Friday, 17 September 2010

Similar texts - Main Task - Guilda


Textual analysis: Gilda


Set design & location
Costumes – sensuality, male weakness, female sexuality/empowerment?
Cinematography & editing



Charles Vidor’s 1946 black and white film Gilda, starring Rita Hayworth, is a glamorous, high-octane film noir set in an Argentinean casino. The film is significant in its genre for the more polished and “Hollywood” aspect it possesses for a noir film, although many of the themes and codes it includes are the same. The opening credits and sweeping score are cinematic and powerful, with “Gilda” appearing across the entirety of the screen in huge letters, precluding the iconic and powerful nature of the starring character and the powerful orchestral music demonstrating the forthcoming dramatic elements of the film. Gilda is recounted as a flashback from an external narrative voice, Johnny Farrell, also the male protagonist in the plot, an implicit feature of noir. The serious, grave voice with which Johnny tells the audience the story lends the film a sense of introspection and melodrama, setting the dark tone for the film while establishing a clear relationship between his character and the audience.


Rita Hayworth, the Hollywood actress playing the starring role as the eponymous Gilda. 

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