Thank you for visiting my blog. I’m a scholar of television, film, and digital media, and the author of CINEMA OF CONFINEMENT (Northwestern University Press) and CAPTURING DIGITAL MEDIA (Bloomsbury Academic). I’ve published a variety of articles on film and television in journals published by Taylor & Francis. I am also a writer of fiction. All of my books can be viewed on www.tomconnellyfiction.com
Coming soon! Suburban TalesLast year, I wrote a bunch of short stories that focus on the supernatural, fantasy and horror. I picked three stories and thought
it would be fun to independently publish them as a book series. The stories are entitled, "The Rock Star," The Piano," and "The Decorator." All three stories focus on Eden Gardens, a fictional neighborhood in the San Fernando Valley.
I was surprised to see a number of well-known authors like Joe Hill and Paul Tremblay were publishing short reads and short stories under the Kindle Short Reads category. I wonder how this has impacted print journals that publish short stories. As always with digital technology, there are pluses and minuses.
I also wrote the third book in my Hudson Valley trilogy called The Mansion. I hope to have it ready later in the year. The other two books in the trilogy are The Postcard and The Bells - both available through Amazon.
My academic books, Capturing Digital Media (Bloomsbury Academic) and Cinema of Confinement (Northwestern University Press), are also available for purchase.
I've been teaching Bong Joon-Ho in my Global Cinema class for the past three years. When I first proposed my course, I didn't know much about Korean cinema. I was directed toward Park Chan-wook's Oldboy by a number of my students. This was the first Korean film I watched, and it is an incredible and visceral movie that will stick with you for a long time.
Bong and Park are part of a number of directors known as New Korean Wave.
What is unique about these filmmakers is they work within genre to get at social concerns. This is clearly the case in Bong's films The Hostand Snowpiercer.
For example, The Host addresses a number of topics, such as youth unemployment after the Asian financial crisis in 1997.
Or "the right of the hungry" (seo-ri), which is connected to the film's theme of consumption.
But one film I highly recommend is Bong's Memories of Murder. Christina Klein wrote an excellent article on Memories and The Host called, "Why American Studies Need to Think About Korean Cinema, or Transnational Genres in the Films of Bong Joon-ho."
Klein argues that Memories and The Host have the traditional Hollywood conventions of the serial killer and the monster genre, respectively. At the same time, both films speak to Korean social concerns. She identifies these two registers through surface and deepcrime.
Klein states: “Bong does not mimic Hollywood but appropriates and reworks genre conventions,
using them as a framework for exploring and critiquing South Korea social and
political issues” (873).
She argues that the surface crime launches
the story and motivates the action. The process of investigating the surface
crime often produces a deep crime, which is a pervasive wrongdoing that lies
beneath the surface of everyday life (881).
This deep crime, for example, points toward the Chun regime during the 1980s. The film capture life under the Chun dictatorship as the detectives attempt to find the serial killer.
Of course, Klein's surface and deep crime reading can certainly apply to Bong's new film, Parasite and its commentary on wealth and inequality. At the same time, the film has surface traits of a thriller and, to some degree, horror.
Lastly, there are many great films from South Korea. Below are a few I recommend:
Be sure to check out Darcy Paquet's great introduction to New Korean Cinema
"The Monsters Are Due on Maple Street" is an episode I have shown many times in my television courses. Rod Serling is an artistic force, especially when you consider the TV anthologies he wrote in the 1950s, such as Patterns and Requiem for Heavyweight. Although the term "showrunner" was not used during the time when The Twilight Zone aired, Serling arguable meets all the traits of a television auteur.
The plot of "The Monsters Are Due on Maple Street" is simple: neighbors conversing on a sun-drenched suburban street are suddenly disrupted when a strange-sounding object flies over with a loud roar and a flash of light. Some think it might have been a meteor. No one really knows for sure. No need to panic. But when they discover they have no electrical power, and lawn mowers and cars no longer work, a meeting is called on the street as the paranoia begins.
The episode offers a number of insights into late 1950s America (albeit allegorically).
As residents of Maple Street gather together, young Tommy references his comic books as a source of
explanation for the strange occurrence. He says aliens may have already sent their people to earth, who look just like humans, a possible reference to Invasion of the Bodysnatchers
(1956).
Of course, this film and others of the 1950s are often
discussed as allegories of an outside threat such as communism or McCarthyism and the Red Scare, which speaks to the height of the Cold War era.
The neighbors blow Tommy off, saying that he's been reading too many comic books. It is interesting to note that in 1954 the Comics Code Authority was established as a way for the comic book industry to police itself.
The
Comics Code Authority was created because of the concern of graphic
content and its impact on the youth. Poor Tommy is certainly a target.
Although the episode suggests social harmony before the strange thing flew by and knocked out their power, the neighbors, in fact, were already aware of their peculiarities. Thinking aliens have infiltrated Maple Street, the neighbors scrutinize all idiosyncrasies.
These differences are brought out into the open as a way to see who's an alien and who's not. At one point, one of the neighbors points out that Steve is always using his ham radio at night.
Steve's ham radio takes on qualities of what Jeffrey Sconce terms a "haunted media." But in this case, the radio is not identified as communicating with a supernatural being or the undead as depicted in Poltergeist (1982), but to communicate with aliens. Of course, Steve laughs at this assertion.
Rodney Hill's excellent article, "Mapping The Twilight Zone: Cultural and Mythological Terrain," notes that “A chief character found
in all of these issues [such as threat of nuclear war, the red scare, and the
ever-present danger that suburban conformity might deteriorate into fascism] is
fear."
Steve's calls the neighbor's inquisitions a kangaroo court, which is an appropriate description of the situation. But it is also a reference to fascism, a topic that Serling also explored in "Eye of the Beholder."
And it is fear that causes Charlie to shoot and kill Jim, thinking he was one of the aliens. It is at this point where logic and rationality collapses as a mob of violence ensues on Maple Street. What they do not know is that aliens are responsible for cutting their power and electricity. But can we assign the paranoia of Maple Street to the aliens?
The closing narration of Serling demonstrates why he is considered one of television's best writers: "The tools of conquest do not necessarily come with bombs and explosions
and fallout. There are weapons that are simply thoughts, attitudes,
prejudices. . . to be found only in the minds of men. For the record,
prejudices can kill. . . and suspicion can destroy. . . and a thoughtless,
frightened search for a scapegoat has a fallout all of its own – for the
children and the children yet unborn. And the pity of it is that these
things cannot be confined to the Twilight Zone."
In my television theory class, we watch the episode "Walkabout" from the series Lost as an approach to studying semiotics - the study of signs. This posting contains spoilers!!
Roland Barthes:
Using semiotics is the basis on how to conduct a close analysis of a film or a television series. Roland Barthes's work on Mythologies is one of the founding texts for this type of analysis. And to keep things simple, I will focus on the terms: denotative and connotative.
Denotative Meanings:
Denotative is the surface level of a sign. For example, if I see a stop sign while driving, I know to stop my car. It is a sign that we can all agree upon - at least I hope we do.
Connotative Meanings:
Connotative is the secondary level of a sign. This means there can be multiple meanings of a sign. For example, I could read the sign "snake" not only as a slimy reptile, but as "sin." The surface reading (denotative) of a snake means a reptile and it slithers. The secondary reading (connotative) of a snake could mean "sin," or it could mean "friend." I preferably would not like to think about snakes at all! But you get the point...
Rhetoric: Making Your Case Convincingly
Rhetoric is the art of persuasion. A connotative approach to studying film or television involves how well you can argue your case. This means when you unpack secondary meanings (connotations), you have to make your case convincingly. To do this, you must inventory the signs of a film and or television episode.
"Walkabout" Example
Lost is a television series about the survivors of Oceanic 815 stranded on a mysterious island. "Walkabout" is an early episode in the first season that focuses on John Locke (Terry O'Quinn), a mysterious man who decides to hunt for a boar after learning the survivors had ran out of food.
"Walkabout" involves Locke's journey into the mysterious island. This odyssey entails a physical component (find and kill the boar), and an interior component (Locke's re-birth). We can track these two registers by inventorying the episode's signs.
Locke's Wheel Chair
The wheel chair is more than simply a means of transportation; it is also about Locke's backstory and his internal struggles before he crashed on the island, which is told through flashbacks. His wheel chair has an added charge of meaning when we learn that Locke can walk after surviving the airplane crash at the end of the episode.
Movement and Stillness
Locke is shown a number of times lying on his back, looking at his feet. Movement has multiples meanings, especially when you consider the title of the episode: "walkabout." It is a spiritual renewal for Locke.
Re-Birth
Locke is re-born as he learns to walk again. The fire framed by his wheelchair at the end of the episode helps to communicate this at the connotative level. He is no longer the same person we saw in the episode's flashbacks.
There are many connotations I could have discussed in this episode. But I chose signs that are tied to a specific theme: Locke's re-birth as a "walkabout" in his hunt for the boar. At the end, he successfully kills the boar and provides food for the survivors. At the same time, Locke's soul is nourished by the hunt in the form of a walkabout.
As you can probably guess by the subject line, this post containsSPOILERS. Please be aware if you plan to read on.
After watching M. Night Shyamalan's Glass, I was reminded of the importance of where a film's climax takes place. I'm not entirely sure what Shyamalan was going for in terms of narrative expectations, but Glass's climax was set in a mental institution parking lot. I felt the location was visually flat, especially as a conclusion for his trilogy of films (Unbreakable and Split), two films that I so much enjoyed.
Glass (2019). Parking lot fight.
Maybe someone will argue that Shyamalan was trying to de-construct the comic book genre. So be it. But there was a scene in Glass where a character enters a comic book store that had a section for "Villains" and "Heroes." Say what you will, but I've been in a lot of comic bookstores and have yet to see those signs. Anyway...I loved Unbreakable and Split. I'm even a big fan of The Village, a film that was not well-received.
After watching Glass, this led me to think about the importance of setting or mise-en-scene (what's put in the frame) in creating an exciting film climax. I thought of some great settings used in movie climaxes (mostly from well-known movies). Interesting to note - many film climaxes often occur in high places. For a great reading on this topic, see Kristen Whissel's article: "Tales of Upward Mobility: The New Verticality and Digital Special Effects."
NATIONAL or ICON PLACES
North by Northwest (1959). Mount Rushmore
X-Men (2000). Statue of Liberty
BRIDGES
A View to A Kill (1985). I posted a while ago that I thought the movie poster was better than the movie. I've grown to like this movie a lot. And you can't beat the Duran Duran track "A View to a Kill."
TALL BUILDINGS or SKYSCRAPERS
Die Hard (1988). Nakatomi Plaza
A MAZE
The Shining (1980). The Maze climax when Jack chases Danny.
THE OCEAN
Jaws (1975). I highly recommend The Jaws Log by Carl Gottlieb
A CHURCH
The Godfather (1972). The symbolic importance of the famous baptism scene.
John Woo's The Killer (1989).
CREEPY HOUSES
Psycho (1960).
THE SKY
Air Force One (1997). I wasn't a big fan of the film. But the ending was kind of cool.
And I'm sure there are plenty of other settings that can contribute to exciting climaxes in films. Though, I'm not sold on a parking lot yet.