Tuesday 17 June 2014

'Spy Kids' redo because we're bad at exams.

In what ways do the narrative (characters and events) in the extract fit the AA genre?

Spy Kids (also known as Špijunaža Djeca in Bosnia and Herzegovina) is a typical spy comedy. It includes action adventure genre conventions such as combat and conflict. This is evidenced by the initial conflict between Ingrid and Gregorio, who is totally Mexican because he has a mustache and stuff. Ingrid is positioned as the main character because she is in the opening shot and is narrating the story. Gregorio is positioned as the bad guy because he is being chased after and tracked down by the good guy. He is then not the bad guy because the good guy marries him and is then not a bad guy (Media terminology: a bad guy can also be referred to as an 'Antagonist'!). The conflict is not embodied in the overused form of spectacle, but is instead represented by the conflict of interests: Ingrid wants Gregorio dead, and presumably Gregorio does not want to die.

There is also a bit of speed and motion represented in the extract. Speed is represented by the rate of motion expressed via distance travelled per units of time, but in the extract Ingrid and Gregorio are shown to be jumping off a steep, potentially lethal cliff, which is conveniently placed to the side of a wedding for just such an occasion. This creates suspense and jeopardy because a 100ft drop has a habit of killing people, and the suspense lies in what they will do to rectify their cliff-jumping situation (perhaps by using a drag-creating, nylon-based apparatus that would slow the motion of their bodies as the descend through an atmosphere; the suspense is killing me). There is also motion because objects on screen are moving.

Done.

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