MedVision ad

Help? ;D [Educating rita] (1 Viewer)

musicxbox

New Member
Joined
Feb 1, 2010
Messages
11
Gender
Female
HSC
2010
I always ask myself this, why do I ALWAYS leave work till the last minute! School starts on wednesday for me and I still have two english essays to do. Agh.

Anyway, can someone help me find analysis for P.J Hogan's Muriel's Wedding? My core text is educating Rita and I'm using Muriel's Wedding and Bend it Like Beckham.


My essay question:
'Individuals moving into the world are increasingly involved in having to make moral and social choices' To what extent do you agree with this view?

Can you guys give me some tips on how to write it? I've written the introduction so far and it really doesn't sound that good. =\

Weather it's social or moral decisions, the word Change is a crucial step when moving into a new world. This is clearly shown through Willy Russel's play Educating Rita, where Rita's growth and change comes about with her education and experience in her social, working class. Muriel's wedding directed by P.J Hogan 1994 and Bend it like Beckham directed by Gurinder Chadha 2002 also demonstrates this, though through difference backgrounds.
 

pooshwaltzer

New Member
Joined
Jul 18, 2010
Messages
23
Gender
Male
HSC
2002
INTRO

It's often the case that relationships between human persons are always political, and politics is the source of our alienation from each other, our alienation cannot be healed merely by socialising. A moral [apolitical] sociability could give us a healing [non-violent] bridge between selves. Nonethelesshumans are compulsively political down to the details, becoming apolitical would alienate you from others even more than will being moral or rational. For this reason, unless there is a quantum shift in human sociability, the real self will always be a social outsider to some extent.1 Having said that, however, our selfhood is embedded in human society - we owe our existence, language, survival and selfhood, to other selves within community. This integrity of interdependence and mutual obligation needs to be respected if we are going to be realistic about being a self in the world. Such respect is a function of morality.
 

musicxbox

New Member
Joined
Feb 1, 2010
Messages
11
Gender
Female
HSC
2010
INTRO

It's often the case that relationships between human persons are always political, and politics is the source of our alienation from each other, our alienation cannot be healed merely by socialising. A moral [apolitical] sociability could give us a healing [non-violent] bridge between selves. Nonethelesshumans are compulsively political down to the details, becoming apolitical would alienate you from others even more than will being moral or rational. For this reason, unless there is a quantum shift in human sociability, the real self will always be a social outsider to some extent.1 Having said that, however, our selfhood is embedded in human society - we owe our existence, language, survival and selfhood, to other selves within community. This integrity of interdependence and mutual obligation needs to be respected if we are going to be realistic about being a self in the world. Such respect is a function of morality.
I'm not talking about relationships though.
 

pooshwaltzer

New Member
Joined
Jul 18, 2010
Messages
23
Gender
Male
HSC
2002
Humanity and social interaction is ALL about relationships. Otherwise, they'd be no issue of conflict with regards to individual moral and social choices. That is, fledgling personalities must learn to deal with co-existence and accept the reality that civilization is community and thereby NOT person-centric.
 

musicxbox

New Member
Joined
Feb 1, 2010
Messages
11
Gender
Female
HSC
2010
Humanity and social interaction is ALL about relationships. Otherwise, they'd be no issue of conflict with regards to individual moral and social choices. That is, fledgling personalities must learn to deal with co-existence and accept the reality that civilization is community and thereby NOT person-centric.
Ah yeah I guess..
 

musicxbox

New Member
Joined
Feb 1, 2010
Messages
11
Gender
Female
HSC
2010
Can someone help me find analysis for P.J Hogan's Muriel's Wedding? My core text is educating Rita and I'm using Muriel's Wedding and Bend it Like Beckham.

My essay question:
'Individuals moving into the world are increasingly involved in having to make moral and social choices' To what extent do you agree with this view?
I'm having a hard time finding analysis on Muriel's Wedding.
Anyone have good sites that might help?
 

pooshwaltzer

New Member
Joined
Jul 18, 2010
Messages
23
Gender
Male
HSC
2002
Muriel's Wedding" is an aesthetically crude ugly-duckling fantasy that is shrewdly designed as a low-brow audience pleaser. This Miramax acquisition from Australia trades on the perennial appeal of the theme of building self-esteem by showing up the people who have always held you down, and finding yourself in the process. Very good business, at least in English-language territories, looks likely, with young women as the target audience.
In the most obvious terms, first-time writer-director P.J. Hogan establishes poor Muriel (Toni Collette) as, in her own words, "stupid, fat and useless."

Uncouth and tasteless enough to wear a phony leopard-skin dress to a wedding, the overweight 22-year-old high school dropout is savaged by her father (Bill Hunter) for not even being able to type and, therefore, hold a job. She is viciously victimized by her snooty girlfriends, who excommunicate her from their petty little circle for not being cool enough. After a resort vacation where she hooks up with g.f. Rhonda (Rachel Griffiths) to do a lip-synched Abba routine in a club, the young ladies move to Sydney, where Muriel spends much of her time building a fantasy wedding photo album out of shots she gets taken of herself at bridal salons.

In a series of unlikely and bizarre plot developments, Rhonda contracts cancer, which provides the chance for Muriel to care forher and thus build some self-worth; her father becomes embroiled in a financial scandal as well as an extramarital affair, and Muriel fulfills at least the externals of her fantasy by marrying a hunky South African swimmer who needs official status in Australia in order to compete on the Olympic team.

Most of the action is played for broad laughs, and Hogan demonstrates the ability to generate them, even if the humor is very base and often cruel, making fun of people's looks and ineptitude.

Visual style highlights the crassest elements of middle-class Aussie lifestyle, with an emphasis on vulgar color schemes, bad clothes and touristic consumerism.

Broadly drawn, performances in varying measure manage to overcome the often humiliating way their characters are presented.

Made to look pathetic and doltish in many scenes, Collette's Muriel will nonetheless serve as an effective conduit for the emotions of viewers who have ever felt unattractive, unwelcome and outcast, which reps quite a few people indeed.

It is here that the potential mass appeal of the film lies.

Bill Hunter brings his usual flavor to the part of the very sociable but unsupportive father.

Best performance by far comes from screen newcomer Griffiths, who, as Rhonda, generates real feeling and shows impressive range in her swing from wild party girl to embittered invalid.

Sporting an active pace early on, pic sags in the latter stages, as script skips around among diverse, far-fetched plot strands after the wedding.

The 1970s pop group Abba seems to be the flavor of the season in Aussie films , as another Cannes entry, "The Adventures of Priscilla, Queen of the Desert," climaxes with an Abba tune, and this one is papered with the band's music, with "Dancing Queen" as its theme.

In this season of weddings and funerals, this film has both, and should appeal to audiences ready for some simple character identification and easy laughs.
 

musicxbox

New Member
Joined
Feb 1, 2010
Messages
11
Gender
Female
HSC
2010
Muriel's Wedding" is an aesthetically crude ugly-duckling fantasy that is shrewdly designed as a low-brow audience pleaser. This Miramax acquisition from Australia trades on the perennial appeal of the theme of building self-esteem by showing up the people who have always held you down, and finding yourself in the process. Very good business, at least in English-language territories, looks likely, with young women as the target audience.
In the most obvious terms, first-time writer-director P.J. Hogan establishes poor Muriel (Toni Collette) as, in her own words, "stupid, fat and useless."

Uncouth and tasteless enough to wear a phony leopard-skin dress to a wedding, the overweight 22-year-old high school dropout is savaged by her father (Bill Hunter) for not even being able to type and, therefore, hold a job. She is viciously victimized by her snooty girlfriends, who excommunicate her from their petty little circle for not being cool enough. After a resort vacation where she hooks up with g.f. Rhonda (Rachel Griffiths) to do a lip-synched Abba routine in a club, the young ladies move to Sydney, where Muriel spends much of her time building a fantasy wedding photo album out of shots she gets taken of herself at bridal salons.

In a series of unlikely and bizarre plot developments, Rhonda contracts cancer, which provides the chance for Muriel to care forher and thus build some self-worth; her father becomes embroiled in a financial scandal as well as an extramarital affair, and Muriel fulfills at least the externals of her fantasy by marrying a hunky South African swimmer who needs official status in Australia in order to compete on the Olympic team.

Most of the action is played for broad laughs, and Hogan demonstrates the ability to generate them, even if the humor is very base and often cruel, making fun of people's looks and ineptitude.

Visual style highlights the crassest elements of middle-class Aussie lifestyle, with an emphasis on vulgar color schemes, bad clothes and touristic consumerism.

Broadly drawn, performances in varying measure manage to overcome the often humiliating way their characters are presented.

Made to look pathetic and doltish in many scenes, Collette's Muriel will nonetheless serve as an effective conduit for the emotions of viewers who have ever felt unattractive, unwelcome and outcast, which reps quite a few people indeed.

It is here that the potential mass appeal of the film lies.

Bill Hunter brings his usual flavor to the part of the very sociable but unsupportive father.

Best performance by far comes from screen newcomer Griffiths, who, as Rhonda, generates real feeling and shows impressive range in her swing from wild party girl to embittered invalid.

Sporting an active pace early on, pic sags in the latter stages, as script skips around among diverse, far-fetched plot strands after the wedding.

The 1970s pop group Abba seems to be the flavor of the season in Aussie films , as another Cannes entry, "The Adventures of Priscilla, Queen of the Desert," climaxes with an Abba tune, and this one is papered with the band's music, with "Dancing Queen" as its theme.

In this season of weddings and funerals, this film has both, and should appeal to audiences ready for some simple character identification and easy laughs.
Soz, I mean analysis on technique and stuff, like camera angles.
 

Users Who Are Viewing This Thread (Users: 0, Guests: 1)

Top