereotyping is involved. masculinity" in Season 4 when he is made redundant as Stereotypes are not always negative but powerless Watcher as he has been sacked by the Watchers' groups in society have always suffered from a narrow Council (for having over-paternal feelings for Buffy) and and highly selective way they are represented. from his job as school librarian as the school has burnt Representation, then, is central to ideological and down. (This crisis is alluded to metaphorically when he is political attitudes reflected in texts, even ones which turned, temporarily, into a monster by Ethan Rayne, an operate in fantasy genres, such as Buffy. English villain from Giles’s past (A New Man [4.12]). His 4.1 when Buffy's power is inadequate to deal with Dark patriarchal power is reasserted near the end of Season 6 Gender Joss Whedon has stated that the essential idea behind Willow's destructive magic. However, the force which he Buffy was to reverse the horror movie convention of the brings across the Atlantic in order to deal with the crisis powerless woman. 1 Both Whedon and many of the commentators on the show referred to it as explicitly was created by a coven of "white" witches. By Season 7, Giles is almost marginalised as Buffy has to assert her feminist. Starting as the air-brained shallow teen Chapter 4: Representation 65 own authority in the face of her ultimate test against out, he because of his working-class background and "The First Evil". she because of her rich background (although this proves temporary as her father loses his wealth after The villains in Buffy are frequently portrayed as being convicted of tax evasion at the end of Season 3). misogynist. Warren, the leader of the nerdy "troika" Xander's working-class family is portrayed as the family which provides the main opposition in Season 6, has a from hell. Significantly, he is the only one of the history of sexual violence against women and, enraged Scoobies not to go to university, becoming a manual by Buffy thwarting his plans, he attempts to kill her worker in the building trade. Class differences using a gun. He only wounds her but one of the shots occasionally make an appearance with the differences kills Tara. In the final season Caleb, The First's chief between the students and the residents in the town henchman, plays a misogynist fundamentalist preacher. highlighted (for example, the bar manager who hates Soon after his first appearance in the season, he tells a students and poisons their beer (Beer Bad [4.7]). Like young woman whom he has picked up in a truck as she Xander, Faith, the Slayer brought into action by Kendra's flees her pursuers: “You were born dirty, born without a death, is from a working-class background, her Boston soul. Born with that gaping maw wants to open up, suck accent and her "trailer trash" demeanor differentiating out a man's marrow. Makes me puke to think too hard her from the other characters. This is a source of conflict on it.” (Dirty Girls, [7.18]) between her and Buffy and, despite Faith's scorn, she occasionally betrays a jealousy about Buffy's more 4.2 Sexuality Buffy was one of the first mainstream network shows for a youthful audience to portray gay characters sympathetically with the Willow-Tara relationship which developed in Season 4. Willow had previously been romantically involved with a male character, Oz, guitarist with the punk band, Dingoes Ate My Baby, but after Oz leaves Sunnydale she begins a romantic relationship with female and fellow witch, Tara Maclay, which eventually privileged upbringing. In general, class is not portrayed as a permanent characteristic, nor necessarily a barrier to relationship (unlike in John Hughes' celebrated teen-pic, Pretty in Pink and the Buffy-influenced UPN series, Veronica Mars). Ideas of working class solidarity are absent; it is seen as something to be overcome rather than identified with. leads Willow to come out as a lesbian. In the early stages of the relationship it was portrayed 4.4 Englishness metaphorically as witchcraft, no doubt to appease The two main English characters come from "posh", nervous network executives who feared a negative upper/upper middle class backgrounds but when they reaction from fans and sponsors. In fact, Buffy fans adopt 'tougher" identities - Spike when he becomes a proved to be tolerant in matters of sexuality and many vampire, Giles when he (briefly) becomes a juvenile considered it the most positive portrayal of a lesbian delinquent (in Band Candy 5.) - their accents go down a relationship on network television at the time. However, few pegs on the social register. The English working the relationship ended in tragedy when a bullet from class is thus associated with toughness and violence. 2 Warren meant for Buffy killed Tara. Tara's death, which The other English characters are shown either as posh ended what many considered the most positive portrayal twits (Leslie Wyndham-Price, who replaces Giles as of a lesbian relationship on television at the time, was Watcher when giles is sacked by the Watcher’s Council) equally controversial and some fans criticised what they or posh villains (Ethan Rayne and rogue-Watcher, viewed as a clichéd resolution, arguing that lesbian Gwendolyn Post). relationships in film and television are often "punished" by death (the "dead lesbian cliché" – see chapter 5Audience). (Other aspects of sexuality are dealt with below under Metaphor.) 4.5 Race The under-representation of non-white characters in Buffy has been widely commented on, including from within the text; one of the few recurring black characters in Season 3, Mr Trick, an African-American vampire in the service of the evil Mayor Wilkins comments on 4.3 Social Class Sunnydale's racial monotony: "I mean, admittedly, it's Most of the characters in Buffy come from middle-class not a haven for the brothers ... you know, strictly the backgrounds. Buffy's mother runs an art gallery; Willow's Caucasian persuasion here in the 'Dale, but ... you know, is a university professor. Only Xander and Cordelia stand you just gotta stand up and salute that death rate" (Faith, Hope and Trick [3..3]). 66 Chapter 4: Representation Black characters, such as the west Indian slayer Kendra realise (either at the time of viewing or later when it and Initiative soldier Forrest, don't tend to last too long' "dawns on" them) that there is another meaning in and Olivia, Giles's black English girlfriend, doesn't hang operation. around after her close brush with monsters in Hush [4.10]. By Season 7, however, there was a much wider The writers, directors and producers of the series have racial representation from the potential slayers and, been quite open about the metaphoric intentions of the especially, school principal Robin Wood, a positive role series. Joss Whedon and the Buffy team have frequently model who manages to survive till the end of the pointed out that the forces of darkness that embattle the season. Slayer and her friends are metaphors for the personal demons people face: fear, isolation, rejection and the 4.6 Religion Buffy makes heavy use of religious symbolism, but often takes a negative view of religion. Whedon has referred to himself as an “angry atheist” 3 , and, in What’s My Line Part 1 [2.9], Buffy says, “Note to self: religion freaky”. In another episode she answers the question "Have you accepted Jesus Christ as your personal savior?" with "You know, I meant to and then I just got really busy" (The Freshman, [4.1]). Nevertheless, many Christians have seen positive messages in Buffy, especially in the way that it deals with the theme of redemption. 4 idea that personal growth is often achieved through suffering. Indeed, Buffy as metaphor is one of the features that has attracted many viewers to the show beyond its core teen-to-thirty audience. The idea of vampires and demons representing various problems and dangers in life has a considerable appeal, particularly when developed over the various seasons in Buffy in the way that different seasons represent different phases in the journey through life. (cf Campbell, Monomyth: The Hero's Journey etc in Chapter 3: Narrative) One of the most persistent metaphors in the series is "high school as hell". It has been said of the show's 4.7 Buffy and Metaphor In addition to the more straightforward representational creator, Joss Whedon, that if he had experienced one happy day at high school, the show would never have strategies employed in Buffy, the series uses more seen the light of day. Buffy took the high-school indirect methods of representation in the form of metaphor and took it a step further, transforming the metaphor. Traditionally, metaphor has been applied to seemingly life-and-death struggles into actual life and the written and spoken word and is the figure of speech death struggles. The vampires and other demons are in which one thing, idea or action is referred to by a metaphors for the troubles of adolescents, the “beast” word or expression normally denoting another thing, which teenagers have to confront becoming literal idea or action, so as to suggest some common quality monsters which the main characters wrestle with. shared by the two. However, the idea of metaphor can be extended to the visual media, where, to put it Sex is one of the main concerns in the show and the crudely, one thing can "stand for" something else. In central relationship during the first three seasons of the verbal language, it is usually clear that the "one thing" is show is between Buffy and Angel, a reformed vampire only there as a way of shedding new light on what it with a soul who is dedicated to atoning for his past stands for. In the visual media, this is less clear in that misdeeds and has become the nice, sensitive boyfriend the image is both itself, its primary meaning, and the of adolescent fantasy. Buffy makes the decision to sleep "thing it stands for". Metaphors in film and television, with him but, unknown to both of them, he has been therefore, are not always as apparent as they usually are cursed in that, should he find one moment of true bliss, in verbal language. This opens up the possibility for an he will lose his soul. He reverts to being the cruel, evil image to be read on different levels (cf differential "Angelus" whom Buffy eventually has to kill (though readings in Postmodernism in Chapter 1: Categories and death is not always permanent in Buffy). In many ways, Chapter 5: Audience). In Buffy, therefore, some viewers Buffy flies in the face of the traditional representation of will be aware of the literal meaning and not of the sexuality in the horror genre where only the virginal metaphorical meaning - or will realise later on there is "final girl" escapes the clutches of the monster, the "bad another level of meaning in operation. For example, in girls" being the first to suffer (for example, in the metaphor witchcraft-as-drug-addiction example Halloween). It does, however, show that sex has developed below, some viewers will read simply that consequences and is not to be taken lightly. Angel's Willow is getting into deep trouble by her dependence transformation might be seen as a metaphor for the boy on witchcraft and ever more powerful spells; others will who, appearing to be charming, sleeps with a girl, then Chapter 4: Representation 67 turns on her afterwards, bragging to his friends and female body parts, with the final piece to be the head of calling her "easy", as Angelus does at one point. The Cordelia. In Season Four, the chief of the shadowy show might therefore be said to address, metaphorically, government organisation, "The Initiative", is secretly the fears and doubts that accompany the decision to creating a human-demon-robot hybrid, Adam, from have sex. In this case it is not fear of pregnancy or of a body parts of demons. Mary Shelley's original novel sexually-transmitted disease but the creation of a might be seen as a metaphor for the way that industrial monster. capitalism created a "monster" in the form of a powerful but alienated working class which threatened to The behaviour of adolescent boys is also represented in overthrow its masters but, more recently, the The Pack [2.6], where the hapless Xander gets in with a "Frankenstein's monster" idea is frequently seen as a gang of bullies who are possessed by the spirit of metaphor for the dangers of scientists "playing god". It hyenas. This allows the episode to explore can also be seen as a reflection on the way in which metaphorically the tendency of adolescent boys to "military-industrial complex" creates weapons of mass indulge in cruel, boorish, pack-like behaviour. The destruction, recklessly disregarding the possible effects connection between what we think of as hyena on humanity. But, in the context of Buffy's teenage behaviour - the vicious pack mentality, the cruel protagonists, the Frankenstein myth can also be seen as taunting laugh - is cleverly played out in this episode. reflecting the feeling of loss of control adults feel as The idea of adolescence turning boys overnight into their offsping grow up and want their independence as monsters is referred to ironically by Giles "It's they become "monsters" (ie teenagers), who rebel devastating. He [Xander]'s turned into a sixteen-year-old against parental authority, begin looking for boy. Of course, you'll have to kill him." The idea of the companionship in the opposite sex. changes wrought by puberty is further developed when Oz, the cool, sensitive, taciturn lead-guitarist of "Dingoes Ate My Baby", turns into a werewolf for three nights every month. "Lycanthropy" (the state of being a werewolf) can be seen as a metaphor for the physical changes to the body and also the idea that there is a creature inside us that makes us do things we wish we didn't do or that we can't help doing. The series explores other issues metaphorically. The winat-all-costs mentality in sports (including school sports) is dealt with in Go Fish [2.20] The school swim team are working wonders, winning matches and medals, all for the glory of the coach and the school. Their winning ways seem to entitle them to whatever girl they want and when Buffy injures a swimming "jock" who thinks he is entitled to her, it is she who gets the blame by "provoking" him with a low-cut blouse. It turns out that the success of the swimming team is due the performance-enhancing DNA which the coach has been giving them, which has the unfortunate effect of turning them into fish-like monsters (itself a metaphor for the dangerous side-effects of steroid abuse in sport). The monster created by the mad scientist is a theme that has appeared in literature since the eighteenth century, its most famous manifestation being Mary Shelley's novel, "Frankenstein", and the Frankenstein motif has been used on a number of occasions in Buffy, for example in No Assembly Required [3.14] where Darryl Epps is brought back to life by his brother who wants a mate so he tries to assemble one from various 68 Chapter 4: Representation The theme of conflict between the generations is developed metaphorically in a number of ways throughout the whole series. For two seasons, Joyce Summers is well meaning but blind in the face of her daughter's nocturnal activities. As Buffy tells her when she refuses to accept Buffy’s status as Slayer: “Open your eyes, Mom. What do you think has been going on for the past two years? The fights, the weird occurrences. How many times have you washed blood out of my clothing, and you still haven't figured it out?” This ignorance provides the basis for much of the comedy in Buffy. In Harvest [1.12], Buffy has, literally to save the world (it won't be the last time) but her mother wants her to stay at home. "If you don't go out it'll be the end of the world? Everything's life and death to a sixteenyear-old" (another example of the dramatic irony to be found frequently in the show). When Buffy finally has to tell her mother the real state of affairs in Sunnydale and that she is the Slayer, it is perhaps a kind of "coming out" metaphor, admitting to a shocked parent that you are gay. (Joyce says, in Becoming Part 2 (2.22) "Have you tried not being a slayer?" - although the gay issue is itself dealt with metaphorically before it becomes literal in the Willow-Tara relationship). But Joyce can't fully come to terms with her daughter's life being devoted to slaying vampires. She tells Buffy: "You belong at an oldfashioned college with keg-parties and boys, not here with Hellmouths and vampires" to which Buffy replies, "not really seeing the difference." The irony of course is that rich college boys in their "frat (fraternity) houses" are shown as owing their wealth to an evil snake god, to whom they sacrifice virgins in the frat house basement; perhaps another metaphor for capitalism and the themselves from that episode's monsters. The spell measures greed will drive people to. As Xander remarks Willow and Tara do in Who Are You [4.20] when Buffy (alluding to F Scott Fitzgerald's "The Great Gatsby"): "I and Faith switched bodies is presented as thinly veiled guess the rich really are different". sex. (As Xander says excitedly in Restless [4.22], "Sometimes when I think of them doing 'spells', I do a Inter-generational conflict is dealt with metaphorically 'spell'" – though, admittedly, he ‘says’ it in Willow’s elsewhere in the series. In Ted [2.11], Joyce starts going dream.) Eventually they "come out" and the metaphor is out with a complete control freak who frequently no longer necessary. This allows witchcraft to shift its criticises Buffy and is determined to change her ways. metaphorical terms where Willow's increased use of and This sets Buffy against him, a conflict which eventually reliance on witchcraft coming to stand for drug leads to Buffy "killing" him but we discover he is in fact addiction. Willow's skill in the black arts is something a robot, an effective metaphor for the cold automaton that Buffy comes increasingly to rely on to help her fight who is a "stickler for the rules." The fact that he was the demons. However, she begins to use it for programmed in the 1950s, frequently seen as a inappropriate purposes, such as altering people's backward, repressive period, can be seen as particularly memory when she has a problem with personal significant. Adolescence is also dealt with metaphorically relationships. For example, Tara's love song to Willow in in the case of Dawn, Buffy's mysterious little sister who the musical episode, Once More With Feeling, [6.7], appears at the start of Season 5. She is, in fact, an orb of "I'm Under Your Spell", is sung twice, the first time in the pure energy, put into human form by monks so that conventional romantic way but in the second Tara Buffy would protect it with her life. But she has no recognizes that Willow has actually altered her memory, knowledge of this at first, memories having been which leads to a (temporary) break-up. This addiction to implanted of a 'normal' childhood, so when she finds out magic has similarities to drug addiction in the way that accidentally who - or rather what - she is, she reacts she lies to her friends, becomes irresponsible (for badly, cutting herself and attempting to burn down the example in Wrecked [6.10], almost leading to Dawn's house. This could be seen metaphorically as the angst death in a car accident), and going out on the town with many adolescents go through when confronting the fellow witch Amy where she tries to drown her sorrows in problems of growing up. As television critic Joyce magic. Like drug addicts she needs a stronger and Millman observes, 5 "The fact that Dawn is 'negative stronger dose which she gets from her "fixer", Rack. space' is a breathtaking metaphor for an adolescent's After Tara's death, her grief, combined with her lack of self-esteem." The idea of the lack of self-esteem witchcraft, almost cause her to destroy the world. She in teenage girls is also explored in Out of Mind, Out of then (in Season 7) goes to England where she learns to Sight [1.11] where an unpopular girl ends up being control her powers under the tutelage of Giles and a literally invisible - and at the end is whisked off to the coven of witches, clearly analogous to "going into FBI to become a government assassin. rehab", and treating her addiction. Another inter-generational conflict dealt with Some commentators 6 have seen Buffy as a politically metaphorically, this time through witchcraft (or "wicca"), radical series in the way that it represents institutions, is the episode entitled The Witch ([1.3] where a former and metaphor is frequently the means by which this is cheerleader, and mother of a student, Amy, switches conveyed. Indeed, it could be seen to follow a left-wing bodies with her daughter so she can fulfil her desire to tradition of associating capitalist exploiters as become a high school cheerleader again and then cast “bloodsuckers” and vampires as exploiters of the spells on rival potential cheerleaders, including Buffy, to helpless peasantry. 7 In Anne, [3.1], for example, eliminate the competition. This can be read as a teenagers are being kidnapped into an underground metaphori for parents who push their own aspirations hell-dimension, where they are worked until old age only onto their children in order to achieve glory or reclaim days later (time goes much faster in this dimension) and past glory. spat out onto the street when they can no longer work. This can be seen as a metaphor for the way capitalism Witchcraft is later used, firstly as a metaphor for exploits its workers. According to Karl Marx, however, lesbianism and then as a metaphor for drug addiction. In capitalism, by creating the workforce, creates its own Season Four, Willow begins a lesbian relationship with grave-digger, as the workers revolt against their Tara, also a witch, but at first this is treated entirely conditions to establish their own individuality. In this metaphorically. They first meet in Hush [4.10] where they episode, Buffy, in denial of her slayer duties, moved from hold hands to summon up the power to protect Sunnydale to start a new life in another town but, finding Chapter 4: Representation 69 herself in this hell dimension, she leads her fellow workers in revolt against the demonic slave drivers to overthrow the system. Significantly, she does so wielding a hammer and sickle (the hammer standing for the industrial worker and the sickle for the peasant), originally the symbol of revolutionary socialism. In the following episode,"Dead Man's Party" [3.2], she returns to Sunnydale where she is given a welcomehome party during which her friends confront her about how she is running away from her problems. Appropriately at this point, a group of zombies gatecrash the party, having been summoned by a magic mask from Joyce's gallery which is hanging on the wall. Buffy deals with the zombies and is reconciled with her friends. The zombies are perhaps metaphors for the way in which problems, if not confronted, have a way of resurfacing to cause even greater problems. As Xander tells Buffy at the party: "You can't just bury stuff, Buffy. It'll come right back up to get you." 70 Chapter 4: Representation Notes 1 Whedon, Joss: Commentary on Season 1 DVD 2 For a discussion of Englishness in Buffy, see Hills, Laura: “Blood Sausage, Bangers and Mash: British English and Britishness in Buffy”, Media Education Journal 35, Aberdeen: Association for Media Education in Scotland, Spring 2004, pp 15-18. 3 Lavery, D, "A Religion in Narrative: Joss Whedon and Television Creativity", paper given by at the Blood, Text and Fears conference in Norwich, England, October 2002; http://www.slayage.tv/essays/slayage7/Lavery.htm] (Retrieved 10 October 2006) 4 For a concise analysis of religion in Buffy, especially Christianity, see Erickson, Gregory, Sometimes You Need a Story: American Christianity, Vampires and Buffy http://www.poppolitics.com/articles/2001-04-23-buffy.shtml (Retrieved 10 October, 2006). 5 Millman, Joyce, Salon.com, “The Death of Buffy’s Mom”, (Retrieved March 12, 2001). http://salon.com/ent/col/mill/2001/03/12/buffy_mom/index.html (Retrieved 11 October, 2006) 6 (For example, “Encyclopédie Buffy” http://encyclobuffy.free.fr/62-Trotskiste.htm (Retrieved 8 October 2006) 7 South, James B. (ed), Buffy the Vampire Slayer and Philosophy: Fear and Trembling in Sunnydale, New York: Open Court Press, 2003, pp257, 258. Activities l Joyce Summers and Giles are represented in a positive way but it has been argued that these are exceptional, that adults are generally portrayed in a negative way. Consider the representation of adults in Buffy as a whole, for example, school principals, teachers (high school and university), the police, civic leaders. l Buffy could be seen as an example of the “dumb blonde” stereotype – she occasionally doesn’t seem all that bright – but the stereotype is constantly undermined by her power, integrity and resourcefulness. Consider, however, another blonde character, Harmony. At first, she is Cordelia’s sidekick in the “Cordettes” at Sunnydale High School but she really comes into her own from Season 4 onwards after she becomes a vampire. Look at some of the following episodes and consider how Harmony is portrayed in terms of the “dumb blonde” stereotype. How do you feel about this representation? The Harsh Light of Day [4.3] The Initiative [4.7] The Real Me [5.2] Crush [5.14] l l The representation of Englishness has been dealt with in this study guide by means of Giles and Spike but Angel is Irish. Consider the representation of Irishness in Becoming Part One [2.21]. Do you see any similarities with other representations of Irishness (particularly in the UK media)? Consider the Initiative, the vampire-hunting secret government installation in Season 4. How does it represent the ‘military-industrial complex’? Chapter 4: Representation 71 72 Chapter 4: Representation Chapter 5: Audience THIS CHAPTER AIMS TO EXPLORE AUDIENCE IN BUFFY, IN PARTICULAR: l l l l l target audience uses and gratifications differential reading (coding and decoding) differential decoding and postmodernism mode of address To arrive at a comprehensive analysis of a media text, referred to earlier. It would also appear to be fairly the Key Aspects must be applied in an integrated way. tolerant audience in matters of sexual attitudes This is particularly the case with Audience and Institution (although this was not so obvious to the producers when in US network television as the whole system depends they were introducing a lesbian relationship, beginning on the industry delivering an audience to television in Hush [4.10] involving one of the core characters, programmes which are financed not by the audience Willow). directly paying for the programme (apart from the relatively small percentage represented by subscription Buffy often addresses its audience as "hip" as well as TV) but by the audience buying the products advertised. mainstream; it is therefore more open to more This transaction takes place within an institutional unorthodox stylistic features - but not excessively as the framework which includes the production companies, show must avoid alienating a significant segment of the the broadcasters (which may be part of the same audience which is younger and has more mainstream organisations), the polling organizations such as Neilson, tastes. Episodes such as Hush [4.10], with more than half the advertising agencies and the manufacturers of the its running time without dialogue, and Restless [4.22], goods being advertised, as well as the regulatory the final episode of Season 4, consisting of surrealist machinery being set up by both industry and the federal dream-sequences, are balanced by more orthodox government. Despite this close integration of Audience narratives. and Institution, Audience is dealt with in a separate chapter from Institutions in order to isolate and focus on An “indie” sensibility overlaps with a “hip” sensibility, as particular aspects of Audience. audiences feel as if they are being addressed in a different way from the mainstream. Clearly, WB, UPN 5.1 Target Audience Producers try to target a wide audience but at the same time look to attract niche audiences which is a more effective way of delivering audiences to advertisers. (This will be developed in the next chapter: Institutions). The main audience targeted by Buffy was the 16-32 audience. (One study 1 puts the average viewer age at 29.) Ratings also tended to be higher in the larger urban centres, not least because the WB and UPN, the networks on which Buffy was shown, lacked affiliates in some of the smaller markets. It was targeted at the more affluent sections of the demographic, a particularly desirable demographic from the point of view of advertisers. It is an audience whose members tend to have certain characteristics in common and this is reflected in the content and style of the show. The audience is "inscribed in the text", that is, the content and style of the series gives indications as to the audiences being targeted. It would seem to be a very media-literate audience, as suggested by the density of and Fox are not “independents”, but in order to attract that particular market, the show frequently addresses its audience in those terms. It does so partly in terms of its (diegetic) music, featuring un-signed, up-and-coming indie/alternative bands, as well as more established, 'cult' bands such as The Breeders. Indeed, the credit music is supplied by one such band, Nerf Herder. The use of cult bands also raises the the whole idea of Buffy as a "cult" show. This term has many different meanings but the central one refers to a media product where the audience has a less casual, more intense relationship with it, and whose engagement with it continues after the episode, or indeed the whole show, has ended. This is reflected, for example, in the thousands of websites devoted to Buffy (which the producers and writers admitted to visiting and indeed participating in) with their message boards, fan fiction, trivia and, frequently, sophisticated reflection and analysis. There is an economic rationale to such a fan intertextual allusions to both pop and classical culture Chapter 5: Audience 73 base as its “cult” end is more likely to buy the spin-off centre stage every time there is a major crime of products such as DVDs, CDs, books, posters and violence involving young people. For example, the film mouse-mats etc. Child's Play 3 was blamed for influencing the child-killers of the toddler Jamie Bulger despite there being no Another area of attraction for such an audience is the proof that they had actually seen the film. A related idea witty and articulate scripts with their original take on is the inoculation model which suggests that long-term language, “Buffyspeak”, and the show also attracted a exposure to media messages makes audiences immune considerable audience in the universities, not just among to them. For example, repeated exposure to screen students but also their teachers: there have been a violence would desensitise the audience so that they number of international conferences attracting scholars would no longer be shocked by it. Studies of the effects from a wide range of disciplines and not limited to of viewing violent images on audiences have tended to media and cultural studies specialists. This has led to the be inconclusive and people are likely to take from them establishment of an online academic journal, “Slayage”.2 whatever corresponds most with their belief system. Despite Buffy’s audience being to some degree a niche These theories view audiences as essentially passive audience, it is not a homogeneous one and, as receivers of media messages. Later theories tended to discussed earlier, Buffy is a cross-generic text, stress that audiences have a much more active suggesting attempts to reach different layers of engagement with the text, an approach summed up in audience. Although the core audience (as far as the James Halloran's phrase: "We must get away from the producers are concerned) is the 16-32 demographic, at habit of thinking in terms of what the media do to the younger end of that spectrum there is a teen people and substitute for it the idea of what people do audience (which overlaps with a smaller but significant to the media.' 3 What audiences do with the media, it pre-teen audience). From the point of view of advertisers was argued 4 , was dependent on what they wanted this is a less lucrative group but not only do they provide from it. Four types of need have been identified: demand for the spin-off merchandise, they also grow up with the show (which ran for 6 years) and would become (i) Personal identity more affluent and able to buy both the products By comparing our own lives and values with roles and advertised on the show with their own money. This end values represented in the media (both fiction and non- of the demographic would be attracted to the (girl- fiction), we discover and reinforce our sense of personal centred) teen-fiction, concerned with relationships, identity. In fictional media, it is more likely that we relate crushes, school cliques etc. more in this respect to realist genres, such as soaps and other forms of drama, rather than fantasy genres. The fact that the series is consciously attempting to However, a rich text such as Buffy continually presents convey a feminist perspective suggests a majority moral dilemmas inviting us to empathise with fictional female audience. Despite this, another layer of the characters by putting ourselves in their position. 5 audience is those interested in the horror genre, the Personal identity also includes the feeling of belonging gothic and martial arts elements of Buffy, which is likely to a group and the more active fans can do so by to include more males than females. The presence of interacting with other fans on websites, chat rooms, etc. attractive young women is another point of attraction for and going to fan Conventions. male viewers – although this is likely to operate across the genders for a show where even the geeks and nerds are generally played by attractive young actors of both genders. (ii) Social interaction and the need for companionship Soap audiences are frequently accused of being unable to differentiate between fictional characters and real-life 5.2 What Audiences Get from Texts Uses and Gratifications Uses and gratifications theory was an attempt to show audiences actively engaging with texts rather than as passive recipients of media messages, The "hypodermic syringe" model, for example, assumed that audiences were easily influenced by the media to the extent of some members of audiences behaving in a violent way because of seeing violent images. This theory takes 74 Chapter 5: Audience ones. This is nonsense of course but audiences do find satisfaction in identifying with characters. For example, elderly people living on their own may find a sense of companionship with a soap character (or even real-life celebrity). Many Buffy fans have a strong sense of identity with the characters and, thanks to the internet, frequently engaged with Buffy's producers about the fate of the characters, for example, the decision to kill off Tara near the end of Season 6 which removed one of the few lesbian role models on prime-time TV. Another dismissal of much popular media as "mere" aspect of the need for social interaction provided by the entertainment and "escapist" and suggests that media is the common ground that can be shared in entertainment responds to real needs in society, the conversation about television shows. Since the image of "something better" ... that our day-to-day lives proliferation of TV channels in recent years which has don't provide'. Using the example of one of the most fragmented audiences, this is thought to be less spectacular (and non-realist) genres - the musical - he prominent than in the days of the BBC and ITV duopoly argues that entertainment offers a utopian vision of the in the UK but occasionally an 'event' TV show can touch world, "what utopia would feel like" rather than how it a wider audience (eg Big Brother, The X-Factor). In the could be achieved. The musical responds to real USA this kind of show is referred to as "water-cooler" TV inadequacies in most people's lives such as scarcity, but the internet also provides this function. The exhaustion, dreariness, manipulation, and fragmentation thousands of sites devoted to Buffy the Vampire Slayer by suggesting utopian visions of abundance, energy, are involved in typical fan activities including fan-fiction intensity, transparency and community. where the fans can indulge in their fantasies by placing the characters in new situations and forming new Which of these "utopian solutions" to the alienated life relationships – see Cult programmes in Chapter 1 might be present in Buffy? The display of abundance is Categories. not to the forefront. Certainly, most of the characters come from comfortable middle-class backgrounds but (iii) The need for information poverty and hardship are never far away, whether it is the The media are a massive source of information, spoilt Cordelia in Season 3 having to become a "name- especially with the development of the Internet. While tag person" and take a job in a clothes shop when her fictional genres are also capable of providing (often father is declared bankrupt due to tax default, or Buffy highly disputed) information (eg the BBC/HBO being unable to pay her way after her mother's death production, Rome), Buffy is unlikely to be a significant and having to take a "Mac-job" in a fast-food restaurant. means of satisfying this particular need (with the Despite the rich variety of expensive designer clothing possible exception of apprentice witches). available to Buffy and the other female characters, it is not (unlike, say, the 1980s American daytime soap, (iv) The need for entertainment Dallas) one of the main attractions for the audience and The media - especially the fictional media - satisfy a so this "solution" does not play a major role in the need for diversion, including the desire for fantasy and audience's needs and pleasures in Buffy. escape from the everyday constraints in our lives, and the need for catharsis – the purging of strong emotion. Certainly, there is plenty of energy and intensity - of excitement and emotion - on display in Buffy to This particular need in the "Uses and Gratifications" counteract the dreariness and monotony of everyday life. approach is addressed by Richard Dyer, in his essay, Likewise, the transparency in the relationships between "Entertainment and Utopia" 6 . He rejects the frequent the Scooby gang are in contrast to the political Reality Utopian soloution Scarcity Poverty and the unequal distribution of wealth, Abundance Elimination of poverty, equal distribution of wealth, Exhaustion Work as a grind, alienated labour, pressures of urban life. Energy Work and play synonymous; able to counteract exhaustion, Dreariness Monotony, predictability of everyday life. Intensity Excitement, drama, authenticity. Manipulation Advertising, political manipulation, restrictive gender roles Transparency Open, spontaneous, honest and sincere communications and relationships Fragmentation Mobility, family breakdown, legislation against collective action (anti-union laws), Community All together in one place, sense of belonging, communal interests, collective activity. Above is a summary of Dyer’s categories [Table 5.1] Chapter 5: Audience 75 manipulation which takes place in society, especially in executive producers who may put a different spin on those layers of society who wield the power – big particular sequences and episodes, even in a television business, senior politicians etc. This manipulation is most text with a strong “authorial voice” such as Joss prominent in Seasons 3 and 4 when Buffy confronts the Whedon’s in Buffy. And not only the creative personnel evil Mayor Wilkins and his witting or unwitting henchmen but the executives of the network where a show is in Sunnydale, such as the police or school principal broadcast, not to mention the sponsors who pay for the Snyder. Or when Buffy has to deal with the secret advertising slots. Nevertheless, there are certain government organisation, The Initiative, led by the dominant messages which are articulated through films, autocratic and devious psychology professor, Maggie television programmes etc. On a fairly simple level, the Walsh, which is a front for the "military-industrial text of Buffy is encoded so that the audience is invited complex" which plays such an important role in to support Buffy and the Scoobies against the villains. American life. The sense of community is emphasised For example, the audience is invited to approve of the particularly in Primeval, [4.21] the penultimate episode defeat of Glory at the end of season 5, even if it means of Season 4 (in effect, the season's climax). In order to killing Ben, the human with whom Glory shares a body. defeat Adam, the "Frankenstein-monster" hybrid of demon and android, the Scoobies have to overcome But there are more general ideological stances adopted their differences that have been exploited in order to by Buffy which go beyond supporting the heroes against fragment the group. Only by combining their strengths the villains. There is a strong pro-feminist element (with can they summon the power to defeat Adam and bring villains often being represented as misogynists), a pro- back their sense of community, their "sense of tolerance stance on matters of sexual preference and a belonging". And it is through the audience's strong sense that acts have consequences and people identification with the characters that this sense of have to take responsibility for their actions. However, not gratification is gained. all viewers would see Buffy in a positive light. For example, Concerned Women of America 7 , and other 5.3 Differential Reading/Coding and Decoding Following a shift from focusing on what texts do to audiences to examining what audiences do to texts, ideas of “differential decoding” were developed – how different sections of the audience deal differently with the same text according to their background (age, gender, class etc). The text is encoded in a certain way to promote a “preferred reading” – how the producers expect the audience to interpret a text. The idea of a preferred reading works better with texts such as adverts where the intended effect on the audience is to buy the product); and with non-fiction texts, such as news and current affairs where the dominant ideas of society tend to be expressed. However, ideas, attitudes and ideologies are also to be found on fictional texts. Of course, audiences do not always decode the text in the way that was intended. When the audience resists a reading intended by the producers, it is referred to as an “oppositional reading”. However, audience members may accept some parts of the message encoded in the text but oppose others, this is referred to as “negotiated reading” The idea of preferred, oppositional and negotiated reading is more complex in fictional texts where there are multiple voices competing to create meaning. There are inputs from the writers, the directors, the actors, the 76 Chapter 5: Audience fundamentalist groups, have campaigned against the use of the occult in shows such as Buffy (and even Sabrina the Teenage Witch and Harry Potter). Buffy also topped the Parent Television Council’s list of worst shows. 8 This is not only because Buffy deals with the occult but because some of its critics see it as encouraging teenage sex (Buffy has sex with Angel on her 17th birthday; Willow sleeps with Oz on the eve of the climactic battle at the end of Season 3) and this has brought the wrath of such groups down on the heads of the show’s producers. Such opponents are unlikely to be regular viewers of the show but it is among the show’s fans that we frequently find negotiated readings – generally favourable but disapproving of particular episodes and story arcs. Some viewers were hostile to the relationship between Willow and Tara, and the producers were wary at first of making the relationship too explicit. (This wariness is also encoded in the text, as in Buffy and Xander’s conversation about what Willow and Tara were up to in Once More With Feeling [6.10], and their concern that Dawn would realise the nature of the relationship. In fact, Dawn finds it “kind of romantic”, to which Buffy and Xander react in unison, “no it’s not!”) Well before Season 6, however, the nature of the relationship is presented in a more matter-of-fact way and it was clear that it met with the general acceptance of the audience. An oppositional reading arose, however, by the way the 5.4 relationship ended – in Tara’s death by gunshot wound Mode of Address This refers to how a media text addresses its audience in Seeing Red [6.19] – but from the opposite direction. and establishes a relationship with it. Television drama, Many lesbians saw Tara and Willow as role models, like film, employs an indirect, impersonal mode of particularly in a TV show on a major network (see the address - the text does not "talk to us" directly, we just section on sexuality in Chapter Four: Representations), "eavesdrop" on the characters and action. The whole and responded vociferously. 9 The producers defended continuity editing system (see Chapter 2: Language) is this development (on, for example, the chat rooms designed to draw us into the action; for example, in a where they would often intervene) on the grounds that shot/reverse-shot, we see things from the perspective of the death of Tara was clearly for narrative considerations one character and then the other. The technique of - in order to push the (now very powerful wiccan) Willow eyeline match, where we see a close-up of a character to the limit, where she comes close to destroying the looking off-screen, followed by a shot of what the world in the season's climax. Whedon had always character sees, situates us in the position of the opposed the idea that the narrative should always serve character. The use of the POV (point-of-view shot – a progressive attitudes to social questions (as in "don't do technique frequently used in thriller and horror genres) drugs" episodes to be found in many teen shows) and also pulls us into the perspective of one of the argued that the narrative itself was paramount. Indeed, characters, often the killer or monster. Buffy has a record of killing off popular characters such as Jenny Calendar and Joyce Summers in order to A more direct device occasionally used to draw us into advance the narrative the action is the voice-over, where one of the characters talk directly to us (or else we overhear their thoughts 5.3.1 Differential Decoding and the Postmodern directly, as in a theatrical soliloquy). In Passions, [2.17], Text Angel, having reverted to his evil alter ego, Angelus, Not all differential decoding is as a result of different becomes once again the vicious killer he was before the sections of the audience having different ideological gypsy curse, and by the end of the episode he has killed positions. It also results from different textual Giles's girlfriend, Jenny Calender. Angel's voice-over competencies exercised by different members of the conveys to the audience the dark tone of the episode: audience. As developed in Chapter Two: Catgories, Passion. It lies in all of us. Sleeping ... waiting... And though unwanted...unbidden ... it will stir open its jaws, and howl. Buffy also has aspects of an artistic style know as postmodernism, one of the features of which is a high degree of intertextuality. Intertextuality often involves another feature of postmodern texts - how the same text This is continued near the end when Angelus, unseen, can be appreciated in different ways by different observes Giles’s grief at Jenny’s death: audiences: the mainstream audience which reads the If we could live without passion, maybe we'd know some kind of peace. But we would be hollow… Empty rooms, shuttered and dank... Without passion, we'd be truly dead. film in a straightforward way and the"cineliterate" (or "smart" or "film buff") audience which recognises the intertextual references. What knowledge the audience brings to the text will However, a direct address to the camera ("breaking the vary, what the French sociologist Pierre Bourdieu called fourth wall") is rarely used in film or TV drama (and only “cultural capital” 10 - accumulated cultural knowledge. occasionally in comedy). The exception is the musical However, it is not always the viewer with the “highest” genre where, when the characters break into song, they form of cultural capital (in terms of the status of high art adopt the position of performing directly for the in relation to popular art). The younger and less audience. In the musical episode, Once More with educated members of the audience may not pick up all Feeling [6.7], for example, Xander and Anya directly the classical cultural allusions while the older, formally address the camera as they sing their "retro-pastiche" more educated members of the audience might miss number, "I'll Never Tell"; and at the resolution of the some of the pop-cultural references which the show episode when Buffy enters the Bronze to take on Sweet, frequently alludes to. the singing and dancing demon, she sings the following verses: Chapter 5: Audience 77 Life's a show and we all play our parts_ And when the music starts We open up our hearts It's all right if some things come out wrong We'll sing a happy song_ And you can sing along And when she sings the last line, at the word “you”, she directly faces the camera, and therefore the audience. 78 Chapter 5: Audience Notes 1 Ono, Kent, “To be a Vampire on Buffy the Vampire Slayer: Race and (“other”) Socially Marginalising Positions on Horror Television” in R.H. Elyce (ed) Fantasy Girls: Gender in the New Universe of ScienceFiction and Fantasy Television. Lanham: Rowman and Littlefield, 2000; cited in Branston, Gill and Roy Stafford, The Media Studies Book, Oxford; Routledge, 2003, p 85. 2 Slayage: An On-Line Journal of Buffy Studies; http://www.slayage.tv/ 3 Cited in O'Sullivan et al, Studying the Media, 1998: London, Arnold, p.129. 4 J Blumler and Katz, E (eds) The Uses of Mass Communication, cited in Studying the Media, Tim O’Sullivan, Brian Dutton and Philip Rayner, second edition, 1998, London, Arnold 5 Riess, Jana,What Would Buffy Do? The Vampire Slayer as Spiritual Guide,New York: Jossey-Bass/Wiley 2004 6 Dyer, Richard, ‘Entertainment and Utopia’, in Only Entertainment. Dyer Richard, London: Routledge, 1992 pp. 17-34. 7 http://www.cwfa.org/familyvoice/2001-11/06-12.asp (Retrieved 22 November 2006). 8 Slayage: The International Journal of Buffy Studiers: http://www.slayage.com/articles/000080.html (Retrieved 20 November 2006). 9 For example, Black Robert A, “It's Not Homophobia, But_That Doesn't Make It Right: Creative Freedom, Responsibility _and the Death of Tara “: http://www.dykesvision.com/en/articles/homophobia.html (Retrieved 24 November 2006). 10 Bourdieu, Pierre, The State Nobility: Elite Schools in the Field of Power. Translated by Lauretta C. Clough, Stanford: Stanford University Press, 1996. Activities l Can you think of two contrasting films or TV shows, one which is clearly targeted at a well-defined audience, and another with a wider appeal. Show how the audienxce is ‘inscribed in the text in each example. l l l Choose a film or TV programme which you particularly like and try to apply the “Uses and Gratifications” model (cf. Chapter 5, pp 63) to it. Look at the adverts in a television programme you are fond of and try to see if there is any obvious connection between target audience and products being advertised. Look at an episode of Buffy and see to what extent an audience (or audiences) is “inscribed in the text”, ie look for particular features that would suggest a particular audience are being targeted by the episode. Chapter 5: Audience 79 80 Chapter 5: Audience Chapter 6: Institutions THIS CHAPTER AIMS TO EXPLORE INSTITUTIONS IN BUFFY, IN PARTICULAR: l l l l l l US network television, film and television, the “Big Three” and the newer networks Neilsen ratings and “the sweeps’ broadcasting and “narrowcasting” Buffy’s defection to UPN institutional constraints (external and internal) institutional constraints in the UK At the end of each episode of Buffy, the following companies are credited: Mutant Enemy, Inc. Josh Whedon's own production company; subcontracted by Fox to make the series Kazui Enterprises Both these companies have some interest in the "intellectual property" that is Buffy, deriving from the original 1992 film which Fran Kazui directed Sandollar Television 20th Century Fox Television Part of a large multimedia corporation (see later); producer of television shows, also (since mid-1980s) a television network WB Television TV network, also part of massive multimedia conglomerate. Buffy went out on WB for the first 5 seasons. A rival to Fox both in production and as a network; also a competitor of ... UPN . . . another TV network and part of a major multimedia company. When contract for Buffy was up for renewal at the end of Seasons 5, UPN outbid WB and broadcast the final two seasons. Table 6.1 In order to make sense of these bodies, it is necessary to 6.1 understand the structure of US television which is very In contrast to the stability it achieved from the 1950s different from the UK model. onwards, American television has been in a considerable Of course, media institutions are not limited to the media industries. Institutions are constituted by a whole network of relationships, regulatory bodies, professional codes of practice etc. But how media practitioners are controlled is central to the idea of institutions, whether it be "internal controls" - where the front-line media practitioners are constrained in what they do by executives and managers, representing the company or organisation that employs them; or external controls where the control is exerted by bodies outwith the media organisation, such as censorship bodies, sponsors and advertisers, polling organisations such as Neilsen (see below), trade unions (especially in relation to health and safety issues), regulatory bodies such as the Federal Communications Commission, and the law courts. US Network Television 1 state of flux in recent years. In the 1950s, when television took over from cinema as the major source of entertainment, three major companies - often referred to as "The Big Three" - dominated the market. These are ABC (American Broadcasting Network), NBC (National Broadcasting Company) and CBS (Columbia Broadcasting System). These were essentially "wholesalers" for programmes made by production companies. For example Desilu Productions was a production company which produced the most popular sitcom of the 1950s, I Love Lucy. It was shown on the CBS network. The same production company produced Gene Roddenberry's Star Trek in the 1960s which was shown on the NBC network. The networks derive their income from selling advertising slots. Unlike the UK system where there is a mixture of state-funded broadcasting (the BBC) and Chapter 6: Institutions 81 commercial stations, American TV has always been programmes to the television networks from the, by overwhelmingly commercial The programmes are "paid now, underused studio facilities. for" by the public buying the products of the companies which supplied the income for the advertising - at the The Paramount Case was a response to a monopolistic cost to the public that the programmes are constantly situation in the film industry. However, a similar interrupted by advertising on a scale far greater than we monopolistic situation developed in the television are used to in the UK. There are parts of US television industry. By 1970, the Big Three networks had financial which don't fit this pattern, such as cable (funded by interests in and syndication rights to 98% of their subscription or advertising – though the adverts don’t programming and independent producers were interrupt the programmes - or a mixture), and a small practically shut out of the market. According to Jennifer public broadcasting sector (funded by federal grants, Holt: commercial and private sponsorship) but - while the cable sector in particular is growing in importance - the main networks still dominate the airwaves. 6.2 Film and Television . . the networks' power was such that there was nothing to challenge their control over the industry. Programme suppliers, mainly consisting of the Hollywood studios, were furious over the terms extracted by the networks for airing their products. 2 As television was becoming established in the USA, the film industry was still the dominant form of mass This led to pressure on the regulatory body, the Federal entertainment. However, this situation was soon to Communications Commission [FCC] to introduce the change. Changes in lifestyle, with a post-war "baby- Financial Interest and Syndication ("Fin Sync") and the boom" and mass migration to the suburbs, led to many Prime Time Access Rule [PTAR]. These rules, designed to people finding other leisure pursuits, (cinemas tended to increase diversity in programming and promote the be in city centres) and a gradual decline in cinema growth of independent stations, prohibited the networks attendance. Things got worse for Hollywood when, in from producing their own prime-time programming, a 1948, the US Justice Department led an action against situation not unlike that in the film industry post-1948 the monopolistic practices of the film industry, the so- where the film companies were not allowed to own called "Paramount Case". Five film "studios" (referred to cinemas. as the "Big Five") - Warner Brothers, 20th Century Fox, Paramount, MGM and RKO - dominated the industry. This system lasted more or less till the 1980s, a time of These film companies operated a system known as deregulation in line with the "free market" ideology "vertical integration": they not only owned the means of dominant at that time. However, it was also the start of a film production but also distribution and exhibition - the period of relative decline of the audience for network very profitable cinemas. (Another three studios - the television which had become increasingly fragmented by "Little Three" - United Artists, Universal and Columbia - cable, home video and, later, the Internet. Until then, the produced and distributed films but did not own cinemas; networks were restricted in their ability to produce however, they were very much in league with the Big programmes themselves. The loosening of restrictions Five as part of the monopolistic system). The studios meant that the networks could make own their own were forced to sell their profitable cinemas and this programmes and show them in prime time, and the furthered the decline as television became increasingly production companies (often owned by large multimedia strong. corporations) feared they would not have an outlet for their programmes and so they set up new networks - Not surprisingly, the film industry was initially hostile to chiefly, Fox in the 1980s and WB and UPN in the mid- television. However, the film companies realised that 1990s. Networks making programmes and production their back catalogue of films was a very valuable asset companies setting up networks was part of a process when sold to television. Columbia was the first studio to which led to the situation today where a few giant sell broadcasting rights in the programmes to the Big multimedia companies dominate the market, both in Three TV networks, who then provided them to their production and exhibition, a situation which goes "affiliates" - the retail outlets that then showed the beyond the vertical integration of the 1940s film industry programmes to the audiences. Soon, Hollywood came to become a vertical and horizontal integration. to realise the importance of television as a market and not only for their back-products: they began to join the ranks of the production companies supplying 82 Chapter 6: Institutions 6.3 The "Big Three" and the newer networks The traditional Big Three networks, ABC, CBS and NBC, and the newer networks, Fox, WB and UPN, are part of large media conglomerates which represent some of the biggest companies in the world with interests all over the globe 3 see Table 6.2 Resulted from a merger of Warner (the successor to the historic Hollywood studio. Warner Bros.), Time (with interests in publishing) and the internet company AOL. Owns multiplex cinemas, magazines, internet services, theme parks and merchandise shops, cable, film and television production. The first four seasons of Buffy was broadcast on the WB Television network. 2003 revenues: $39.6 billion As well as the famous cartoons and theme parks, Disney owns Touchstone, Miramax and Buena Vista films, a number of publishers, basketball and football teams, as well as the ABC network (one of the "Big Three"). Recently acquired the Pixar animation company. 2003 revenues: $28.4 billion Blockbuster Videos, UCI cinemas, MTV and VHI are among Viacom's interests. It also owns Paramount (which owns UPN which showed the final 2 series of Buffy). It broke US rules controlling media ownership when it bought the CBS network but its allies in the senate had the rules changed. It has recently swallowed up Steven Spielberg’s DreamWorks studio. 2003 revenues: $26.6 billion News Corporation was originally based in newspaper publishing (in the UK, owning The Times, The Sun and The News of the World, as well as The New York Times). Now has a controlling interest in Sky Television in the UK as well as 20th Century Fox Films and Fox TV, now one of the largest in the USA. Produces Buffy. 2003 revenues: $17.5 billion Its interests include the NBC network, Universal Pictures and Universal Studios leisure parks. 2003 revenues: $39.6 billion (although not limited to the media and entertainment business) Table 6.2 (The sixth Hollywood "major" is Sony. The Japanese 13% of the viewing population. For example, during owned company recently swallowed up MGM, once the "Prime Time" (8 -11 pm) in November 2000, NBC was largest film studio in Hollywood, and also owns Sony watched by 13.87 million households, ABC by 13.86 Pictures and Columbia Tristar. It is one of the world's million and CBS by 11.89 million. largest producers of consumer electronics and a major in music production. It is a producer ot television shows for The newer networks are smaller than the old, with the major networks but does not itself control a major around 80 - 120 affiliates - although Fox has grown US TV network). enough to be considered part of a "Big Four". In order to find a market in a system dominated by the Big Three, Each of the three older networks owns between 12 and the new networks tried to establish niche audiences 15 stations and each has about 200 other stations to which were not well provided for by the traditional which they supply programmes - their "affiliates". Their networks. For example, Fox targeted a male audience revenues come mainly from the advertising that with programmes such as Married with Children and dominates the programmes. Each has between 9% and American football, and teens and twenties with shows Chapter 6: Institutions 83 such as Beverly Hills 90210, Melrose Place, The representing 32% of the people in this age group. On Simpsons, Ally McBeal, and The X-Files. It also targeted the basis of these figures, NBC, the network which African-Americans in its early days, less so when it broadcast Friends, was able to charge almost $0.5 expanded its range and audience. WB and UPN also million for a 30-second slot (rising to $2.1 million for the targeted African-Americans and youth - especially young final episode on May 6, 2004.) women. WB broadcast shows such as Dawson's Creek, Roswell and, of course, Buffy the Vampire Slayer. UPN However, the Neilsen ratings system is heavily criticised, targeted young men (the network was best known for its especially by producers, writers and actors who feel their wrestling) but was eager to increase its share of the shows are under-represented - which could, of course, wider youth (especially twenty-something) audience, one lead to cancellation by the network. The system fails to of the reasons they acquired Buffy from Fox in 2001 for take account of "time-shifting", where people record the final two seasons (see below) when the contract with programmes viewing later (and indeed watch more than WB came up for renegotiation. once for shows with an particularly committed audience). The system will be under even more pressure with the 6.4 The Economics of US Network TV: Nielsen Ratings In order to determine the ratings on which advertising rates depend, specialist companies were established, the most important of which is Neilson Media Research which goes back to the days of commercial radio. Neilsen data indicate how many viewers watch and which demographic they fall into. Neilsen records viewing behaviour through the "people meters" it installs in 25,000 households (about .02% of the households in the USA. 4) Neilson ratings are used by networks to determine whether they will continue to broadcast programmes and what advertising rates will be. As such, they are an extremely powerful force in us television. The Neilsen ratings system is a combination of ratings increasing popularity of advices such as Tivo boxes which allow not only time-shifting but also enable viewers to skip the adverts much more efficiently than using the fast-forward button on a VCR. Advertisers may in the future have to consider other ways of getting their products to their audience (such as product placement, highly developed in the film industry, where products appear in the shows themselves - for example, the Apple laptop computers used by Willow in her research). The Neilsen system is hardly an exact science, but it is a powerful force in determining the programming, as a shift in a percentage point represents millions of dollars. However, for the time being, in the absence of a more reliable system, the industry behaves as if it the Neilsen ratings accurately measure how many viewers the networks deliver to the advertisers. and share of the audience. It is currently estimated that there are some 109.6 million households with at least 6.4 The "Sweeps" one TV set (there are few with none) in the USA. A The "people-meters" are not the only measuring ratings point represents 1% of all households (or devices used to gauge the size of the audience. Four 1,096,000) for the 2004/5 season. Share is the percentage times a year - November, February, May and July - there of TV sets tuned into a specific programme. For are the "sweeps" where selected viewers in designated example, a programme rated at 9.2/15 means that market areas (DMAs) are asked to fill in diaries 10,083,000 households are watching it, and 15% of all accounting for a week's TV viewing. (They are called television sets on at that time were tuned into this sweeps because of the way the data is collected, starting programme. in the northeastern USA and "sweeping" systematically across the rest of the country). Ratings established Of course, (as will be further developed below) the total during the sweeps help set advertising rates for the next number of viewers is not all that the advertisers are three months and can determine whether a show will live interested in; they wish to appeal to particular or die. During the sweeps, the local stations and demographics such as age-group, gender, social class networks make an effort to produce their best material etc. so that specific products can be targeted at and series frequently feature special episodes and particular demographics, and the Neilsen statistics take gimmicks, expensive mini-series and award shows etc to these into account. Therefore when Friends, one of the attract a higher share of the audience. most popular shows of the late 1990's/early 2000s, The "Sweeps" and Buffy the Vampire Slayer gained a rating of 11.8/32 in the 18-49 age bracket on 6.4.1 Thursday 31 October 2002, it would be interpreted that If we look at various episodes over the seven series of 11.8% of those aged between 18 and 49 were watching, Buffy, we can see that some of the stronger episodes 84 Chapter 6: Institutions (particularly the ones written and directed by Joss Whedon) appear during the sweep months. For 6.5 Broadcasting and "Narrowcasting" example, Lie to Me, The Dark Age and What's My Line The term broadcasting suggests transmitting Parts 1 and 2, some of the strongest episodes of Season programmes to as wide an audience as possible. In US 2, all appeared in November 1997, while Passion, with television, with its domination by commercial networks, the evil Angelus in full flight, appeared in February, with and a miniscule public service broadcasting service, the season finale, Becoming Parts 1 and 2, and broadcasters sell broadcast time to sponsors - the Graduation Day Parts 1 and 2, the Season 3 finale, advertisers - to whom they deliver audiences who then appearing in May. In Season 4, the early part of the buy the goods which pays for the advertising. However, season is dominated by one-off episodes but The as has been suggested above, the size of the audience Initiative [4.7], which develops the main story arc of the is not the only factor which determines profitability as season, first appeared on November 16 1999. Hush lower ratings do not necessarily command smaller [4.10], one of the most admired episodes which was revenues. Instead of targeting a large but largely without dialogue, was first aired in December heterogeneous audience, some channels - especially the 1999. In Season 5, Fool for Love (5.7), we learn Spike's newer ones - target their audience more narrowly (a back-story - not someone who's "always been bad" as practice referred to as "narrowcasting" as opposed to he boasts to Buffy but as the wimpish and effete William, broadcasting), hoping to deliver a more homogeneous pathetic poet and unsuccessful lover, broadcast on demographic to the advertisers. (Narrowcasting is more November 14 2000. The Body (5.16) was one of the often used about an even narrower focus on a particlar outstanding episodes of Season 5, where Buffy and her target audience, eg a dedicated channel to cater for a friends are devastated by the loss of Buffy's mother to particular interest, but it is also useful in a wider context an aneurism, an episode, where there is no non-diegetic to make the distiction between programmes that try to sound, in which the supernatural is almost absent and target a much wider audience). which was shot in an almost art-film style; it appeared on 27 February 2001. These are the kinds of episodes that MTV (Music Television) prospered by delivering a the producers like to showcase and attract the attention smaller, more youthful audience but one with a higher not only of the viewing public but those who nominate disposable income, with companies advertising, for TV shows for the Emmy awards, US TV's equivalent of example, music, cosmetics and electronic goods etc., the Oscars; indeed, Hush was the only episode of Buffy paying higher advertising rates than for a larger but less to receive an Emmy nomination for best programme in focused audience. The sixteen to thirty-four market its category. (Buffy's core audience) is considered particularly lucrative for the advertisers. 5 For example, in 1995, The programmes that receive the highest ratings in US Murder She Wrote, a show whose appeal is to the over- television are one-off events such as the Superbowl and 60s, had significantly higher viewing figures than the the Oscars but among the regular programmes to Superman series, Lois and Clark (aka The New achieve high Neilsen ratings were/are ER, Friends, Will Adventures of Superman), ranking ninth in the overall and Grace, Who Wants to be a Millionaire, Frasier and rankings to the latter's sixty-fourth. Despite this, ABC The X-Files and the various CSI shows which regularly could charge advertisers $132, 000 for a thirty- second attracted between 17 and 18 million viewers. Buffy did spot on Lois and Clark, while CBS could only charge not reach those levels, the highest ratings being $116,000 for the same time on Murder She Wrote. 6 between 4 and 5 million, apart from seasons' finales which occasionally hit the 7 million mark. However, During the period when the film industry was dominated advertising (and, of course, foreign sales) is not the only by vertical integration, the studio made the films (with source of revenue. Ancillary products, especially DVDs, thousands of salaried workers and its own stars under represent a growing revenue stream for production long contracts) which it distributed itself and showed in companies, and a show with a loyal following is a reliable its own cinemas. With the arrival of vertical integration to market for these. A smaller but more committed television, it might be expected that the media audience will often result in much higher sales of DVDs corporations would produce programmes to show on its and other merchandising than shows on the main own networks. This happens to some degree as a networks with much bigger audiences. multimedia corporation will attempt to combine its diverse arms in order to maximise profits - a process known as synergy. Disney/ABC do so to greater extent than the others. Chapter 6: Institutions 85 However, there are counter-forces operating on these is its very difference from the mainstream networks; companies and they do not always go down this road. something its audiences seem to respond to. Despite the setting up the new networks as a way of Interestingly, Joss Whedon's scifi/western hybrid series, ensuring an outlet for their programmes, the networks Firefly (2003), was not only made by Fox but was shown did not in fact restrict themselves to their own product: on the Fox network. It lasted only 14 episodes before it they sold programmes to each other. For example, was pulled from the schedules and many commentators Buffy, a programme owned by Fox, was shown on the suggested that part of its lack of success was because WB network for the first five seasons, after which it Fox did not promote it effectively enough. (They also moved to UPN for the final two seasons. This practice of scheduled on a Friday evening which is considered the selling to rival networks might seem to contradict the graveyard slot of US TV.) Perhaps it would have fared monopolistic synergistic strategies which deregulation better with a niche audience on one of the smaller allowed networks to pursue by allowing them also to be networks. Arguably, Buffy would not have survived much producers. However, one of the reasons they sell to beyond its first season on the Fox network. others is fear of litigation from actors and producers claiming that the networks are selling programmes within their own group of companies at bargain rates, which has the effect of limiting the financial return the creative personnel might expect. According to Jennifer Holt: Buffy's Defection to UPN In 2001, Fox shocked the television industry by moving Buffy between networks in 2001. Early that year, when it was time to negotiate a new deal, Fox asked WB for $2 million per episode, a considerable hike on what was The threat of these lawsuits has given conglomerates serious pause before engaging in 'sweetheart deals', throwing an enormous wrench into even the best-laid synergist plans. 7 Fox, producers of Buffy, have been under particular scrutiny. Steven Bochco, celebrated TV auteur (Hill St Blues, NYPD Blues) sued Fox for what he saw as a cutrate deal for syndicated episodes of NYPD Blues to one its cable channels. David Duchovny, star of The X-Files, also sued Fox in 1999, accusing them of cheating him out of $25 million by negotiating a cut-price deal with one of its affiliated companies, a case which was settled out of court for $20 million. 8 Disney, which now owns the ABC network, also came under fire for selling rights to its animated features to ABC at well below the going rate. paid before. WB were prepared to pay no more than $1.6, claiming they would lose money on the series. Fox's demands were based on the fact that, while Buffy was only WB's third highest rated series, it was its biggest revenue-generator, with 30-second advertising spots worth $100,000 each. Fox was also attempting to recoup the ever-increasing production costs. When a show is successful, it puts the main actors in a very advantageous position when it comes to renegotiating fees; it also had increasing production values as the show developed, adding significantly to the costs. UPN came in unexpectedly with an offer of $2.3 million an episode for a 44-episode deal (ie two seasons). WB responded with a statement in which they called the deal "an inauspicious decision for the television for the television industry by taking one of their programmes off Another reason for the networks selling their product to other networks is that they may not have the right niche audience in their schedule. For example, Buffy's audience might not be big enough for the show to appear on the much bigger Fox network whereas both WB and UPN developed a niche market which was a perfect match for the programme. For Fox themselves to have shown Buffy, they might have had to remove an existing and profitable prime-time programme as well as incurring the expense of promoting the show. No doubt, Fox found it more lucrative to sell to WB and, later, UPN, especially as the video/DVD rights and rights to further syndication remain with Fox. As the smaller networks often target "niche" audiences, they frequently seek shows which are different from the mainstream. The show can do this because part of its unique selling point 86 6.6 Chapter 6: Institutions a non-affiliated network and placing it on a network in which they have a vested interest." 9 This was a reference to rumours circulating that Fox were considering making a significant investment in UPN. If they were, it came to nothing. Many commentators expected this defection to have a radical effect on the way the networks operated by selling shows to each other. At one point in the negotiations, Fox suggested they were prepared to run the show on their own network, which could have had the effect of Fox establishing a "vertical integration" by running programmes they themselves had made. One of the interesting aspects of the situation is that UPN seemed to have been prepared to make a loss on the deal, not behaviour normally to be expected from a television network. There is, however, a certain logic in UPN's behaviour. As suggested above, WB and UPN had similar marketing strategies, both targeting niche markets not well catered for elsewhere. However, there was one important difference: while WB targeted adolescent (and older) females, UPN (with, for example, its wrestling and various "freak" shows) targeted young males. It was a station with little critical status and even where there was perceived to be "quality" product on the UPN schedules, it was compromised by the UPN label. The acquisition of Buffy, even at a loss, could establish the network, not only among young women, a majority among Buffy fans, but established them as a "quality" network which could attract that desirable and relatively affluent demographic that had a significant disposable income. Buffy had given the WB a 'hip' or 'cool' image by showing Buffy in 1997. It gave access to a certain audience which advertisers found attractive. UPN also used Buffy to establish a cooler image. According to James Poniewozik: "The fact is, for UPN, "Buffy" is a bargain at any price, even if the network is never able to recoup the hefty price tag off the show itself. It guarantees a big influx of a key demographic: namely, people who otherwise would never watch UPN. 10 comes to the mass media there is an important distinction: creative people in the media do not have the same independence. Literature is largely an individual pursuit but media production involves a complex division of labour and access to expensive equipment. Novelists are more or less autonomous when it comes to deciding what they will write although they may have to accept limitations on their freedom if they are going to get the work published but, when it comes to media production, which involves an outlay of large sums of money, programme makers have a number of constraints placed on them. (i) External controls Some of these are constraints are external to the organisations and individuals who make the programmes. For example, libel laws prevent programme makers from airing what they like, as do copyright laws. Health and safety regulations also put restrictions on what a production company can do, particularly if there is a strong union organisation defending their members' interests. But most media industries in the majority countries have a codes of practice and guidelines which affect the content of the media we consume. Among these is the process of Part of UPN's strategy was to bring Angel, the Buffy spin-off, to UPN. In the event, Angel remained with the WB and the rumour that WB would boycott Fox products proved unfounded. WB had a niche youth audience, especially young women and one of reasons UPN was willing to outbid WB for series was they wanted to broaden their network's appeal to this demographic. Before then, UPN’s appeal was to a youth audience but its appeal was mainly to young men, particularly with shows such as wrestling, giving UPN an image as a “low-quality” network. In repositioning themselves towards the 'quality' youth market, UPN were following a strategy which MTV has shown to be successful over 20 years. But the youth market is notoriously fickle and the viewers grow up very quickly and look for other things. Perhaps Buffy's ability to grow up with its audience (especially after the move from high school to college at the end of Season 3) and to move into young adult territory in later seasons has been the key to its success in this area. classification, of declaring specific programmes to be unsuitable for a particular age groups. The various classification systems have a significant influence on the content of programmes. Most Buffy episodes broadcast in the USA are classified as TV14 which cautions parents that it's unsuitable for under-14s. The show was labelled with "DSLV warnings" (D for suggestive dialogue, S for sex, L for strong language and V for violence). 11 Despite attacks on the show from various lobbies over its sexual content and its dark themes, this was not a major problem as both Whedon and WB saw the target audience as being in the 16-plus range. However, when the programme was broadcast in the UK, the mismatch between content and the audience it was deemed to be aimed at by both the BBC and Sky resulted in unforeseen problems (see UK Reception below). (ii) Internal controls Given that American TV is mostly financed by advertising revenues, it follows that advertisers can therefore exert great influence on the content of shows, either directly, 6.7 Institutional Controls by threatening to withdraw their sponsorship if the The media depends on creative and well-trained shows contain material which is deemed to be offensive individuals and in the case of drama it depends on or objectionable; or indirectly, by network executives imagination and craft. The same could be said, of anticipating objections and over-riding the creative course, about writing poetry or a novel but when it personnel. For example, in Season 6, Buffy gets a job in Chapter 6: Institutionsr 87 a branch of "Doublemeat Palace", a fastfood chain no The opposition to postponement was based largely on doubt based on McDonalds and the like. This narrative the nature of the portrayal of violence on TV, what might strand was dropped after a few episodes, some be called a problem of modality, a semiotic term commentators attributing it to the desire not to offend relating to the level of realism in a given text. Whereas fast-food advertisers (though this strand was not Earshot was of a higher level of modality, with its particularly popular with audiences). This was confirmed psychologically realistic would-be suicide, Graduation in an interview Whedon gave to the Force9 website: The only time the network got their knickers in a twist was when Buffy worked at the Double Meat Palace and we made fun of fast food. The advertisers were unhappy so we said sure. It wasn’t like we were trying to make a big statement about it. 12 Day was clearly fantasy with students, at a prearranged signal from Buffy, throwing off their academic robes to reveal axes, cross-bows and flame-throwers to use in the fight against the Mayor, who is transformed into a giant serpent, and his demonic allies. The postponement caused many fans to send a barrage of letters and emails, and many protests were posted on the web. The episode did air on the previous Monday in parts of Canada, including Ottawa and Toronto. WB doesn’t air in Canada where it was broadcast, allowing fans to capture the episode on tape. Some digitized the episode and made it available over the internet. Joss Whedon actually encouraged the distribution of the bootlegs, saying it was nice that people cared about the show, for which he got into “big trouble” with the WB but when it was finally aired it received very good ratings which pacified the network’s executives. 15 The DVD Commentaries make clear that the programme makers are always conscious of internal constraints. The frequently refer to how surprised they were “to get away with” this or that language or gesture, such as the Willow-Tara relationship over almost three seasons to such things as the hand gestures in Hush [4.10] , Buffy’s misunderstood one, what Whedon refers to in the DVD Commentary as the “infamous ... why-did-they-let us away-with that’ gesture.”; and Anya’s naughty “let’shave-sex” hand-gesture ( “the network’s reaction was very much like Giles’ [one of horror] but they let us keep it because it was so damned funny”). 13 (iii) Institutional Constraints in the UK 16 Network executives are frequently nervous about how Buffy first aired in the UK in January 1998 on Sky what they broadcast will be received by the public and (satellite) and in December of that year on the BBC sponsors and will intervene if they think it might harm (terrestrial). Both these broadcasters with rights to show ratings, as demonstrated by the “Columbine” affair. On Buffy saw the show as being targeted for a younger 20 April 1999, in Littleton, Colorado, two disaffected audience – perhaps similar to that other popular show students with an arsenal of weapons opened fire in their dealing with witchcraft, Tina the Teenage Witch - and school, Columbine High School, and killed 12 of their therefore scheduled the show for an early evening slot, fellow students and one teacher. Ironically, the episode earlier than in the USA when it would air at 8pm and of Buffy that was due to air just after the incident was 9pm. Given some of the adult content, this caused Earshot [3.18], which involved an attempt to murder the problems for UK broadcasters. In the UK, there is the student body and a suicidal student with a high-velocity recognised convention of the "nine o'clock watershed" - rifle. The producers decided to pull the episode until the that programmes with "adult" content be shown after autumn and the creative personnel were in agreement 9pm. This caused both Sky and the BBC to cut offending with that decision. However, when the producers scenes, which caused a strong reaction from UK fans decided to delay another episode, the Season 3 finale, who petitioned the two broadcasters who eventually Graduation Day Part 2, which involves the burning down agreed to show uncut versions late at night. When the of Sunnydale High School in a battle against the evil sseries came out on DVD they were classified as 15 by Mayor Wilkins, Joss Whedon and the other creative the VSC (Video Standards Council) which gives personnel were less supportive of the decision, feeling certificates to videos in the UK in terms of sexual content that the message of the show was generally anti- and violence. Unlike VHS videos – where several boxed violence. Indeed, for Lisa Parks, rather than encoraging sets are required to cover a season - DVDs were at first violence, “Buffy has become an important pedagocical sold as a complete season and so the whole set has to tool, providing opportunities for adult and teen viewers have the same certification. Despite some individual VHS alike to unravel and discuss the complex meanings of videos being classified as 12, the boxed set DVDs are all violence [providing] crucial opportunities for humanities classified as 15 and so, potentially, limited sales to a scholars to to begin intervening in and redirecting public small but significant segment of its audience. debates on tv violence.” 14 88 Chapter 6: Institutions Notes 1 Much of this chapter is based on Jancovich, Mark and James Lyons (eds) , Quality Popular Television, London : BFI, 2003. 2 Ibid p14. 3 List of United States over-the-air television networks, http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_United_States_over-theair_television_networks (Retrieved 7 November 2006). 4 Butler, op. cit. 5 Jancovic, opus cit. p. 149. 6 Ibid p 149. 7 Ibid p 24 8 Ibid p24 9 The Buffy Library: http://www.cesnur.org/2001/buffy_april01.htm 10 Ibid. (Retrieved 18 October 2006]. In 2006 there were merger talks between WB and UPN. 11 History.Com (The History Channel) : http://www.historychannel.com/ncta/ (Retrieved 18 October 2006. 12 http://www.phase9.tv/moviefeatures/buffythevampireslayerq&a-josswhedon.shtml (Retrieved 23 December 2006) 13 Season 4 DVD Commentary 14 Jancovic, opus cit., p 119. 15 Science Fiction Weekly interview, http://www.scifi.com/sfw/issue128/interview.html (Retrieved 18 October 2006). 16 Journal of Cult Media: http://www.cult-media.com/issue1/Ahill.htm. (Retrieved 28 November 2005). Activities l Summarise briefly the structure of US network television from the post-World War 2 period until the 1980s. l Why did Fox and, later, others, establish new networks in the 1980s/90? l What marketing strategy did the new networks employ and how did this affect shows like Buffy. l Can you think of any incidents in Buffy (other than the ones mentioned in this chapter) where there might have been a conflict between the creative personnel and the studio executives? Chapter 6: Institutions 89 90 Chapter 6: Institutions Appendix 1 BUFFY THE VAMPIRE SLAYER: SEASON OVERVIEW Summaries of individual episodes can be found online at; Wikipedia: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Buffy_the_Vampire_Slayer_plot_summary and in more detail at Buffyworld: www.buffyworld.com (which also has complete scripts) Season One Buffy the Vampire Slayer Season One had only 12 episodes as it was was a mid-season replacement series. It follows on from the film which ends with Buffy burning down the gym school in her school in LA. Buffy is now aware that she is the Slayer but wants to keep it quiet when she moves with her mother (who is oblivious of her daughter's powers) from LA to the small Southern California town of Sunnydale. Her Watcher, the librarian at Sunnydale High School, Rupert Giles, is aware of her identity but she is at first reluctant to get involved; however, when a corpse is found in someone's locker she embraces her calling. She meets Xander and Willow, the core of what will become her gang of helpers (later to be known as “The Scooby Gang”). The school, they discover, is located on a "Hellmouth", a portal to a whole variety of supernatural beings strange events. These demons can be seen as metaphors for the trials and tribulations of being a teenager; for example, a girl ignored by her peers in a very competitive social environment literally becomes invisible. The main narrative arc of the season is the struggle against the ancient and powerful vampire called the Master who is trapped underground and looking for a way back to the surface but most of the episodes are one-off series episodes where Buffy and gang confront a range of monsters and demons which they will have dealt with by the end of the episode. They are guided in their task by Giles's weighty tomes on dealing with the supernatural but Willow's skill on the computer also comes in handy. Buffy discovers another ally in Angel, a vampire who has had his soul restored by gypsies wishing to inflict a torment of guilt on him for his past misdeeds out of revenge for killing one of theirs. Buffy falls in love with him. In the climactic battle with the Master she dies momentarily but is revived by Xander and is able to destroy the Master when he escapes from his lair. Season Two Season 2 (which, like the following five seasons, consists of 22 episodes) is also composed mainly of standalone episodes but an important narrative arc in the relationship between Buffy and Angel. A new, younger vampire - Spike arrives on the scene with girlfriend Drusilla and become Buffy's main foe in the earlier part of the season. He is joined in the role of "Big bad" by Angel who loses his soul and reverts to his former evil state after making love with Buffy for the first time: the gypsy curse ensured that this would happen if he achieved one moment of human bliss. Angel (now called Angelus) joins with Spike and Drusilla, who try to kill Buffy and her friends. Some new characters are introduced in this season. These include Oz, bass player for the rock Band "Dingoes Ate My Baby" and Willow's love interest; Kendra, a West Indian Slayer, because of Buffy's brief "death" at the hands of the Master; Jenny Calendar, Giles's loveinterest, a computing teacher who is actually a descendant of the Gypsies responsible for Angelus's curse (and who is murdered by Angelus); and Ethan Rayne, an English evil warlock who was a colleague of Giles in his youth when they both dabbled in the black arts. Angel(us) attempts destroy the world by the use of an ancient statue that can suck all living things into hell. Buffy hopes Willow can do a spell to restore Angel's soul but is prepared to kill him. She finds an unexpected ally in Spike who is prepared to work with her against Angel because of jealousy over Angelus's overtures to Drusilla. He leaves town with Drusilla. The particulars of the ritual dictate that, once Angel opens the portal, the only way to close it is by killing him. The gang hopes to either kill Angel or restore his soul before he can perform the ritual: however, while Willow succeeds in restoring his soul, she is too late as before she does so he performs the ritual, meaning he must be killed Even though it is clear that his souls is restored and the evil Angelus is replaced by the good Angel, Buffy still must kill him to save the world in a tragic ending to the season. Buffy, who has had to reveal her Slayer identity to her mother, is expelled from school and decides to leave Sunnydale for good. Appendix 1 91 Season Three The season opens with Buffy working as a waitress in LA and she has to confront a group of demons who entice young homeless people into an underground hell dimension where they are exploited and when no longer able to work (time goes faster in this dimension which ages them prematurely) are thrown back onto the streets. She solves this problem and decides to go home to Sunnydale. Angel has also been suffering in a hell dimension where time runs much faster which causes his suffering to last much longer than normal time. He manages to return to Sunnydale without knowing why or how but he is able to help Buffy deal with the season's new "Big Bad", the evil Mayor Richard Wilkins III. Faith, another Slayer, is “called” after Kendra’s death at the end of the previous season. She has had an unhappy, deprived "trailer-trash" childhood in Boston which causes her to be very unstable; and she is very fond of violence for its own sake. She accidentally kills one of the mayor's assistants, and is won over to the "dark side". She becomes the mayor's chief enforcer and he develops a paternal relationship with her: no doubt this substituted for the father she never had. The Mayor, it turns out , is a demon who plans to "ascend" from human into pure demon. In a fight with Faith, Buffy puts her into a coma where she remains until the middle of Season 4. Wesley Wyndam-Pryce, Giles's replacement as watcher, also arrives in Season 3. (The Council of Watchers, feeling that Giles has grown too emotionally attached to Buffy, sack him). Wyndam-Price is presented as a bit of a buffoon until he moves to LA to join the spin-off show, Angel (see below). During the mayor's high school graduation address he turns into a giant reptile. Buffy and the student body battle with him and his vampire minions. Buffy manages to blow him up but in doing so destroys Sunnydale High School. Angel goes off to LA to fight evil (in the spin-off show, Angel) having realised there is no future for him and Buffy. Season Four The characters, having left home and gone to university, have to deal deal with more grown-up issues over the next four seasons. While Buffy and Willow start university at UC Sunnydale, Xander takes a trip around the America but soon returns. The major narrative arc of the season concerns The Initiative, a top-secret military installation called manned primarily by under-cover military personnel who double as teachers and students. Maggie Walsh is a psychology professor but is secretly the head of the Initiative. Riley Finn is a teaching assistant but also an officer in the Initiative. He and Buffy are attracted to each other but it takes some time for each to learn the other's secret identity. At first, the Initiative appears to be a demon-fighting organization but it becomes clear that it wants to harness the demon powers for military uses. One of their main experiments is Adam, a hybrid of demon and robot. Buffy works with the Initiative for a while but Maggie Walsh, partly through jealousy at Buffy's influence over Riley, tries to get her killed but it is Adam who kills Maggie Walsh and hatches a plan to create a hybrid race of demon/cyborg creatures like him. Riley gradually realises the kind of organisation he is involved in and the harm it has been inflicting on him and his comrades. In Season 4 Spike returns to Sunnydale as a regular character. He is captured by the Initiative who implant a microchip in his brain which prevents him from doing harm to human beings. He manages to escape the Initiative but is deprived of his power to harm humans. However, his violent urges find an outlet in fighting demons and he forms an alliance with Buffy and the Scoobies. He can't be trusted though and it is not until season 5 that, through love of Buffy, he comes over unambiguously to her side. Of the other characters, Anya - a former vengeance demon who is accidentally made human - develops a relationship with Xander and becomes a regular character. Another new character is Tara, a shy lesbian witch with whom Willow has a relationship which lasts until Tara's death near the end of Season 6. She replaces Oz in Willow's affections. Oz decides to leave to see if he can find a cure for his lyncanthropy (he becomes a werewolf for several nights every month). Another character from the previous season, Faith, also returns in this season as she comes out of her Buffy-induced coma. She leaves Sunnydale and turns up in Angel where she seeks redemption and ends up in prison. (She will return to Sunnydale for the final season). The season arc ends with the Scoobies - having grown apart - combining to defeat Adam, the sum of their parts being superior to their individual powers. However, there is a sort of coda in the final episode, Restless, which is a dream sequence involving the four main characters and is very much a surrealist "art movie", though relating to previous and subsequent narrative arcs. Season Five The big surprise at the end of the first episode of Season 1 is that Buffy has a sister who previously never existed. At first, Dawn's origins are kept mysterious, both to the audience and to the characters. Eventually it is revealed that the fourteen-year-old is "The Key", created by a group of monks who fashioned the girl from a ball of mystical energy and gave Buffy and all those around her a lifetime worth of completely convincing false memories. All of this was to 92 Appendix 1 protect the Key from the evil Glory, a powerful exiled hell-God, expelled from her own dimension as a disruptive influence who has to shares her body with a human (a young doctor called Ben) and feeds off the mental energy of humans. The primary action of Season Five revolves around Glory's efforts to locate the Key which will allow her return to her own dimension, and Buffy and her friend's struggle to discover Glory's true plans and to protect the innocent Dawn. The season also details Dawn's struggle to accept what she is, as well as Spike's ongoing unrequited love for Buffy. A dramatic highlight of the fifth season was also the unexpected death of Buffy's mother (from completely natural causes) in an episode - The Body - which won the series its widest critical acclaim. Glory eventually discovers the Key's new form, and determines to sacrifice the girl in a ritual which would bring down the walls that separate different dimensions, resulting in absolute chaos and torment for every living thing. In a similar conflict to the one in season two, it is revealed that once the ritual is performed, the only way to save the world would be to kill Dawn. However, once the ritual has begun, Buffy realizes that she and Dawn share the same essence, and rather than let her sister die, Buffy throws herself into the vortex and sacrifices her own life. Season Five ends with the world safe, Dawn completely mortal and human, and Buffy dead and buried. Season Six This is the first season after Buffy's move from WBTV to UPN. It begins with Buffy being resurrected through Willow using a powerful spell. (In the show's mythology, magic cannot normally bring back the dead but, because Buffy's death was not "natural", it is possible.) Wilow has convinced the others that she must have been suffering torment in a Hell dimension, but Buffy later confides to Spike she was in fact at peace " in heaven", something which, under the force of the “dancing demon" in the musical episode, Once More with Feeling, she reveals to her horrified friends the truth of her situation). The season deals largely with her alienation and unhappiness at being brought back and having to deal with day-to-day reality, with loneliness, with having to earn money (her mother's medical bills having exhausted whatever savings they had) and with being a surrogate mother to Dawn. The "Big Bad' in this season is not some powerful demon like the Master or Hell-god like Glory: it is the troika of pathetic nerds from high school, Warren (who had managed to create a robot girlfriend in the previous season), Jonathan (a loner who almost killed himself at high school but for Buffy's intervention) and Andrew (pathetic brother of one of Season 3's minor villains). Comically inadequate they may be but they also prove, through their geeky genius, to be a real danger to Buffy and strive to be her "arch nemesis-es". A key narrative arc involves Willow and her growing addiction to magic. This arc merges into the season's climax, when Willow's lover Tara is killed by Warren with a bullet destined for Buffy, and Willow goes on the rampage, using her, by now, very powerful mastery of witchcraft. She takes revenge on Warren by flaying him to death and takes on Buffy and the Scoobies who are trying to prevent her from killing Jonathan and Andrew. Finding her grief intolerable, she seeks to end sadness in the world by destroying it . Giles returns from England (he had left in the middle of the season to allow Buffy to be more independent) with power developed by a coven of "white" witches but he seems no match for her. In the end, it is Xander, who had been previously wallowing in self-pity at his own inadequacies, who saves the day by giving Willow unconditional love and forgiveness which gets through to her in time to stop her destroy the world. Another major arc in Season 6 also involved Spike's love for Buffy. It is unrequited love, despite the fact that she and Spike have a passionate and violent sexual affair. But she admits she was only using him to make her feel something, still suffering as she is from the trauma of being wrenched out of heaven. Spike can't handle her rejection, even going as far as attempted rape to win her back. He leaves Sunnydale, seemingly to have his chip removed so he can be his former self but what actually happens is that, after going through torment, his chip remains but his own human soul is restored to him. Season Seven The final season returns to its roots with Sunnydale High School having been rebuilt (above the Hellmouth) where Dawn is a student and Buffy gets a job as a student counsellor. The season revolves around the "First Evil", the evil that underpins all other evil. It had previously appeared in Season 3 attempting to convince Angel - driven to near-despair by pangs of conscience at his evil deeds – to destroy himself. The "First"can’t harm Buffy or the others directly but has agents known as "bringers" who attempt to kill all potential slayers so that Buffy, when she is killed, will have no successor. The First also empowers Caleb, a mysogynistic fundamentalist preacher who at first appears too strong for Buffy but eventually she is able to overcome him. The First manages to sow fear and confusion by the ability to take on Appendix 1 93 the appearance of any person who has died (including Buffy who has already "died" twice). For example, she takes the form of the dead mother of the new high school principal, Robin Wood, who had been the slayer killed by Spike in New York in 1977. After the bringers wipe out the Watchers' Council and several potential slayers, Giles gathers the remainder at Buffy's house in Sunnydale to train them for the battles to come. The season also highlights the spiritual struggles of (the now re-ensouled) Spike who - like Angel - has to learn to live with remorse for his past deeds. It becomes clear as the season progresses that the First Evil has been gathering beneath the Hellmouth an army of ferocious, vampire offshoots known as Turok-Han, far more powerful and violent than the normal ex-human variety. The season ends with a climactic battle within the Hellmouth itself. With the aid of a sacred scythe, Willow invokes a magical spell which results in every girl in the world with the potential to become a slayer being able to be a slayer. Buffy's small army of potentilals are now endowed with full Slayer power and form a powerful army. This includes Faith who, having resisted bringers' attempts to kill her in prison, comes back to Sunnydale to help Buffy. Her redemption is complete. They manage to contain the army of vampires (not without losing Anya who has - unlike at the end of Season 3 - stayed to fight with the "stupid" humans). They hold off the vampire hordes long enough for a powerful amulet worn by Spike to destroy all of the creatures in the Hellmouth, which kills Spike in the process, and causes an earthquake which destroys the entire town of Sunnydale, leaving nothing but an empty crater where the town (abandoned by its citizens earlier in the series) and the Hellmouth used to be. The show ends its run with the Hellmouth closed, and Buffy no longer the only "Chosen One." Giles informs him that a new Hellmouth has opened up - in Cleveland. 94 Appendix 1 Appendix 2 Bibliography Adams, Michael. Slayer Slang: A Buffy the Vampire Slayer Lexicon. New York: Oxford University Press, 2003. Altman, Rick. Film/Genre, London: BFI, 1999. Barthes, Roland. Image/Music/Text, (trans. Stephen Heath). Glasgow: Fontana-Collins, 1977. Barthes, Roland. S/Z. London and New York. Blackwell, 1975. Blumler, Jay G and Katz, Elihu. The Uses of Mass Communication. Beverly Hills. Sage Publications, 1974. Bordwell, David and Thomson, Kirstyn. Film Art: An Introduction. Reading, London, Amsterdam. Addison-Wesley, 1979. Bourdieu, Pierre, The State Nobility: Elite Schools in the Field of Power (trans. Lauretta C. Clough) Stanford, Stanford University Press, 1996. Branston, Gill and Stafford, Roy, The Media Student’s Book, 3rd edition. London. Routledge, 2003. Campbell. Joseph, The Hero with a Thousand Faces. Princeston: Princeton University Press, 1968. Casey, Bernadette, et al. Television Studies, The Key Concepts. London and New York: Routledge, 2002. Clover, Carol, Men Women and Chainsaws, London: BFI, 1993. Creeber, Glen (ed.), The Television Genre Book, London: BFI, 2002. Dunbar, Brian. Comedy Films, Leighton Buzzarrd, Auteur Publications, 2002. Dyer, Richard, Entertainment and Utopia, in Dyer, Richard (ed). Only Entertainment. London: Routledge, 1992. Ellis, John, Visible Fictions. London, Routledge, 1972. European Journal of Cultural Studies, Special Issue, The Vampire Spike in Text and Fandom: Unsettling Oppositions in Buffy the Vampire Slayer. Volume 8, No 3 London: Sage Publications, August 2005. Field, Syd, Screenplay London. Dell, 1979. Golden, Christopher and Holder, Nancy. Buffy the Vampire Slayer: the Watcher's Guide. New York: Pocket Books, 1998. Hills, Matthew. Reading the (Teen/Star/Vampire/Cult) Romance: Buffy, Reading Formations and the Rising Stakes of Generic Hybridity.in Parks, Lisa and Levine, Elana (eds), Red Noise: Buffy the Vampire Slayer and Critical Television Studies. Durham: Duke University Press, 2005. Jancovich, Mark and Lyons, James (eds). Quality Popular Television, London: BFI, 2003. Kaveney, Roz (ed.), Reading the Vampire Slayer (2nd ed), London and New York: IB Tauris, 2004. Kawin, B, How Movies Work, Berkley, Los Angeles and London: University of California Press, 1992. Lacey, Nick, An Introduction to Film, London: Palgrave Macmillan, 2005. Lacey, Nick. in the picture, issue 40 (West Yorks, Autumn 2000) Lacey, Nick. Narrative and Genre, London: Palgrave Macmillan, 2000 McQueen, David. Television: A Media Student’s Guide. London: Oxford University Press, 2001. Miller, Toby (ed.), Television Studies, London: BFI, 2003. O’Sullivan, Tim; Dutton, Brian; and Philip Rayner (eds) Studying the Media. London, Arnold, 1998. Parks, Lisa, “Brave New Buffy: Rethinking ‘TV Violence”, in Quality Popular Television Jancovich, Mark and Lyons, James. (eds) London: BFI, 2003, p 123. Appendix 2 95 Parks, Lisa, and Levine, Elana (eds). Red Noise: Critical Writings on Buffy the Vampire Slayer. Durham: Duke UP, 2005. Patterson, John), “Move Over Hollywood”, The Guardian, London: May 20, 2006 Riess, Jana. What Would Buffy Do? The Vampire Slayer as Spiritual Guide, Jossey-Bass/Wiley, 2004 South, James B. Buffy the Vampire Slayer and Philosophy: Fear and Trembling in Sunnydale, New York: Open Court Press, 2003 Thomas, Deborah, "Reading Buffy" in Close-up, issue 01. London: Wallflower Press, 2006. pp 214-234. Thompson, Kristin. Storytelling in the New Hollywood, London and Cambridge Massachsets, Harvard University Press, 2001. Todorov,Tristran, The Poetics of Prose, Oxford: Blackwell, 1977. Turnbull, Sue and Stranieri, Vyvyan, Bite Me: Narrative Structures and Buffy the Vampire Slayer. Victoria: Australian Centre for the Moving Image, 2003. Vogler, Christopher. The Writer’s Journey, London, Boxtree, 1996. Wilcox, Rhonda V and Lavery, David (eds) Fighting the Forces, Lanham, Boulder, New York and Oxford: Rowman and Littlefield, 2002. Wilcox, Rhonda. Why Buffy Matters London: IB Tauris, 2005. Websites There are thousands of websites devoted to Buffy the Vampire Slayer. The following are particularly useful: www.slayage.com http://angelicslayer.com www.buffyworld.com www.buffyguide.com Like many Buffy-related sites, these are now legacy sites, no longer being updated, but they are very useful for episode guides, summaries and transcripts, reviews, etc. www.slayage.tv www.watcherjunior.tv Slayage is an academic journal rather than a fan-site, and is edited by David Lavery and Rhonda Wilcox, authors and editors of Fighting the Forces: What's at Stake in Buffy the Vampire Slayer. As well as a vast collection of academic articles, some complex and forbidding, especially for secondary school students, others more accessible, it has an episode guide with all writers and directors catalogued. It is also the focus for the various academic conferences that have been held in the last few years, news of new Buffy books and other events, and regular links to recommended essays from other publications. WatcherJunior is an undergraduate version of Slayage. http://davidlavery.net This is the website of one of the main Buffy scholars, David Lavery, who moved in 2006 from Tennessee University to take up the Chair of Film and Television Studies at Brunel University in London. There is a section on Joss Whedon, Wonderboy by Lavery, which is to be published by IB Tauris in 2007. 96 Appendix 2 Appendix 3 Films and Television Programmes Referred To (i) 1 Feature Films 10 Things I Hate About You (Gil Junger, USA, 1999) The Adventures of the Road Runner (Chuck Jones, Harry Potter and the Philosopher’s Stone (Chris Columbus, USA, 2001) His Girl Friday (Howard Hawks, USA, 1940) I Know What You Did Last Summer (Jim Gillespie, USA, 1997) Maurice Noble, Warner Bros, 1962) I Spit on Your Grave (Meir Zarchi, USA, 1978) Alien ( Ridley Scott, USA, 1979) The Indian in the Cupboard (Frank Oz, USA, 1995) American Pie (Paul Weitz, USA, 1999) It Happened One Night (Frank Capra, USA, 1934) The Amityville Horror (Stuart Rosenberg, USA, 1979) Kiss Me Deadly (Robert Aldrich, USA, 1955) Beverly Hills Cop (Martin Brest, USA, 1984) The Last Seduction (John Dahl, USA, 1994) The Big Sleep (Howard Hawks, USA, 1946) Lord of the Rings (Peter Jackson. New Zealand/USA, The Birds (Alfred Hitchcock, USA, 1963) Blade Runner (Ridley Scott, USA, 1982) Bram Stoker's Dracula (Francis Ford Coppola, USA, 1992) Buffy the Vampire Slayer (Fran Rubel Kuzui, USA, 1992) Carrie (Brian De Palma, USA, 1976) Carry on Screaming (Gerald Thomas, UK, 1966) Casablanca (Michael Curtis, USA, 1942) Child's Play (Tom Holland, USA, 1988) Clueless (Amy Heckerling, USA, 1995) 2001) The Vampires (Les Vampires) (Louis Feuillade, France, 1915) La Ronde (Max Ophuls, France, 1950) The Lost Boys (Clive Gordon, USA, 2002) Love at First Bite (Stan Dragoti USA, 1979) The Maltese Falcon (John Huston, USA, 1941) The Nightmare on Elm Street (Wes Craven, USA, 1984) North by Northwest (Afred Hitchcock, USA, 1959) Nosferatu - A Symphony of Terror (FW Murnau, Crouching Tiger, Hidden Dragon (Ang Lee, China, 2000) Germany, 1921) Cruel Intentions (Roger Kumble, USA, 1999) The Nutty Professor (Jerry Lewis, USA, 1963) Dawn of the Dead (George Romero, USA, 1978) Pan’s Labyrinth/ (El Laberinto del Faun ) (Guillermo del Don't Look Now (Nicolas Roeg, UK, 1973) Dracula (Terence Fisher, UK, 1958) Edward Scissorhands (Tim Burton, USA, 1990) The Exorcist (William Friedkin, USA, 1973) The Faculty (Robert Rodriguez, 1998) Fahrenheit 9/11 (Michael Moor, USA, 2004) Four Weddings and a Funeral (Mike Newell, UK, 1994) Frankenstein (James Whale, USA, 1931) Friday 13th, (Sean S. Cunningham, USA, 1980) Ghost (Jerry Zucker, USA, 1990) The Godfather (Francis Ford Coppola, USA, 1972) Groundhog Day (Harry Ramis, USA, 1993) Halloween (John Carpenter, USA, 1978) Toro, Spain/USA, 2006) The Pit and the Pendulum (Roger Corman, USA, 1961) Pretty in Pink (Howard Deutch, USA, 1986) Pretty Woman (Garry Marshall, USA, 1990) Psycho (Alfred Hitchcock, USA, 1960) Pulp Fiction (Quentin Tarantino, USA, 1994) Rebel Without a Cause (Nicolas Ray, USA, 1955) Reservoir Dogs (Quenton Tarantino, USA, 1992) The Rocky Horror Picture Show (Jim Sharman, USA, 1975) Scream (Wes Craven, USA, 1996) The Searchers (John Ford, USA, 1956) The Seventh Seal (Det sjunde inseglet) (Ingmar Bergman, Sweden, 1957) Appendix 3 97 The Shining (Stanley Kubrick, USA, 1980) Grange Hill (BBC, 1978 –) The Sixth Sense (M. Night Shyamalan, USA, 1999) Hill Street Blues (MTM/NBC, 1981-1989) Stagecoach (John Ford, USA, 1939) I Love Lucy (Desilu Productions, USA, 1951-1957) Straw Dogs (Sam Peckinpah, USA, 1971) Lois & Clark: The New Adventures of Superman (Warner Sunset Blvd (Billy Wilder, USA, 1950) Bros. Television, USA, 1993-1997) Supersize Me (Morgan Spurlock, USA, 2004) Married with Children (Columbia Pictures TV, USA, 1987- Texas Chainsaw Massacre (Tobe Hooper, USA, 1974) There's Something About Mary (Bobby Farrelly, Peter 1997) Melrose Place (Fox Television, USA, 1992-1997) Farrelly, 1998) Middlemarch (BBC, UK, 1994) To Be and To Have /Etre et Avoir (Nicolas Philibert, Murder One (20th Century Fox TV/ABC, 1995), France, 2002) Untouchables (Brian de Palma, USA, 1987) The wizard of Oz (victor fleming, USA, 1939) Murder, She Wrote (USA, Universal TV, 1984-1996) My So-Called Life (ABC Productions, USA, 1994-1995) NYPD Blues (20th Century Fox Television, USA, 1993- Young Frankenstein (Mel Brooks, USA, 1974) 2005) The Young Girls of Rochefort (Les Demoiselles de Pride and Prejudice (BBC, UK, 1991) Rochefort) (Jacques Demy, France, 1967) Zero for Behaviour (Zéro de Conduite) (Jean Vigo, France, 1933) The Rockford Files (NBC, USA, 1974-1980) Roswell (20th Century Fox TV, USA, 1999-2002) Sabrina the Teenage Witch (Warner Bros. TV, USA, 1996 (ii) Television Programmes – 2003) 24 (20th Century Fox TV, 2001 -) Saved by the Bell (NBC, USA, 1989-1993) Ally McBeal (20th Century Fox TV, 1997 -2002) Scooby-Doo (Warner Bros TV, 1969-) The A-Team (NBC, 1983-1987) The Simpsons (20th Century Fox TV, USA, 1989-) Angel (20th Century Fox TV, USA, 1999-2004) The Sopranos (Home Box Office, USA, 1999 -) Beverley Hills 90210 (Spelling Television, USA, 1999-2000) Star Trek (Desilu Productions Inc; Paramount Television ((1966-1969) Big Brother (Canel 4/Endemol, UK, 2000 -) Veronica Mars (Warner Bros. TV, USA, 2004) Bleak House (BBC, UK, 2005) The West Wing (Warner Bros. TV, USA, 1999-2006) Brookside (Channel 4/Mersey TV, 1982 – 2003) Who Wants To Be a Millionaire (ABC, US, 1999 – 2002) Coronation Street (Granada, UK, 1960 -) Will and Grace (NBC, USA, 1998 – 2006) Count Dracula (BBC, UK, 1977) Xena the Warrior Princess (Universal TV, 1995 – 2001) CSI (CBS, USA, 2000 -) X-Factor (Thames Television, UK, 2004) Dawson's Creek (Columbia Tristar TV, USA, (1998-2003) 1 EastEnders (BBC, UK, 1985 -) Eldorado (BBC, UK, 1992-1993) ER (Warner Brothers, USA, 1994 -) Firefly (20th Century Fox TV, USA, 2002-2004) Films are referenced by the name of the director, the main country involved in finance and production and the year. This does not necessarily support the view that the director is always the main “author” of a film. Television programmes are referenced by the Forever Knight (Paragon Entertainment Corp. USA, 1992) main production company and the year. The Frasier (Paramount Television, USA, 1993 – 2004) main source for both is the Internet Movie Data Base (www.imdb.com). Friends (Warner Brothers TV, USA, 1994-2004 98 Appendix 3 Appendix 4 Glossary of Media Studies Terminology 1 180° system The continuity approach to editing dictates that the camera should stay on one side of the action to ensure consistent left-right spatial relations between objects from shot to shot. The 180° line is the same as the axis of action. See also continuity editing, screen direction. academy ratio The standardized shape of the film frame established by the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences. In the original ratio, the frame was 1 1/3 times as wide as it was high (1.33:1); later the width was normalized at 1.85 times the height (1.85:1). Joss Whedon claims to have designed Buffy’s mise en scene for Academy ratio but the (European) DVDs were in 16:9 widescreen format. action code One of Barthes’ narrative codes, it governs how actions are sequenced, eg the putting on of a gun belt in a western suggesting preparing for action; the packing of a suitcase suggesting leaving. Also known as the proairetic code. aesthetic Relates to the idea of form and beauty in a work of art, the way the text creates appreciation in the audience. allegory A story with a second distinct meaning partially hidden behind its literal or more obvious meaning. ambient sound Background sound that you tend not to notice. If there was absolutely no sound the audiuence would notice so ambient sounds, eg of the city or of the coutryside are placed on the soundtrack at low volume. ambivalence Co-existence in one person of different emotional attitudes towards the same person or situation. anachrony A term used to denote a discrepancy between the order in which events of the story occur and the order in which they are presented to us in the plot. Anachronies take two basic forms: ‘flashback’ or ‘analepsis’, and ‘flashforward’ or ‘prolepsis’. analepsis See anachrony anchorage/anchoring A term used by Roland Barthes (1915-1980) to describe the interaction of words and visual texts. A photograph, according to Barthes is polysemic (i.e., open to a range of possible meanings). Text is added, perhaps in the form of a caption or an advertising slogan, to "anchor" the meaning, to lead the reader towards the preferred reading of the visual text. More broadly, anchorage of an image's meaning can occur not only through words, but, for example, through the juxtaposition of two images; by non-diegetic music in film anchoring a particular mood or tone. angle of framing The position of the frame in relation to the subject it shows: above it, looking down (a high angle); horizontal, on the same level (a straight-on angle); looking up (a low angle). Also called camera angle. archetype A character type or pattern of action, which recurs, related to universal myths, eg the hero, the quest. art film narration Art film narration departs from classical narration in that events and actions do not always have an obvious cause or motivation, with a loosening of the cause-and-effect chain and an emphasis on psychology rather than action. It is a style of narration that draws attention to itself, unlike the “invisible style favoured by classic Hollywood. Art cinema favours style over story, ambiguity over clarity, open endings over closure, cineliterate over popular audience. Examples of directors whose output is classified as art film include Fellini, Bunuel and Bergman. Although there are occasional elements of art film narration in Buffy, Restless [4.22] is the only episode totally dominated by this style. auteur A filmmaker (usually a director) whose films show a personal vision or style; it originated in the French New Wave movement in the late 1950s/early 1960’s and was used to distinguished ordinary “craftsmen” directors from those who had a more original vision. More recently used to refer to creative producers and writers in television such as Whedon. avant garde Innovative, experimental work which breaks mainstream conventions. Appendix 4 99 axis of action In the continuity editing system, the imaginary line that passes from side to side through the main actors, defining the spatial relations of all the elements of the scene as being to the right or left. The camera is not supposed to cross the axis at a cut and thus reverse those spatial relations. Also called the 180° line. (See also 180° system.) backlighting Illumination cast onto the figures in the scene from the side opposite the camera, usually creating a thin outline of highlighting on those figures. binary oppositions The theory that you cannot understand good if you don’t understand evil, eg heroes and villains. camera angle See angle of framing. canted framing A view in which the frame is not level; either the right or left side is lower than the other, causing objects in the scene to appear slanted out of an upright position. (Also known as Dutch angle or framing). catharsis The effect of purgation or purification achieved by tragic drama (according to Aristotle ‘s Poetics (4th century BC). Tragedy had the effect of arousing pity and fear in such a way as to lead to a “cleansing of the emotions. This has been interpteted as an explanation to the puzzle of why audiences experience pleasure or relief in viewing the disturbing events enacted in tragedies and, by extension, horror. categories A key aspect of Media Studies – how producers and audiences categorise texts in terms of medium, purpose, form, genre, tone, style etc. cinematography A general term for all the manipulations of the film strip by the camera in the shooting phase and by the laboratory in the developing phase. classic narrative or classic Hollywood narrative The dominant narrative mode found in mainstream film which uses traditional narrative structure (equilibrium, disruption, return to equilibrium), a goal-driven protagonist and continuity editing to give clarity. cliché The predictable treatment of any element of a media text, eg happy ending of most blockbusters. cliff-hanger An ending that creates suspense, often used in a ‘soap’ to make the audience watch the next episode. climax The point in the narrative where conflicts/enigmas are resolved. close-up A framing in which the scale of the object shown is relatively large; most commonly a person's head seen from the neck up, or an object of a comparable size that fills most of the screen. closure The degree to which the ending of a narrative film reveals the effects of all the causal events and resolves (or "closes off") all lines of action. In a closed narrative, there are no enigmas left for the audience. codes Systems of signs which can be analysed in terms of denotation and connotation. connotation The meaning associated with a sign, eg a red rose could be associated with love; (in contrast to denotation which is the primary or literal meaning). consumption How audiences access media texts, eg films may be viewed in cinemas, on video, on DVD, on cable, on satellite etc. context External aspects of a text which shape its style and meaning, eg the audience, social and institutional contexts. continuity editing A system of cutting to maintain continuous and clear narrative action. Continuity editing relies on matching screen direction, position, and temporal relations from shot to shot. For specific techniques of continuity editing, see axis of action, crosscutting, cut-in, establishing shot, eyeline match, match on action, reestablishing shot, screen direction, shot/reverse shot. contrast In cinematography, the difference between the brightest and darkest areas within the frame. convention Established ways of treating genre, codes, narrative or representations. 100 Appendix 4 crane shot A shot taken from a special device called a crane, which resembles a huge mechanical arm. The crane carries the camera and the cinematographer, and can move in virtually any direction. crosscutting Editing that alternates shots of two or more lines of action occurring in different places, usually simultaneously. cult A text which has an avid following by a (relatively small) group of people who engage with the text in a more intense way that an average audience, for example, on web-sites and attend conventions etc. cultural codes Sign systems that are shared by members of a culture, eg dress, gestures, linguistics. culture The shared ideas and practices of any social group. cut 1. 2. cut-in An instantaneous shift from a distant framing to a closer view of some portion of the same space. decoding The processes by which media audiences interpret meaning in a media text. deep focus A use of the camera lens and lighting that keeps both the close and distant planes being photographed in sharp focus. deep space An arrangement of mise-en-scene elements so that there is a considerable distance between the plane closest to the camera and the one farthest away. Any or all of these planes may be in focus. (See shallow space.) demographics The social characteristics of an audience, eg social class, age, gender. denotation The description of a sign, eg the dictionary definition (as opposed to connotation). dialogue overlap In editing a scene, arranging the cut so that a bit of dialogue coming from shot A is heard under a shot that shows another character on another element in the scene. Aka overlapping sound. diegesis In a narrative film, the world of the film's story. The diegesis includes events that are presumed to have occurred and actions and spaces not shown onscreen. See also diegetic sound, nondiegetic insert, nondiegetic sound. diegesis, diegetic, The 'world' of a text, as indicated not only by what can be seen, or by sounds generated from on-screen actions and objects (eg footsteps, explosions) but also by off-screen sounds that belong to the world being depicted (eg birdsong, church bells). The diegesis of a film or series can follow different rules to the ‘normal’ world. For example, the diegesis of Buffy (“the Buffyverse”) has its own rules that don’t apply to our world. diegetic sound (external and internal); nondiegetic sound External diegetic sound is represented as coming from a physical source within the story space that we assume characters in the scene also hear. Internal diegetic sound is represented as coming from the mind of a character within the story space. Although we and the character can hear it, we assume that the other characters cannot. Non-diegetic sound is typically music or sound effects not generated in the filmic world but added to indicate characters' state of mind or to generate audience response, eg mood music or a narrator's commentary. In filmmaking, the joining of two strips of film together with a splice. In the finished film, an instantaneous change from one framing to another. See also jump cut. Other non-diegetic elements are titles (“China 1905”), titles and credits. direct address Making the audience feel they are participating in what is happening, eg newscasters use direct address as if they are speaking directly to the viewer. Not normally used in a fictional text (“breaking the fourth wall”) but occasionally used for certain effects. discourse Systematic ways of presenting representations so as to express particular ideologies or myths, eg nationalistic discourses in sports coverage; the discourse of the countryside as natural, peaceful, beautiful etc. dissolve A transition between two shots during which the first image gradually disappears while the second image gradually appears; for a moment the two images blend in superimposition. Appendix 4 101 distance of framing The apparent distance of the frame from the mise-en-scene elements. Also called camera distance and shot scale. See also close-up, extreme close-up, extreme long shot, medium close-up, medium shot, plan américain. distribution One of the three branches of the film industry; the process of supplying the finished film to the places where it will be shown. See also exhibition, production. dolly A camera support with wheels, used in making tracking shots. dominant decoding When a reader interprets a text in the preferred way, eg they interpret the text the way the maker wants them to dominant ideology When the beliefs of the majority or powerful groups in society dominate. dramatic irony See irony. dumbing-down The idea that media is becoming more trivial, eg entertainment has replaced information, soft news is replacing hard news. Dutch angle See canted framing. editing 1. ellipsis In a narrative film, the shortening of plot duration achieved by omitting intervals of story duration. See also elliptical editing, viewing time. elliptical editing Shot transitions that omit parts of an event, causing an ellipsis in plot and story duration. encoding The process by which media producers construct meanings in a text. enigma A question posed in a text. enigmatic code Structuring a narrative to pose a question, eg minor enigma (who is this character), major enigma (will they live happily ever after); also known as the hermeneutic code escapism The audience’s use of media to escape from the pressures and limitations of everyday life. establishing shot A shot, usually involving a distant framing, that shows the spatial relations among the important figures, objects, and setting in a scene. exhibition One of the three branches of the film industry; the process of showing the finished film to audiences. See also distribution, production. exposure The adjustment of the camera mechanism in order to control how much light strikes each frame of film passing through the aperture. extreme close-up A framing in which the scale of the object shown is very large; most commonly, a small object or a part of the body. extreme long shot A framing in which the scale of the object shown is very small; a building, landscape, or crowd of people will fill the screen. eyeline match In continuity editing, a cut obeying the axis of action principle, in which the first shot shows a person looking off in one direction and the second shows a nearby space containing what he or she sees. If the person looks left, the following shot should imply that the looker is offscreen right. fade 1. 2. fill light Illumination from a source less bright than the key light, used to soften deep shadows in a scene. See also three-point lighting. film noir Literally, dark film, a term applied by French critics to a type of American film made in the 1940s and 1950s, usually in the detective or thriller genres, with low-key lighting and a sombre mood. It used low-key lighting, shadows etc to reflect the dark side of human nature. film stock The strip of material upon which a series of still photographs is registered; it consists of a clear base coated on one side with a light-sensitive emulsion. 102 Appendix 4 In filmmaking, the task of selecting and joining camera takes. 2. In the finished film, the set of techniques that governs the relations among shots. Fade-in: A dark screen that gradually brightens as a shot appears. 2. Fade-out: A shot gradually darkens as the screen goes black. Occasionally fadeouts brighten to pure white or to a colour. filter A piece of glass or gelatin placed in front of the camera or printer lens to alter the quality or quantity of light striking the film in the aperture. flashback An alteration of story order in which the plot moves back to show events that have taken place earlier than the one already shown. (cf prolepsis, analepsis and anachrony). focal length The distance from the center of the lens to the point at which the light rays meet in sharp focus. The focal length determines the perspective relations of the space represented on the flat screen. See also normal lens, telephoto lens, wide-angle lens. focus The degree to which light rays coming from the same part of an object through different parts of the lens reconverge at the same point on the film frame, creating sharp outlines and distinct textures. font The design/style of characters in the typeface. form The general system of relationships among the parts of a film. frame A single image on the strip of film. When a series of frames is projected onto a screen in quick succession, an illusion of movement is created. framing The use of the edges of the film frame to select and to compose what will be visible onscreen. freeze frame A shot composed of a single frame that is reprinted a number of times on the fstrip; when projected, it gives the illusion of a still photograph. frontal lighting Illumination directed into the scene from a position near the camera. genre A set of conventions or common practices which guide the production, marketing, identification and interpretation of texts (eg musical, romantic comedy,gangster, soap, gameshow, quiz show). goal-driven protagonist The protagonist is the central character who embodies the central conflict in a drama. He or she will have a conscious want or goal which is difficult to achieve. The goal driven protagonist is one of the characteristics of Hollywood cinema. Buffy’s goal is to protect humanity from vampires and demons. graphic match Two successive shots joined so as to create a strong similarity of compositional elements (e.g., color, shape). hand-held camera The use of the camera operator's body as a camera support, either holding it by hand or using a harness. height of framing The distance of the camera above the ground, regardless of the angle of framing. hermeneutic code See enigmatic code. high-key lighting Illumination that creates comparatively little contrast between the light and dark areas of the shot. Shadows are fairly transparent and brightened by fill light. hip Aware of the latest trends in music, media. Fashion etc. (Often used in quotation marks to indicate its colloquial register). hooks Ways of getting the attention of the viewer so they will watch or continue to watch, eg trailers, cliff hangers. icon An icon is a type of sign that has a close resemblance to what it represents, eg a photograph or a portrait. Also, someone idolised by others, eg pop star, politician. iconography The use of a well-known cultural symbol or complex of symbols in an artistic representation. In films, iconography can involve a star’s persona, the shootout (in a western), the use of archetypal characters and situations, and such stylistic features as lighting, settings, costuming, props, and so on. identify When a viewer becomes emotionally involved with a character or what is happening. ideology A relatively coherent system of values, beliefs, or ideas shared by some social group and often taken for granted as natural or inherently true. See dominant and oppositional ideologies. Appendix 4 103 image i. a visual representation ii. the general impression of a person, event, object or organisation which has been specially constructed for the mass media, eg the image of the Prime Minister constructed by ‘spin doctors’. index A type of sign that links or gives evidence, eg smoke – fire; sweat – effort or state of mind; mercury rising in a thermometer – rising temperature. indie A contraction of the word independent, “indie” is used to refer to production which is independent of mainstream commercial culture. The term was originally used about popular music (where it was characterized by a do-it-yourself approach) and spread to other cultural forms, including film. It overlaps with avant garde and cult, and the indie sector is often seen as a new source of talent to refresh the mainstream. (Like “hip”, often used with quotation marks to indicate its colloquial register). institutions How the production of media output is organised, financed, and controlled and how these shape media texts. A Key Aspect of Media Studies. integration The links between each key aspect. intellectual montage The juxtaposition of a series of images to create an abstract idea not present in any one image. interpretation The viewer's activity of analyzing the implicit and symptomatic meanings suggested in a film. See also meaning. intertextuality The way in which media texts gain their meanings by referring to other media texts that the producers assume that the reader will be familiar with and recognise. Another feature typical of postmodernism. irony A contrast or an incongruity between what is said or written and what is really meant, or between what is expected to happen and what actually does happen. Two kinds of irony are: 1) verbal irony, in which a writer or speaker says one thing and means something entirely different (a form of wit used frequently on Buffy; and 2) dramatic irony in which a reader or audience member perceives something that a character in the story does not. For example, in Fool for Love Spike boasts to Buffy, I’ve always been bad”. Then there is a flashback to spike in his pre-vampire days in nineteenth century England where spike, far from being ‘bad”, is shown as a weak, effeminate, foppish failed poet. jump cut An elliptical cut that appears to be an interruption of a single shot. Either the figures seem to change instantly against a constant background, or the background changes instantly while the figures remain constant. See also ellipsis. juxtaposition The side by side positioning of an article/item in relation to others which gives added or contrasting meaning. key light In the three-point lighting system, the brightest illumination coming into the scene. See also backlighting, fill light, three-point lighting. language Key aspect of Media Studies – how the media create meanings through the use of codes (technical/cultural codes). lens A shaped piece of transparent material (usually glass) with either or both sides curved to gather and focus light rays. Most camera and projector lenses place a series of lenses within a metal tube to form a compound lens. linearity In a narrative, the clear motivation of a series of causes and effects that progress without significant digressions, delays, or irrelevant actions. long shot A framing in which the scale of the object shown is small; a standing human figure would appear nearly the height of the screen. long take A shot that continues for an unusually lengthy time before the transition to the next shot (a trope favoured by Joss Whedon and frequently used in Buffy.) long-form narrative/drama A (relatively recent) term used to describe both television serials and series, as well as mini series, sitcoms and soaps. low-key lighting Illumination that creates strong contrast between light and dark areas of the shot, with deep shadows and little fill light. Used to connote evil in eg film noir. 104 Appendix 4 mainstream Media products aimed at a mass audience, usually implying unadventurous in style, avoiding experimentation. Most of Hollywood’s product is likely to be mainstream as opposed to the independent (“indie”) sector which tends to be more adventurous. major International media company which is part of a larger conglomerate, eg Warner Brothers is part of Time-Warner: Fox is part of News International. match on action A continuity cut which places two different framings of the same action together at the same moment in the gesture, making it seem to continue uninterrupted. For example, a shot shows someone starting to move then the next shot shows them finishing the movement – the viewer follows the action and does not notice the cut. meaning 1. Referential meaning: Allusion to particular items of knowledge outside the text that the viewer is expected to recognize. 2. Explicit meaning: Significance presented overtly, usually in language and often near the text’s beginning or end. 3. Implicit meaning: Significance left tacit, for the viewer to discover upon analysis or reflection. 4. Symptomatic meaning: Significance that the text divulges, often against its will, by virtue of its historical or social context. media construct A text constructed from signs and codes chosen by a maker to create preferred reading. medium close-up A framing in which the scale of the object shown is fairly large; a human figure seen from the chest up would fill most of the screen. medium long shot A framing at a distance that makes an object about four or five feet high appear to fill most of the screen vertically. See also plan américain, the special term for a medium long shot depicting human figures. medium shot A framing in which the scale of the object shown is of moderate size; a human figure seen from the waist up would fill most of the screen. merchandising Products which are based on films, eg T-shirts, toys etc. Mickey Mousing A film technique in which music is composed to sync up with various occurring events in the film. The term comes from the early and mid-production Walt Disney films, where the music almost completely works to mimic the animated motions of the characters. miniseries (in the UK, usually mini-series) A television drama running over several episodes – typically three – each episode lasting about 2 hours. Eg Angels Over America. mise en scene Literally ‘putting together the scene’; All the elements placed in front of the camera to be photographed: the settings and props, lighting, costumes and make-up, and figure behaviour. .In textual analysis, how we read the actions of the creative personnel in a film crew who visualise a script. For some, cinematic mise en scene encompasses both the staging of the action and the way that it is photographed (cinematography). modality Modality refers to how close to reality the producer intends a particular text to be. For example, the makers of Tom and Jerry obviously intended their animation to be some distance from realistic - to have 'low modality'. Some documentary makers, on the other hand - especially observational documentaries - would like to persuade us that they are capturing a version of reality - ie 'high modality'. Each text will include clues as to how high or low the modality is. 'Modality markers' might include whether there is music on a soundtrack, whether the editing is stylised, or shots are long and static. While Buffy’s modality in generally of low modality, many episodes and sequences are of high modality. mode of address How the text speaks to its audience, eg direct or indirect. montage 1. Transitional sequences of rapidly edited images, used to suggest the lapse of time or the passing of events. Often employs dissolves and multiple exposures. (Sometimes referred to as “American montage”) In Europe, montage means the art of editing. 2. An approach to editing developed by the Soviet filmmakers of the 1920s; it emphasises dynamic, often discontinuous, relationships between shots and the juxtaposition of images to create ideas not present in either one by itself. See also discontinuity editing, intellectual montage. montage sequence A segment of a film that summarizes a topic or compresses a passage of time into brief symbolic or typical images. Frequently dissolves, fades, superimpositions, and wipes are used to link the images in a montage sequence. motif An element in a film that is repeated in a significant way. Appendix 4 105 motivation The justification given in the film for the presence of an element. This may be an appeal to the viewer's knowledge of the real world, to genre conventions, to narrative causality, or to a stylistic pattern within the film. Motivation is the reason for the use of a specific code, eg to aid understanding, myth The stories a culture tells about itself, eg representation of Scotland as a romantic land peopled by brave warriors in kilts. narration The process through which the plot conveys or withholds story information. The narration can be more or less restricted to character knowledge and more or less deep in presenting characters' mental perceptions and thoughts. narrative How texts are organized (for example, plot and story). A key aspect of Media Studies narrative arc This term is used to refer to the long-term narrative developments to be found in longform drama, especially in the American TV series, especially ones where the basic series format can also have a strong serial aspect creating a hybrid of serial and series. Whereas the individual episodes might be self contained, resolved and closed by the end of the episode, there are arc elements, narrative trajectories that work themselves out over longer periods, such as the whole season or over several seasons. The X-Files is a good example, with its disruption which Mulder and Scully set about dealing with by the end of the show, and the narrative strands working themselves out over several episodes or several seasons - the government cover-up, cancer man etc. Buffy the Vampire Slayer uses narrative arcs with standalone monster-of-the-week episodes dominating early on, and a gradual "big bad" narrative arc becoming more dominant as the season progresses so that by the end the series has virtually become a serial. Some arcs, especially relationship ones, last several seasons. narrative codes various rules used to construct narratives, eg enigmatic, action, semic etc (cf Barthes’ Codes) narrative form A type of filmic organization in which the parts relate to each other through a series of causally related events taking place in time and space. narrative structure A recurring structure which is the basis of many different texts, eg classic narrative, the quest; equilibrium/disruption narrowcast(ing) As the term suggests, an alternative to 'broadcast', in which a particular text, or whole channel, is targeted at a narrow niche audience. negotiated reading/ meaning See preferred reading non-resolution When the end of the narrative is left open for the audience to decide what happened. oppositional decoding When a reader interprets a text in a different way from the preferred reading. over-exposure This is where an excess of light has been allowed to hit the film, resulting in a pale, washed-out look of the shot. pan A camera movement with the camera body turning to the right or left. On the screen, it produces a mobile framing that scans the space horizontally. parallel editing When a film sequence cuts from one location to another to show events happening simultaneously. patriarchy, patriarchal Originally, rule by a patriarch, the oldest male of the family in some primitive cultures. By extension, male rule, male dominance. persona From the Latin, “mask.”, the constructed image of a ‘star’; the actor’s public image, based on his or her previous roles, and often incorporating elements from their actual personalities as well. plan américain A framing in which the scale of the object shown is moderately small; the human figure seen from the shins to the head would fill most of the screen. This is sometimes referred to as a medium long shot, especially when human figures are not shown. plan-séquence French term for a scene handled in a single shot, usually a long take. (see long take). 106 Appendix 4 plot In a narrative film, all the events that are directly presented to us, including their causal relations, chronological order, duration, frequency, and spatial locations. Opposed to story, which is the viewer's imaginary construction of all the events in the narrative. See also duration, ellipsis, frequency, order, viewing time. point-of-view shot (POV shot) A shot taken with the camera placed approximately where the character's eyes would be, (showing what the character would see; usually cut in before or after a shot of the character looking. polysemic Literally ‘many-signed’, an image in which there are several possible meanings de-pending on the ways in which its constituent signs are read. popular culture Media texts enjoyed by a mass audience rather than an elite. postmodernism A style in arts and media which mixes high popular culture with different genre and historical periods, eg Blade Runner, Twin Peaks and Buffy all have aspects of a postmodernist style. postsynchronization The process of adding sound to images after they have been shot and assembled. This can include dubbing of voices, as well as inserting diegetic music or sound effects. It is the opposite of direct sound. preferred reading/ meaning How the maker(s) wants the audience to read the text. Related to the idea that texts contain messages which support mainstream ideology. An oppositional reading is where sections of the audience read the text in a way which opposes how they are meant to read it; and a negotiated reading is where the audience accepts some aspects of the producers’ message and not others. proairetic (code) See action code. product placement The use of brand name products in a film or programme – companies pay for this sort of advertising. Willow’s use of Apple Macs would appear to be an example of product placement. production One of the three branches of the film industry; the process of creating the film. See also distribution, exhibition. prolepsis See anachrony public service broadcasting (PSB) broadcasting system whose primary aim is to serve the public. punk-rock, punkrocker A loud, fast-moving, and aggressive form of rock music, popular in the late 1970s and early 1980s. Typical punk bands were The Clash, Sham 69 and Spike’s favourite, The Sex Pistols quest A common narrative structure in which a hero(ine) searches for something or someone. racking focus Shifting the area of sharp focus from one plane to another during a shot; the effect on the screen is called rack-focus. rate In shooting, the number of frames exposed per second; in projection, the number of frames thrown on the screen per second. If the two are the same, the speed of the action will appear normal, while a disparity will create slow or fast motion. The standard rate in sound cinema is 24 frames per second for both shooting and projection but 25 on video (30 in the USA). re-establishing shot A return to a view of an entire space after a series of closer shots following the establishing shot. referential code Providing references in a narrative to general knowledge, eg references to history, geography, entertainment, politics etc; aka cultural code. reframing Short panning or tilting movements to adjust for the figures' movements, keeping them onscreen or centered. representation How media texts represent people, places, and events – a key aspect of Media Studies. resolution The outcome of a narrative conflict. rhythm The perceived rate and regularity of sounds, series of shots, and movements within the shots. Rhythmic factors include beat (or pulse), accent (or stress), and tempo (or pace). Appendix 4 107 scene A segment in a narrative film that takes place in one time and space or that uses crosscutting to show two or more simultaneous actions. self-referentiality self-reflexiveness The tendency of a work of art to become self-conscious, to call attention to itself as construct, to its conventions, structive and meaning. A feature of postmodernism. segue To move without interruption from one song (in music) or one scene (in film). Pronounced seg-way. sequence Term commonly used for a moderately large segment of film, involving one complete stretch of action. In a narrative film, often equivalent to a scene. serial Continuing storylines over a number of episodes – soaps are ‘unending serials’. series A set of episodes with the same characters and settings but with a complete story every episode. shallow focus A restricted depth of field, which keeps only one plane in sharp focus; the opposite of deep focus. shot 1. In shooting, one uninterrupted run of the camera to expose a series of frames. Also called a take. 2. In the finished film, one uninterrupted image with a single static or mobile framing. shot/reverse shot Two or more shots edited together that alternate characters, typically in a conversation situation. In continuity editing, characters in one framing usually look left, in the other framing, right. Over-the-shoulder framings are common in shot/reverse-shot editing. sign Word, object, image or sound which communicate meaning. signified The concept associated with the signifier, eg BBC equals quality. signifier The physical form of the sign, eg BBC. sjuzet See fabula. soap A serial that focuses on the lives of ordinary people in realistic settings and uses multiple storylines and cliff hangers. soft lighting Illumination that avoids harsh bright and dark areas, creating a gradual transition from highlights to shadows. sound bridge 1. At the beginning of one scene, the sound from the previous scene carries over briefly before the sound from the new scene begins. 2. At the end of one scene, the sound from the next scene is heard, leading into that scene. special effects A general term for various photographic manipulations that create fictitious spatial relations in the shot, such as superimposition, matte shots, and rear projection. stereotype Representations of people, places or events in an instantly recognizable way, eg Scots with red hair wearing kilts. stinger chord A strongly accented chord with a sudden sforzando (increase in volume) used to register shock or surprise. story In a narrative film, all the events that we see and hear, plus all those that we infer or assume to have occurred, arranged in their presumed causal relations, chronological order, duration, frequency, and spatial locations. Opposed to plot, which is the film's actual presentation of events in the story. See also duration, ellipsis, frequency, order, space, viewing time. storyline One story in a narrative, eg soaps usually have several storylines at any one time. style The repeated and salient uses of film techniques characteristic of a single film or a group of films (for example, a filmmaker's work or a national movement). symbol A type of sign which is significant to a social group, eg the cross is a symbol of Christianity. symbolic code Textual elements that carry ideological or mythical meaning, eg kilted warriors in Braveheart. 108 Appendix 4 take In filmmaking, the shot produced by one uninterrupted run of the camera. One shot in the final film may be chosen from among several takes of the same action. target audience The main group or groups of individuals at whom the product is aimed. teaser A strategy for attracting the audience’s attention in serial drama by giving the audience a glimpse of what it can expect as the episode continues. technical codes Sign systems in the language of the medium, eg a fade in may connote a beginning, sans serif font may connote modernity. technique Any aspect of the film medium that can be chosen and manipulated in making a film. technology How media products are created and distributed to the audience and how technology shapes the production process and its products. Key aspect of Media Studies text The film, programme, piece of popular music, newspaper, magazine etc, when the product is an object of study. three-point lighting A common arrangement using three directions of light on a scene; from behind the subjects (backlighting), from one bright source (key light), and from a less bright source balancing the key light (fill light). tie-ins Promotional campaigns tied to specific texts, eg food chains who tie-in to a blockbuster film. tilt A camera movement with the camera body swiveling upward or downward on a stationary support. It produces a mobile framing that scans the space vertically. tonal shift (variation) A sudden shift in tone, eg from tragic to comic. Another feature typical of postmodernism. tracking shot A mobile framing that travels through space forward, backward, or laterally. See also crane shot, pan, and tilt. tripartite lighting A common arrangement using three directions of light on a scene: from behind the subjects (backlighting), from one bright source (key light), and from a less bright source balancing the key light (fill light). Also known as three-point lighting. trope In literature, a word or expression used in a figurative sense; used more generally in film and TV drama as an obvious stylistic device. utopia(n) Imaginary place with perfect society; ideal state of things. (Cf dystopian). whip pan An extremely fast movement of the camera from side to side, which briefly causes the image to blur into a set of indistinct horizontal streaks. Often an imperceptible cut will join two whip pans to create a trick transition between scenes. wide-angle lens A lens of short focal length that affects a scene's perspective by distorting straight lines near the edges of the frame and by exaggerating the distance between foreground and background planes. In 35mm filming, a wide-angle lens is 30mm or less. zapping Use remote control to flick through channels. zoom lens A lens with a focal length that can be changed during a shot. A shift toward the telephoto range enlarges the image and flattens its planes together, giving an impression of magnifying the scene's space, while a shift toward the wide-angle range does the opposite. 1 The Glossary was synthesised from a number of sources including Baldick, Chris, The Concise Oxford Dictionary of Literary Terms, Oxford and New York, OUP, 1990; Screenonline: www.screenonline.org.uk/education/glossary.html; the Glossary compiled by the Higher Still Development unit of the Scottish Qualifications Authority (www.sqa.ord.uk) in the late 1990s. Appendix 4 109