Now showing 1 - 10 of 43
Loading...
Thumbnail Image
Publication

Campion, Jane

2002-10, Hopgood, Fincina

Jane Campion is Australasia’s leading auteur director. As recipient of the Palme d’Or (1993), the Silver Lion (1990) and an Academy Award (1994), she is also one of the most successful female directors in the world. (1) These statements are not made innocently. They are intended to draw attention to issues of nationality, of auteurism and art cinema, and of gender.

Loading...
Thumbnail Image
Publication

"Bubbling" the Fourth Age in the Time of COVID-19: Ambivalence and Agency

2021, Brooks, Jodi, Hopgood, Fincina

Each year the Australian National Dictionary Centre, based at the Australian National University (ANU), selects "a word or expression that has gained prominence in the Australian social landscape". In 2020, "iso" took out first place, with "bubble" following close behind. On the Centre's website, Senior Researcher Mark Gywnn explains that "iso" was selected not only for its flexibility, merrily combining with other words to create new compound words (for instance "being in iso", doing "iso baking" and putting on "iso weight"), but also because it "stood out asa characteristically Aussie abbreviation" (Australian National Dictionary Centre).

Loading...
Thumbnail Image
Publication

ABC's Mental As ... it’s OK to laugh about mental health

2014-10-09, Hopgood, Fincina

So what’s funny about mental illness? Very little. It can be hard to smile, let alone laugh, when every day feels like a wet blanket. When someone makes a joke about mental illness, it often trivialises and dismisses another person’s suffering, revealing how much fear, taboo and misinformation surround the issue. In this context, laughing at mental illness acts as a defence mechanism, a nervous response that protects one person from empathising with another’s pain and anguish.

Loading...
Thumbnail Image
Publication

Mental illness on screen - a new world of hopes and aspirations

2014-02-04, Hopgood, Fincina

It is a basic tenet of mainstream filmmaking that you want the audience to identify with your protagonist: to go on an emotional journey with them, to empathise with them. What, then, are the particular challenges filmmakers face when the protagonist is living with a mental illness?

Given the stigma that is still prevalent towards mental illness, how can filmmakers break down these barriers that inhibit the empathetic relationship between character and viewer? Why would commercially-minded filmmakers want to tackle mental illness at all?

Loading...
Thumbnail Image
Publication

Caring about Mental Illness: The Power of Melodrama in Contemporary Australian Cinema

2007, Hopgood, Fincina

Between 1989 and 1996, six feature films were produced in Australia that shared an interest in depicting mental illness and exploring the boundaries between normality and insanity. While they were different in style and market positioning, ranging from cult classics and art films, to commercial successes and failures, these films - Sweetie (Jane Campion, 1989), Bad Boy Bubby (Rolf de Heer, 1993), Angel Baby (Michael Rymer, 1995), Lilian's Story (Jerzy Domaradski, 1995), Cosi (Mark Joffe, 1996) and Shine (Scott Hicks, 1996) - portray mental illness through the eyes and experiences of the afflicted protagonist or, in the case of Cosi, through the encounters of the protagonist with a range of afflicted characters. I am interested in the ways in which these films rely upon codes and conventions of melodrama to stage mental illness in a sympathetic and emotionally affective manner for the audience. Historically, mentally ill characters in mainstream cinema have been depicted as sources of horror or comedy. These films, however, seek to challenge the audience by encouraging them to care about these characters, even inviting them to identify with the characters and to empathise with their dilemmas. It is through the power of melodrama that this caring response is evoked.

Loading...
Thumbnail Image
Publication

Eco-anxiety, Ecological Thought and the Fabulative Turn in Nordic Noir TV: Investigating EcoNoir from the Arctic to the Antipodes

2024-03-28, Sanderson, Coralie Gail Jarvis, Hopgood, Fincina, Hamilton, Jennifer M, Turnbull, Sue

In the new millennium, humans are increasingly confronted by the dire consequences, both current and predicted, of a changing climate. As the environmental crisis deepens and uncertainty percolates, individual and collective engagement with discomfiting ecological thought is largely unavoidable. The seemingly insoluble quandary has fomented a range of clinically recognised psychological responses which congregate under the umbrella term of eco-anxiety. In this thesis, I investigate the human predisposition to confront and attempt to assuage contemporaneous fears through storytelling on screen. I direct my focus toward the medium of television and the manifestation of this proclivity in the internationally recognised genre of Scandinavian serialised television crime drama known as Nordic Noir. In observing the infiltration of ecological themes and supernatural, folkloric, and Gothic tropes into Nordic Noir productions over the last two decades, I identify the germination and global proliferation of a discrete and replicable sub-genre which, I argue, specifically reflects and responds to the psychological complexities inherent in eco-anxiety. I refer to this novel form of cultural expression as EcoNoir. In EcoNoir crime dramas, I observe that detectives are invariably drawn into cases of murder, missing children and nefarious eco-crimes; however, it is the ways in which these supernaturally charged local stories are told and how their global relevance affectively resonates with viewers, which is at the heart of this thesis.

The confluence of rationality and irrationality in the sub-genre of EcoNoir introduces a narrative ambiguity to the conventions of crime drama which disrupts the cathartic relief from tension that viewers traditionally expect of the form. EcoNoir, like its film noir progenitors, resists definitive resolution and thus, when conflated with environmental themes, authentically reflects the ambiguous nature of the climate crisis and the concomitant uncertainty that stalks the global zeitgeist.

The study reveals a correlation between ecological thought, eco-anxiety and the global human imaginary by tracing the transnational distribution and replication of this fusion of social realism, environmental crime fiction, noir and supernatural fabulation from the Arctic to the Antipodes. Replicating a distinct suite of tropes and conventions, disparately geolocated television creators and practitioners weave local ecological concerns with representations of their own folklore and mythologies to create glocalised productions that reflect the global nature of the climate crisis and respond to universally shared concerns. As producers and purveyors of long-form serialised television, digital streaming platforms facilitate the transmission of complex narratives from culturally specific locations to the wider world: stories that echo our commonalities and foster an appreciation that humans (and non-humans alike) are enmeshed in a shared existential dilemma.

I employ a methodology of close textual analysis and draw on theoretical and scholarly sources in psychology, philosophy, literary and screen studies, environmental humanities, folklore studies, peace studies and gender studies, to examine seven EcoNoir serial television productions as case studies of the sub-genre. These are the German series Dark (2017-2020), the Swedish Jordskott (2016-2017), the French Zone Blanche (Black Spot) (2017-2019), the British Fortitude (2015-2018), the Swedish and French co-production Midnattsol (Midnight Sun) (2016), the Colombian Frontera Verde (Green Frontier) (2019) and the AustralianThe Gloaming (2020-). The analyses will reveal the ways in which the sub-genre of EcoNoir, both cognitively and affectively, reflects the multifarious environmental crises currently unfolding around the planet and the diverse manifestations of eco-anxiety which these crises evoke – from the relatively benign melancholy of solastalgia to the extremes of violent psychosis, by way of narratives ranging from nihilistic defeatism through to tentative optimism and hope.

Loading...
Thumbnail Image
Publication

Third Take: Australian Film-makers Talk

2003-06-25, Hopgood, Fincina

Third Take is a valuable historical resource and an insight into contemporary filmmaking both in Australia and overseas. This is the second instalment in Raffaele Caputo and Geoff Burton's series of Australian film-makers "talking", based on the model of John Boorman's Projections series. In their first volume, Second Take, Caputo and Burton presented a series of essays, interviews and previously-published articles that profiled, or gave voice to, a dozen Australian directors, including Gillian Armstrong and Jane Campion. One of the improvements of Third Take is its diversification of the label "film-makers" to include contributions from three cinematographers (John Seale, Don McAlpine, Vince Monton), one actor (Bill Hunter), one producer (David Elfick), and one scriptwriter (Bob Ellis), as well as six directors (Phillip Noyce, Peter Weir, Rolf de Heer, Andrew Dominik, Curtis Levy and Dennis O'Rourke, who is interviewed by Martha Ansara) plus a reprint from Ken G. Hall's Australian Film: The Inside Story. The need for dialogue and insight into the film-making craft, identified by the editors in their introduction to Second Take (6), is answered in Third Take by this inclusion of craftsmen [they are all men] other than the director, an important corrective to the auteurist preoccupations of academic criticism.

Loading...
Thumbnail Image
Publication

Hilary Radner, Alistair Fox and Irene Bessiere (eds), Jane Campion: Cinema, Nation, Identity (Contemporary Approaches to Film and Television Series). Detroit, IL: Wayne State University Press, 2009, 329 pp. Deb Verhoeven, Jane Campion (Routledge Film Guidebooks). London and New York, NY: Routledge, 2009, 273 pp.

2010, Hopgood, Fincina

The field of 'Campion studies', as it has become known, has been reinvigorated by the release of Jane Campion's first feature film in six years, Bright Star (2009), and the timely publication of two new books: Deb Verhoeven's monograph, simply titled Jane Campion, and the edited collection, Jane Campion: Cinema, Nation, Identity. Together these books offer a detailed and thorough examination of not only Campion's films but her persona as an auteur, as a woman director and as an 'antipodean' filmmaker. As such they constitute an important intervention in current theorizing about the contemporary auteur (or the 'post-auteur'), as well as a substantial contribution to our understanding of Campion's cinema.

Loading...
Thumbnail Image
Publication

You may not like reality TV but How 'Mad' Are You? rightly tests our assumptions about mental illness

2018-10-12, Hopgood, Fincina

In recent years, Australia’s public broadcasters have been willing to program innovative, thought-provoking content to coincide with Mental Health Week. This year is no exception, with SBS taking a gamble on a new format in a two-part series How ‘Mad’ Are You?, which began last night.

The series is produced by Blackfella Films, which also made the factual series First Contact and Filthy, Rich and Homeless. Much like these shows, How ‘Mad’ Are You? adapts the reality TV format of “the social experiment” to examine a complex social issue.

Loading...
Thumbnail Image
Publication

Inspiring Passion and Hatred: Jane Campion's In the Cut

2004-01, Hopgood, Fincina

Described as a psychosexual thriller, Jane Campion's In the cut (2003) explores the intense sexual relationship between a creative writing teacher and a detective, set against the backdrop of a serial killer investigation in New York city.