865 resultados para Semiótica e cinema


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O filme Apocalypse Now (1979), de Francis Ford Coppola, inspirado no romance O Coração das Trevas (1902), de Joseph Conrad, discute o conflito entre indivíduo e sociedade no contexto da Guerra do Vietnã, nos anos 60 e 70 do século XX. Este trabalho pretende mostrar, embasado pela Semiótica francesa, as estratégias utilizadas pelo diretor para explicitar essa oposição na linguagem cinematográfica e preservar a fidelidade temática em relação às questões abordadas pelo livro, passado durante o Imperialismo britânico na África, no século XIX.

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Coordenação de Aperfeiçoamento de Pessoal de Nível Superior (CAPES)

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A presente dissertação analisa a relação entre filosofia e cinema segundo o ponto de vista deleuziano da criação de uma nova imagem do pensamento, crítica à imagem dogmática clássica. Com o objectivo de analisar as considerações filosóficas de Gilles Deleuze sobre o cinema de A Imagem-movimento (1983) e A Imagem-tempo (1985), tendo como ponto de partida o movimento reversível entre cinema e filosofia, defendemos a hipótese de o cinema ter uma função filosófica definida no seu pensamento quando relacionado com um sistema filosófico já fundamentado, circunscrito a Diferença e Repetição (1968). Baseando-se na semiótica de Charles S. Peirce e na ontologia materialista de Henri Bergson, Deleuze cria os conceitos filosóficos de imagem-movimento e de imagem-tempo a partir da materialidade das imagens cinematográficas e segundo uma crítica da tradição filosófica relativamente aos estudos sobre o movimento. Deleuze defende a primazia da dimensão temporal; uma concepção de Tempo não decalcado da dimensão espacial; e uma ideia de consciência como algo que está no tempo. Esta reavaliação culmina no conceito de imagem-cristal, o elemento noo-onto-cinematográfico da sua filosofia-cinema. Assim, a questão sobre o que é o cinema leva-nos a uma outra sobre o que é a filosofia. Que tipos de interferências ocorrem entre cinema e filosofia? A filosofia definida como criação conceptual é o fio condutor para a análise de duas ligações que julgamos essenciais e objecto de alguns equívocos: por um lado, a relação entre cinema e filosofia e, por outro, entre filosofar e pensar. Prosseguindo a questão heideggeriana sobre o que nos faz pensar, localizamos no não-filosófico a “origem” não essencialista da própria filosofia: a partir de um encontro paradoxalmente acidental e necessário, que tem no cinema a correspondência imagem-pensamento e imagem-movimento. Este movimento reversível entre imagens cinematográficas e conceitos filosóficos exige uma revisão do platonismo e da concepção da relação entre imagem e pensamento, bem como uma refutação da analogia entre mente e cinema. Segundo esta analogia, o cinema é compreendido como uma cópia dos processos mentais na sua função de passividade, inércia e manipulação. A reacção a este automatismo espiritual corresponderá, paralelamente, a uma luta contra o cliché da imagem e o fascismo da imagem dogmática. Deste modo, a noologia deleuziana estabelece uma nova imagem do pensamento enquanto nova teoria da imagem, da qual sobressaem dois elementos distintos: a intervenção do não-filosófico como impoder e o domínio de uma lógica paradoxal da síntese disjuntiva. Deste modo, a presente dissertação esclarece alguns dos equívocos estabelecidos relativamente à identidade entre o cinema e a filosofia, nomeadamente a ideia que predomina numa certa tendência da filosofia do cinema hoje, de que o cinema filosofa. Isto é, defendo que o cinema tem a capacidade de nos dar os imprescindíveis elementos não-filosóficos que nos fazem pensar e que o cinema tem um papel prático na criação conceptual, sugerindo assim uma afinidade entre imagem cinematográfica e conceito filosófico que se traduz na expressão filosófica de pensar o cinema pelo cinema.

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O artigo parte de uma simples constatação: é bastante insatisfatória, no presente estágio da pesquisa, a colocação do problema das relações entre imagens e palavras no universo fílmico. Trata-se, no entanto, de uma questão decisiva para a estética do cinema. em geral, as análises feitas valorizam apenas a função das imagens na gênese e no desenvolvimento das significações. A hipótese de trabalho que se apresenta aqui, vem propor, ao contrário, uma abordagem do complexo sígnico constituído pela fusão indissolúvel dos dois recursos expressivos, que forma assim um meio de comunicação específico, original e absolutamente novo. Esse caráter inédito exige uma investigação minuciosa e urgente, conjugando-se perspectivas filosóficas, semióticas e propriamente cinematográficas.

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The English writer Neil Gaiman has a varied background in various genres of literature and comics. His novel Coraline (2002) was considered a bestseller and received numerous adaptations, including versions for the comics (U.S., 2008, illustrated by P. Craig Russelle) and for a musical off Broadway (USA, 2009). The object of analysis chosen for this research was the adaptation of Coraline for film, Coraline (U.S., 2009), stop motion animation directed by Henry Selick. In the eyes of the general public the film stands out for being an engaging animation. Under a closer look, Coraline becomes a valuable object of study that incorporated the technique of stop motion at the same time that modernized the fantastic genre, usually directed to children and youth, but in that case, reaches many audiences. The objective of this research is to analyze the animation based on theory of origin greimasian, focusing on the narrative that constitutes the fantastic genre in order to infer the regularities of genrer and the specificities of audiovisual product

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This work consists of a semiotic analysis of the animation motion picture The Lion King (1994), by the Walt Disney Animation Studios, describing its intertextual relation with Hamlet, by Shakespeare, considering Disney’s individuality, its style. In order to study style in texts, we use discursive semiotics theory, highlighting Discini’s work (2013) and the concept of discursive settings. Hence, a deep discussion about The Lion King’s style, compared to the Shakespeare’s play, is established. The movie, once a syncretic text, requires advanced studies on Expression Plane, its plastic, musical and verbal/phonic aspects. We find these studies in the work of José Luiz Fiorin (2009), Lúcia Teixeira (2009), Ana Claúdia de Oliveira (2009), Jean-Marie Floch (2009) and Antônio Vicente Pietroforte (2008). We note how a syncretic text makes the discursive settings more complex by assembling plastic and sonorous materials in semissimbolic relation. Once defined The Lion King’s style, we analyze the way it justifies the intense popularity of this kind of animation features. Finally, it is important to understand how Disney uses in its style not only discursive settings, but also passional settings, revealing its own way to stir emotions on the spectator

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The book is an in-depth view of recent Italian cinema - bringing an interdisciplinary knowledge to the study of a complex cinema industry. The book aims to address a number of questions about Italian cinema of the last twenty years, bringing interdisciplinary knowledge to a cinema that eschews traditional definitions and categories, and challenges critical assumption about a film industry that is struggling to find a new direction. In doing so, Recent Italian Cinema offers a transverse analysis of the Italian cinema industry in its dealings with national and international production, and of the themes and issues that have emerged in films produced during the period 1980-2006.

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This Australasian horror special issue is an important step forward in putting Australian and New Zealand horror movies on the map of film and cinema studies as a subject worthy of intellectual debate. The journal issue is the first devoted solely to the academic discussion of Australasian horror movies. While an Australian horror movie tradition has produced numerous titles since the 1970s achieving commercial success and cult popularity worldwide, the horror genre is largely missing from Australian film history. While there have been occasional essays on standout titles such as Wolf Creek (Mclean, 2005), an increasing number of articles on ‘Ozploitation’ movies, and irregular discussion about Australian Gothic, overall the nature of Australian horror as a genre remains poorly understood. In terms of New Zealand, debate has tended to revolve around ‘Kiwi Gothic’ and of course Peter Jackon’s early splatter films, rather than Kiwi horror as a specific filmmaking tradition.

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Different terminologies have been used to characterize the Chinese independent cinema in the 1990s. These definitions focus on the experimental practices outside the official production system and independent of official ideology. The film industry has had distinctive development since the entry of WTO in 2001. Private investors have played essential role in cinematic economy; strict censorship has been obviously relaxed; the film industry is being divided into two opposing extremes. Thus, it is necessary to give a new definition of the Chinese independent cinema. The definition of independent cinema in today China I suggest in the light of American independence is that any film that has not been financed, produced and distributed by majors is independent. At least four corporations are majors in the Chinese film industry. They are China Film Group Corporation, Huayi Brothers Corporation, PolyBona Film Distribution Corporation and Shanghai Film Group Corporation. Except the four majors, all the other film production or distribution companies are independents.

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While Australian cinema has produced popular movie genres since the 1970s, including action/adventure, road movies, crime, and horror movies, genre cinema has occupied a precarious position within a subsidised national cinema and has been largely written out of film history. In recent years the documentary Not Quite Hollywood (2008) has brought Australia’s genre movie heritage from the 1970s and 1980s back to the attention of cinephiles, critics and cult audiences worldwide. Since its release, the term ‘Ozploitation’ has become synonymous with Australian genre movies. In the absence of discussion about genre cinema within film studies, Ozploitation (and ‘paracinema’ as a theoretical lens) has emerged as a critical framework to fill this void as a de facto approach to genre and a conceptual framework for understanding Australian genres movies. However, although the Ozploitation brand has been extremely successful in raising the awareness of local genre flicks, Ozploitation discourse poses problems for film studies, and its utility is limited for the study of Australian genre movies. This paper argues that Ozploitation limits analysis of genre movies to the narrow confines of exploitation or trash cinema and obscures more important discussion of how Australian cinema engages with popular movies genres, the idea of Australian filmmaking as entertainment, and the dynamics of commercial filmmaking practises more generally.

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The Australian screen industries are a leading domestic creative industry sector at a crossroad. New production, distribution and exhibition technologies are challenging traditional models of ‘filmmaking’. For the screen industries to remain competitive they must renovate business models for an emerging marketplace. This paper is a preliminary examination of three key aspects of next generation filmmaking: post-cinema approaches to screen production, emerging production and business models, and issues for policy.

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Screen industries around the globe are evolving. While technological change has been slower to take effect upon the Australian film industry than other creative sectors such as music and publishing, all indications suggest that local screen practices are in a process of fundamental change. Fragmenting audiences, the growth of digital video, distribution and exhibition, the potential for entirely new forms of cultural expression, the proliferation of multi-platforms, and the importance of social networking and viral marketing in promoting products, are challenging traditional approaches to ‘film making’. Moreover, there has been a marked transition in government policy rationales and funding models in recent years, resulting in the most significant overhaul of public finance structures for the film industry in almost 20 years. Film, Cinema, Screen evaluates the Australian film industry’s recent development – particularly in terms of Australian feature film and television series production; it also advocates new approaches to Australian film, and address critical issues around how screen production globally is changing, with implications for local screen industries.