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Intertextual Inspiration - Complete!

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Page 1: Intertextual Inspiration - Complete!
Page 2: Intertextual Inspiration - Complete!

Anders Tomlinson is a “complex and complete artist that merges different creative disciplines into story telling” who often works with painting, graphic art, sound, video and photography to communicate different ideas.

by Anders Tomlinson

The art also shows how relationships often take place in their own world, away from everyone else with only one another as company. This inspired us to have only our two main leads in the video with no one else, suggesting that they only see each when they are together, a notion often associated with being deeply in love.

I found this series of artwork when researching relationships in art. It shows how when a couple enter a relationship they can become in synch with one another, sharing thoughts and feelings etc. and ultimately become one person.

The artwork also inspires me to have our music video have lots of links to nature in it. Wildlife is often associated with love due to it’s natural and peaceful connotations; in these paintings, images of space and time are used to show the depth of their feelings. This is an image I am keen to replicate during the beginning of my music video, when the two lead characters are in love and nothing else seems to matter than one anther. The bright, vivid colour scheme also reflects the loving, happy emotions associated with the start of new relationships.

Page 3: Intertextual Inspiration - Complete!

Looking back, I sometimes wonderIf there were things I should have changed,A hurt that even now I might appease.Has it all been taken from me?No, time has shown a tender mercyFor I still have my precious memories.

by Alora M KnightLittle thought was givenAs the years went quickly.We took good times for granted, that is true.Perhaps, it all was for the best,Enjoying simple pleasures,In retrospect, that was all we ever knew.I will take those precious memoriesAnd frame them with my love,Then hang them in the hallways of my heart.I hope the fond remembranceOf the joys that once were sharedWill overcome the tears that want to start.There was no use to ask the futureTo give away its secrets.No blueprints for what would lie ahead.It is the choices that are made,Experiences, both good and bad,That down life's pathways, all are led.

The poem goes on to accurately convey the hurt and sadness of no longer being in love with someone, much like how my couple feel by the end of the video; however, it recognizes that by remembering past memories, the relationship becomes bittersweet instead of simply bitter, which reflects the up-beat and poignant tone of the track: Gather and Run representing the couple running through life, gathering their memories in their wake to reflect on later.

The poem discusses how, at the beginning of a relationship, everything goes by so quickly and each new day is taken for granted; this is much like my story concept, where the couple are so caught up in the own world they don’t even realise when their relationship begins to feel strained.

I found this poem when researching people’s experiences on losing a person they once loved. I wanted to gain as much knowledge on the subject as I could so I could convey the loss convincingly in my music video: a story of two young men who fall in love, but during the course of the track begin to fall out-of-love with each other until at the end they are separated.

Page 4: Intertextual Inspiration - Complete!

Directed by Michel Gondry, Eternal Sunshine of the Spotless Mind tells the story of Clementine (Kate Winslet) who, after a painful breakup, undergoes a procedure to erase all memories of her boyfriend Joel (Jim Carrey). When Joel discovers what Clementine has done, he undergoes the same procedure and slowly begins to forget about the woman he once loved.

Blue Valentine is directed by Derek Cianfrance and tells the story of a married couple, Dean Pereira (Ryan Gosling) and Cindy Heller (Michelle Williams), regularly shifting back and forth in time between the happier, early stages of their relationship and the ultimate dissolution of their marriage several years later due to his lack of ambition and her retreat into self-absorption.

These films inspired me as they both take the subject of a broken relationship and use non-linear narratives to tell the story of the build up to the break up. It inspired me to use flashbacks to tell the story of the relationship between my two main characters to emphasise the way their feelings change for one another throughout the course of the video. Like Blue

Valentine, this will hopefully emphasise the sadness and sense of loss felt when a couple is experiencing difficulties, but will also have a bittersweet emotive pull like Eternal Sunshine of the Spotless

Mind, where by remembering the good times of the relationship it reminds the audience that there was once love there, creating a more reflective, reminiscent atmosphere to make the music video more uplifting, matching the heartening tone and lyrics of the track Gather and

Run.

Page 5: Intertextual Inspiration - Complete!

The film Anna Karenina inspired me due to it’s flowing camera movement achieved during first half of the film. Clever transitions are used to make it seem as though the film takes place inside a theatre, so Anna Karenina is constructed like a theatre production, transitioning smoothly between each take. I want to achieve this feel in my music video in order to represent that my characters are rushing through their relationship, never pausing to realise that they might be drifting apart from one another.

Transition 1 is that of a toy train going through a tunnel, before emerging on the other side at night as the real train that Anna is travelling on. The camera never moves position, just changes focus, which is a clever way of transitioning into the next scene. As is transition two; as Levin walks across the stage, he pulls open the heavy doors to reveal the next location, a cold and snowy scene. Transition 3 plays with lighting, illuminating Anna’s background until the audience cannot see anything, before cutting to the thick smoke of the train. When creating our video, we want to take aspects of each of thesetransitions and put our spin on them to create a fast-moving, flowing video, matching the upbeat pace of Gather & Run.

Page 6: Intertextual Inspiration - Complete!

In his book The Wonderful Wizard of Oz, which The Wizard of Oz was based upon, author L. Frank Baum describes Kansas as being 'in shades of grey’, with Dorothy living in a farmhouse with paint peeling and washed away by the weather, which gave it an 'air of greyness.' Baum also described Aunt Em and Uncle Henry as being 'grey with age’, further cementing Kansas as being dreary and dull for young Dorothy. During the film, therefore, the use of monochrome and sepia tones for the Kansas sequences was a stylistic choice that conjured images the dull and grey countryside. The use of colour in the production was extremely important to the film studio, with the bold, bright colours of Oz highlighting that Dorothy had travelled to a new world far more exciting than Kansas. The MGM production crew often favoured some hues over others; this even resulted in the studio's art department taking almost a week to settle on the final shade of yellow for the yellow brick road.

The changing of colour to symbolise Dorothy’s change in surroundings from what was ultimately a boring life to an exciting, fantastical world inspired me when it comes to creating my music video. When the couple in my video first meet, the colour saturation is very dull and dark; that is, until the two touch and their whole world explodes into colour. Like Dorothy in The

Wizard of Oz, this can symbolise how their lives were empty and boring without one another, and now it has colour and life.

Also, when Dorothy ultimately returns to Kansas, the difference in colour is very apparent; the bright, jewelled tones of Oz have disappeared to make way for dull, brown hues, reminding the audience of Dorothy’s far more boring reality. This inspired me for my music video as the colour grading will become progressively saturated and dull throughout as the couple falls out-of-love with each other, reminding the audience that nothing can remain bright and optimistic forever.

Page 7: Intertextual Inspiration - Complete!

by Ernest Hemmingway“Part of you died each year when the leaves fell from the trees and their branches were bare against the wind and the cold, wintery light. But you knew there would always be the spring, as you knew the river would flow again after it was frozen.”

by Francis Brett Young

“It was one of those perfect English autumnal days which occur more frequently in memory than in life.” by P.D. James

“An autumn garden has a sadness when the sun is not shining...” 

“Use what you have, use what the world gives you. Use the first day of fall: bright flame before winter's deadness; harvest; orange, gold, amber; cool nights and the smell of fire. Our tree-lined streets are set ablaze, our kitchens filled with the smells of nostalgia: apples bubbling into sauce, roasting squash, cinnamon, nutmeg, cider, warmth itself. The leaves as they spark into wild colour just before they die are the world's oldest performance art, and everything we see is celebrating one last violently hued hurrah before the black and white silence of winter.” 

by Shauna Niequist

As we would be filming in the autumn, I looked up different quotes about that particular season and people’s different interpretations on it so I would be able to weave these themes into my music video. The first quote discusses how we should make the most of Autumn, and uses lots of natural imagery, from flames and leaves to get this message across, inspiring me to use lots of nature themes in my video; this could represent how their love is natural and pure. The second quote links to whenthe couple are falling out-of-love; the foundations of their relationship remain, but the love is no longer there. The third quote talks, again, about selective memory, linking to the idea of our characters not realising the relationship is failing as they seem to be clinging on to past, happier memories. The final quote talks about hope even when you think there is none, which is important as we want our video to have an uplifting end, or the overall product would become too depressing.

Page 8: Intertextual Inspiration - Complete!

by Katie Melua

by Walking on CarsThe use of birds-eye view in Nine Million Bycles

inspired me because in one of our scenes we wanted to have our two main characters in a field. We were not sure what composition to have or even what our characters could be doing, but this video inspired us to have our two leads on a picnic, with the birds-eye view looking downon them. However, we were not sure what transition we should use to get into this shot. This is, until we watched the video for Always Be With You, where the edit cuts between one of the leads falling onto a sofa and the other onto the floor. This led to us developing a concept of having our two characters sitting on a bench inone shot, before cutting to them falling onto the picnic blanket in the next shot, almost as though they had stayed in one position and their surroundings had changed around them instead. Always Be With You also inspired us as it featured two leads of the same gender in a romantic relationship; the relationship was treated in the same way that it would be a straight couple, which is a notion we wish to follow when creating our music video. Much in the same way, we want to highlight that that LGBT community is equal to – and faces the same issues as – heterosexual couples.