Monday, May 17, 2010

Final paper

The Psychology of a Serial Killer
and Woody Allen's Work


What is a serial killer? There are many books and films that portray a killer and what they are capable of doing to a human being. For instance, Crime and Punishment, Disturbia, School for Terror, Dead before Dark, Crimes and Misdemeanors and American Psycho. These are films and books that have a killer murdering people. An example would be the Jekyll and Hyde story. Even though these are all fictional works they all have a point in showing the killer’s mind in its subconscious state at work and the evil that they portray by committing these vile acts of murder. There are two types of killers: the organized type and the disorganized type. All of the fictional characters portrayed in books, movies, and shows are based upon the real life serial killers that were through out history and in today’s time as well. Woody Allen has shown great artistic outlook in the way he portrays his characters in his films, like the way he did in Crimes and Misdemeanors.
Some murderers have the characteristics of being egotistic and/or narcissistic. The difference between a serial killer and a killer is that a serial killer is a person who attacks and kills victims one by one in a series of incidents, while a killer is just a person or thing that kills (Sycamnias). In most of the above listed works the characters are considered serial killers for murdering more than one person, with the exception of Raskolnikov who suffered a great deal due to his conscience. In Woody Allen’s film Crime and Misdemeanors, there is a character that ordered someone to kill his mistress because she was being a bother to him. Even though he didn’t kill her directly he is still flooded with the guilt of having someone killed. He even went to the scene of the crime to confirm that there wasn’t anything that would give him away. The rest do not have the sense of right and wrong in what they are doing. The characters in these works all have normal lives with a stable job or getting an education for a career. Their psychopathic nature prevents them from feeling any kind of sympathy towards anyone. They become so involved with themselves that they are confident that they can get away with anything. Serial killers do not show their emotions in the open, instead they hide behind a carefully constructed mask. Patrick Bateman in American Psycho is a perfect example of a carefully constructed mask of normalcy which he uses to cover up all the crimes he commits. For the most part serial killers blend in and have learned how to camouflage themselves through years of practice. They plan and wait for their victim in just the right moment when it should be committed.
The two types of killers have a distinct difference. The organized type is most likely has highly intelligent who have above average IQ of 105-120 range, these highly intelligent killers plan their crimes methodically. The disorganized type has a low intelligence of below average IQ of 80-95 range and they commit their crimes impulsively (Giles). The character Patrick Bateman falls into the highly intelligent, the same as the killer from Dead before Dark and Disturbia. As for the killer from Crime and Punishment and School for Terror, they are also in the high intelligence but are just unrefined and unpracticed so in their first killing would be careless.
Most serial killers do not fit a typical profile. Traditional explanations of why these serial killers are how they are is because of childhood abuse, genetics, chemical imbalances, brain injuries, exposure to traumatic events, and perceived societal injustices. They frequently choose a victim weaker than they are. All of their victims fit a certain pattern which has significant meaning to the killer himself. For example, the serial killer Ted Bundy murdered girls with long brown hair. This was the characteristic of his college fiancée that broke off the engagement; with the killings of all of these girls he was reliving the killing of his fiancée over and over again. Another serial killer named Gacy strangled young men who reminded him of his own inadequacy in which his father saw him with. Like all other predators, they get close to their victims by gaining their trust.
A biological defect in a part of the brain makes some people more prone to violence than others (Sycamnias). In a scientific test showed that the subjects all had antisocial personality disorder (ADP). It had detected physical differences in the front part of the brain above the eyes, the prefrontal cerebral cortex, in violent male offenders compared to other men (Vronsky). There was a popular misconception in the 1960s and 1970s that XYY males were more prone to criminal behavior (XYY syndrome). Examples of this have come up in films and television shows about characters having this syndrome. For instance, in the shows Criminal Minds, Law & Order, and CSI Miami all have episodes were there is a criminal to be known to have the XYY syndrome in their genetic makeup and is the cause of the mass murders found by the law enforcement.
Serial killers tend to share the following general characteristics: the majority are single, white males, they are often intelligent, have trouble holding down jobs, tend to come from unstable families, and typically abandoned by their fathers and raised by domineering mothers as children. Their families often have criminal, psychiatric and alcoholic histories, often abused emotionally, physically and/or sexually by a family member. They also have high rates of suicide attempts, interested in voyeurism, fetishism, and sadomasochistic pornography from early age. Many are fascinated with fire starting, and they are involved in sadistic activity or torturing small animals.
There are four categories of motives for serial killers which are visionary, mission-oriented, hedonistic, and power or control. For the Hedonistic category there are three subcategories, which are lust, thrill, and comfort/profit. Serial murderers tend to target more women than men and kill strangers more often than family or acquaintances. Female serial killers prefer to kill those with whom they are already intimately familiar; rather men tend to go for targeting strangers (Giles). Female serial killers are very rare. They murder men for personal gain, usually emotionally close to their victims, and they need to have a relationship with a person before killing them. On rare occasions, women may be involved with a male serial killer and be part of a killing team. For most female serial killers the preferred method of killing was by poisoning (Sycamnias). There are exceptions like the killer Aileen Wuornos, who killed outdoors with a gun and chose to kill strangers for personal gratification. Another would be Jane Toppan who would administer a drug mixture to patients and would lie in bed with them while they died, holding them close to her body.
Serial killers are featured as stock characters in many types of media. Dexter is a great example of a vigilante serial killer. He is the only character that has shown to have murdered for the greater good of everyone else by murdering bad, evil men. These fictional characters were brought to show what some of the real serial killers have done through out history. For instance, there is Gilles de Rais who was a very wealthy man in Europe in the 15th century, Thug Behram said to be the most prolific serial killer, Burke and Hare were the first to get media attention, Eusebius Pieydagnelle, Jack the Ripper, H.H. Holmes, and Joseph Vacher (R, Elizabeth). These are only some from before 1900 and there a lot more through out the rest of history.
Serial murders occur in six phases. The first phase, the serial killer starts to lose his grip on reality, because of a stressor. The second phase, a serial killer seeks out a victim. The third phase, the serial killer manipulates and lures his victim. The fourth phase, the killer entraps his victim. The fifth phase, the killer tortures and kills his victim. The sixth phase is also referred to as the depression phase, it occurs after the killer kills his victim. This cycle repeats itself until the serial killer is either caught or dies. There are some infamous serial killers like Jack the Ripper and the Zodiac Killer that have never been caught. The United States has a 76 percent of all the serial killers in the world which makes this the country with the most serial killers.
Woody Allen gives everyone of his characters their own personality and charisma. His representation is better seen with the tragedy, romance, humor, and different situations. Even in his most stressful or horrific scenes (if any) there is always the humor to lighten up the bad things and make them seem less bad. He is a great film maker and gets out his view points in every single of his films, whether it is from the past, present, or future. Out of all of the films that I have seen of his, the best one for me would be Sleeper. That film has everything: action, adventure, romance, tragedy, and humor. He would be very successful at making horrific stories into humorous ones if he wanted, make them seem less tragic and horrific than what it really is.

Works Cited
Giles, Jim. “Inside the mind of a killer.” The Independent. 24 March 2000. 22 March 2010.
“XYY syndrome.” November 2005. 22 March 2010.
R., Elizabeth. “Criminal Minds: A Look into the Mind of Infamous Serial Killers.” EduBook. 9 October 2009. 23 March 2010
Sycamnias, E. (2008). Evaluating a Psychological Profile of a Serial Killer. 23 March 2010.
Vronsky, P. (2004). Serial Killers: The Method and Madness of Monsters. New York: Penguin Group

Monday, April 26, 2010

Weekly Reflection

Fahrenheit 451

Liberalism
Intellect -other
"self"

"normal"
Hedonism + media+liberalism

pleasure connector freedom rights
without
consequences

-perform
conform with the interation of the screen.

Mundane life style keeps Linda content but not happy.
Media makes us the subjects, tapped into a subject position.

Book, the discourse of power. Emphasis on ideas, free thinking. The things that emerge offended by a book, get rid of it. In order to equalize everyone, get rid of things that upset them.


Film Sleeper Woody Allen
Radical, secondary contradiction, racism, sexism, and hedanistic lifestyle. Charity enables capitalist relationship to continue.
The pleasure is too much that the people aren't able to handle certain situations. There is great rigidity to art. It is driving away history and bringing forth computers. The people lack the means to communicate, they wont be able to see and have the meaning of things. The history and symbols in the film, have lost all meaning. There is an aetheistic position.

Wednesday, April 21, 2010

Weekly Reflection


Cyborg Manifesto
Technology, politics.
Cartesian logic of "I think therefore I am".
I exist, I am. Fighting for an existence.
If you don't think you don't exist. It is opinion vs. fact.
The enlightenment in the 18th century was a shift away from religion.
Empiricism is true through observation not faith based knowledge. Religion is faith based with no solid facts. Why would it be so important? Who or what is served by the "I"? Partiality, Utopian, and without innocence. The "I" is closed off... Individualism, separation.
Cyborg is post gender, pre-odipal symbiosis. Machine/human, committed to partiality. Adam and Eve are the original sin story told throughout history. There will always be the question of what it means to be fact.

Three Boundaries it Transcends
Ideology behind:
animal-human / Machine ex. artificial insemination
human / animal ex. compatibility of organs
physical / non-physical ex. reproductions/sequels
-The critique of enlightenment

When the future is already set, any changes that may occur is looked down by others.
Woody Allen's Sleeper, reproductions of self that represents one another.

Thursday, April 15, 2010

Weekly Reflection

4/12-14/10

The film Three Sisters shows the wealthy joking around having lunch and having friends over. They make jokes at the expense of another, in this case the girlfriend of Andre, the brother of the three sisters. That family of wealthy people just wants to dream about work but never actually have to do it. They feel that working would be a good pass time for them since they have never had to work in their lives for the money that they have.

Woody Allen’s film Hannah and Her Sisters has some form of connection to the Three Sisters. His representation of his character in the film is of a dramatic about his health that is always jumping to conclusions. He always imagines that he has some kind of illness just because he has some of the symptoms of the illness. When he had headaches he immediately assumed that he had something to worry about, so he went to get a check up and there were some abnormalities with his test results. He then assumed that he had cancer due to the attitude of the doctor in getting him to take more tests to be sure it wasn’t something serious to worry about. He even had bad dreams due to worrying so much that he was going to die from cancer, turns jumpy and depressed. When he is waiting for the final results of his tests he starts imagining that the doctor comes in and tells him that he does have cancer and he is doing to die, when in fact the doctor comes in to tell him that he is in perfect health. This character just jumps to conclusions and imagines the worst of everything in his life. He had once been married to Hannah.

Monday, April 12, 2010

Three Sisters









In the 1970 film Three Sisters, Olga, Masha, and Irina Prozoroff lead lonely and purposeless lives following the death of their father who has commanded the local army post. They dream daily of their return to their former home in Moscow, where life is charming and stimulating, meaningful. But for now they exist in a malaise of dissatisfaction. Soldiers from the local military post provide them some companionship and society, but nothing can suffice to replace Moscow in their hopes. In trying to find purpose and happiness in their lives, Olga attempts to find satisfaction in teaching but secretly longs for a home and family. Masha, unhappy with her marriage to a timid schoolmaster, falls hopelessly in love with a married colonel. Irina works in the local telegraph office but longs for gaiety. Their sense of futility is increased by their brother's marriage to Natasha, a coarse peasant girl. She gradually encroaches on the family home until even the private refuge of the sisters is destroyed. They dream of starting a new life in Moscow but are saddled with the practicalities of their quiet existence. Despite their past failures, they resolve to seek some purpose and hope when the army post is withdrawn from the town.

Midterm

The Psychological Understanding of a Serial Killer


What is a serial killer? There are many books and films that portray a killer and what they are capable of doing to a human being. For instance, Crime and Punishment, Disturbia, School for Terror, Dead before Dark, Crimes and Misdemeanors and American Psycho. These are films and books that have a killer murdering people. An example would be the Jekyll and Hyde story. Even though these are all fictional works they all have a point in showing the killer’s mind in its subconscious state at work and the evil that they portray by committing these vile acts of murder. There are two types of killers: the organized type and the disorganized type. All of the fictional characters portrayed in books, movies, and shows are based upon the real life serial killers that were through out history and in today’s time as well. Woody Allen would be great at portraying serial killers or would have been one due to his psychological problems and all the tragedy his life suffered.
Some murderers have the characteristics of being egotistic and/or narcissistic. The difference between a serial killer and a killer is that a serial killer is a person who attacks and kills victims one by one in a series of incidents, while a killer is just a person or thing that kills (Sycamnias). In most of the above listed works the characters are considered serial killers for murdering more than one person, with the exception of Raskolnikov who suffered a great deal due to his conscience. The rest do not have the sense of right and wrong in what they are doing. The characters in these works all have normal lives with a stable job or getting an education for a career. Their psychopathic nature prevents them from feeling any kind of sympathy towards anyone. They become so involved with themselves that they are confident that they can get away with anything. Serial killers do not show their emotions in the open, instead they hide behind a carefully constructed mask. Patrick Bateman in American Psycho is a perfect example of a carefully constructed mask of normalcy which he uses to cover up all the crimes he commits. For the most part serial killers blend in and have learned how to camouflage themselves through years of practice. They plan and wait for their victim in just the right moment when it should be committed.
The two types of killers have a distinct difference. The organized type is most likely has highly intelligent who have above average IQ of 105-120 range, these highly intelligent killers plan their crimes methodically. The disorganized type has a low intelligence of below average IQ of 80-95 range and they commit their crimes impulsively (Giles). The character Patrick Bateman falls into the highly intelligent, the same as the killer from Dead before Dark and Disturbia. As for the killer from Crime and Punishment and School for Terror, they are also in the high intelligence but are just unrefined and unpracticed so in their first killing would be careless.
Most serial killers do not fit a typical profile. Traditional explanations of why these serial killers are how they are is because of childhood abuse, genetics, chemical imbalances, brain injuries, exposure to traumatic events, and perceived societal injustices. They frequently choose a victim weaker than they are. All of their victims fit a certain pattern which has significant meaning to the killer himself. For example, the serial killer Ted Bundy murdered girls with long brown hair. This was the characteristic of his college fiancée that broke off the engagement; with the killings of all of these girls he was reliving the killing of his fiancée over and over again. Woody Allen could have become a killer if he had some sort of brain defect and immense psychological problems in his life, he had all the problems and motivations to have committed murders and smart enough to commit them. Another serial killer named Gacy strangled young men who reminded him of his own inadequacy in which his father saw him with. Like all other predators, they get close to their victims by gaining their trust.
A biological defect in a part of the brain makes some people more prone to violence than others (Sycamnias). In a scientific test showed that the subjects all had antisocial personality disorder (ADP). It had detected physical differences in the front part of the brain above the eyes, the prefrontal cerebral cortex, in violent male offenders compared to other men (Vronsky). There was a popular misconception in the 1960s and 1970s that XYY males were more prone to criminal behavior (XYY syndrome). Examples of this have come up in films and television shows about characters having this syndrome. For instance, in the shows Criminal Minds, Law & Order, and CSI Miami all have episodes were there is a criminal to be known to have the XYY syndrome in their genetic makeup and is the cause of the mass murders found by the law enforcement.
Serial killers tend to share the following general characteristics: the majority are single, white males, they are often intelligent, have trouble holding down jobs, tend to come from unstable families, and typically abandoned by their fathers and raised by domineering mothers as children. Their families often have criminal, psychiatric and alcoholic histories, often abused emotionally, physically and/or sexually by a family member. They also have high rates of suicide attempts, interested in voyeurism, fetishism, and sadomasochistic pornography from early age. Many are fascinated with fire starting, and they are involved in sadistic activity or torturing small animals.
There are four categories of motives for serial killers which are visionary, mission-oriented, hedonistic, and power or control. For the Hedonistic category there are three subcategories, which are lust, thrill, and comfort/profit. Serial murderers tend to target more women than men and kill strangers more often than family or acquaintances. Female serial killers prefer to kill those with whom they are already intimately familiar; rather men tend to go for targeting strangers (Giles). Female serial killers are very rare. They murder men for personal gain, usually emotionally close to their victims, and they need to have a relationship with a person before killing them. On rare occasions, women may be involved with a male serial killer and be part of a killing team. For most female serial killers the preferred method of killing was by poisoning (Sycamnias). There are exceptions like the killer Aileen Wuornos, who killed outdoors with a gun and chose to kill strangers for personal gratification. Another would be Jane Toppan who would administer a drug mixture to patients and would lie in bed with them while they died, holding them close to her body.
Serial killers are featured as stock characters in many types of media. Dexter is a great example of a vigilante serial killer. He is the only character that has shown to have murdered for the greater good of everyone else by murdering bad, evil men. These fictional characters were brought to show what some of the real serial killers have done through out history. For instance, there is Gilles de Rais who was a very wealthy man in Europe in the 15th century, Thug Behram said to be the most prolific serial killer, Burke and Hare were the first to get media attention, Eusebius Pieydagnelle, Jack the Ripper, H.H. Holmes, and Joseph Vacher (R, Elizabeth). These are only some from before 1900 and there a lot more through out the rest of history.
Serial murders occur in six phases. The first phase, the serial killer starts to lose his grip on reality, because of a stressor. The second phase, a serial killer seeks out a victim. The third phase, the serial killer manipulates and lures his victim. The fourth phase, the killer entraps his victim. The fifth phase, the killer tortures and kills his victim. The sixth phase is also referred to as the depression phase, it occurs after the killer kills his victim. This cycle repeats itself until the serial killer is either caught or dies. There are some infamous serial killers like Jack the Ripper and the Zodiac Killer that have never been caught. The United States has a 76 percent of all the serial killers in the world which makes this the country with the most serial killers.

Thursday, March 11, 2010

Weekly Reflection


3/8- 10/10

Modernism is an extension of enlightenment. The painting of “The Scream” (1894) gives off the realization that there is nothing, no point in living. The representation of the painting is of being alone and modernist alienation. Dickens once said that only facts matter for scientific progress. There is no point in things if everything is facts in the world. Post modernism is just an extent of modernism. There is a defense mechanism that is constantly at odds that there is something bigger out there.

Amory, from This Side of Paradise, is trying to find himself and what he is there for. His identity and nationalism, no matter what it is he is always trying to find his self through out the whole book. At the end I believe that he still has not found who he really is, what he wants to be, or what he actually wants to do in life. He goes through a lot that he thinks that he knows who he is even if no one else does.

Thursday, March 4, 2010

Weekly Reflection

3/1/10

Citizens monitor and maintain each other is panoptic. The control is now horizontal and not vertical where every citizen has the power to report a neighbor for any bad conduct. Everyone is watching each other instead of talking and coinciding with each other. There is a difference in being cast away and being quarantined by a community.

In Allen’s film Manhattan, the characters are being shaped by the city itself not the characters shaping Manhattan. The geography of New York City is a really fast pace version on L.A. Allen’s character is not able to leave New York City, he shows that it is part of him that he can’t leave behind to go live somewhere else. He barely made it out to go after the woman he loved.

Thursday, February 25, 2010

Weekly Reflection

2/24/10

In Crime and Punishment there is a representation of a modern man with the lack of faith in others. Social Darwinism better suited for the environment. Rational egoists are into their own self interest. Raskolnikov cannot get away from his guilt of killing someone even if he is a rationally smart person.
Raskolnikov vs. Patrick Bateman
(C & P) (American Psycho)
Egotistic Narcissistic

Raskolnikov is egotistic.
Egotistic: thinking better of oneself, everyone is inferior.
Think that everyone is there to serve them.
Takes place in 1866 Russia.
Thinking rationally, doing bad things to make a better world.
Thinks he has the right to take a life because of being better or smarter.

Patrick Bateman is narcissistic.
Power (control).
Not a complete person when you buy, purchase, or own things that makes someone successful.
It takes place in 1980’s Manhattan N.Y.

Wednesday, February 17, 2010

Weekly Reflection


2/15/10

Art in Woody Allen films are self reflexive. In Annie Hall, it calls attention to romance, genre, sex comedy, and modern.
1. romance, sex
2. genre romance, sex comedy
3. modern more reliable

The more realistic painting will draw the natural (positive) response to the painting. It is realistic but not realistic in its reflexivity. It is through the representation of the real makes you pay attention.
Greenberg emphasized formalism. Cause v. effect. In formalism, what matters is the text itself. The Picasso work forces one to think with his strange and abstract paintings. Reppin paints the effect and puts everything out there for you in the painting. Rosenberg is an action painter; the action in a painting is what’s considered art. Originality is the spontaneous action. It is said that the critic is as important as the art. Benjamin said that art is reproducible in mass production. Adorno said that art has an aura and that aura of the painting is lost in the mass production.
Annie Hall is a modern romance that shows art and the aura of a painting in the museum when Allen’s character approaches a girl observing a painting. When he asks her what she thinks of the painting she says a long response of what she feels when looking at the painting which leaves Allen’s character confused and scared of the girl he thought looked good looking and normal.

Thursday, February 11, 2010

Weekly Reflection

2/10/10

Adorno said that the aura of art can be tainted by mass production. It provides liberation for the mass reproduction. The aura has already been given to you by representation by others or the representation by the museum. Mass thinking is the source of knowledge.

Benjamin thought that the emotion, perception that took to create the art.
In principal a work of art has always been reproducible. Man-made artifacts could always be imitated by men. Replicas were made by pupils in practice of their craft, by masters for diffusing their works, and by third parties in the pursuit of gain. The mechanical reproduction of a work of art represents something new. The Greeks, for instance, only knew two procedures; founding and stamping.

Even though the aura of art can be tainted by mass production, it is still done none the less. I believe that there is a certain feeling that each art form tries to convey for the observer by the art maker. Some people are very observant and are able to see what the artist was trying to express. Art can make people feel all kinds of different feelings and emotions; it can also make you think far beyond what you might normally think. Since early on in history art has been an important part of history. For instance, the Egyptians wrote down their historic events in the inside of their pyramid walls and they did that with drawings. All kinds of art forms are important all over the world.

Wednesday, February 10, 2010

The Greatest Comedic Film: Get Smart

In my search for a comedic film, I found that the movie Get Smart is one of the best that I have seen. It has everything that a funny movie should have like physical comedy and jokes. The character Maxwell Smart makes everything seem funny, even in the most dangerous of situations. There are so many things that this movie has that just makes people laugh the whole way through. I don’t believe that it has anything in common with the text that we have read besides Freud, Perelman and maybe Roth. The way jokes are made up and the way they are said.
In the film Maxwell Smart wants to be a spy for CONTROL to fight the forces of evil, who is KAOS. With that he wants to save the nation and its people. This is kind of what Alex from “Portnoy’s Complain” tries to do in helping people with his job, even if the circumstances are different in the story line. Max’s dreams come true when CONTROL headquarters is attacked by its arch-enemy, the terrorist organization KAOS, which is lead by a man named Siegfried, in retaliation for CONTROL’S infiltration of KAOS. In that dangerous situation there was confusion going around and because of it Max hit the Chief of control which was one of the things caused by him being clumsy, just like Charlie Chaplin did in his work with physical comedy.
There were situations in the movie where names were mistaken and said in a funny way. For instance, when the main agents of CONTROL were in the safe room having a meeting after the CONTROL headquarters was attacked, there was a joke made from the name of one KAOS agent named Kristik. It was the same in Perelman’s story of “Why a Duck?” were Chico mistakes viaduct with why a duck. There is a lot of play on words in this movie. Like when Agent 99 and Max are on the plane to Moscow, Max gets into trouble and gets handcuffed by a police officer on the plane when he needed to go to the bathroom he said to the officer something like I have to squeeze the lemon. That is a clear view of play on words. Also, there is the scene where Max infiltrates Siegfried's bomb factory pretending to be one of them. Siegfried says, "How do I know you're not CONTROL?" Max responds, "If I were CONTROL, you'd already be dead." "If you were CONTROL, you'd already be dead," says Siegfried. Max says, "Neither of us is dead, so I am abviously not from CONTROL." Shtarker says, "That actually makes sense."
In Freud’s Jokes and Their Relation to the Unconscious it says that when jokes are made with three people there are usually two that gang up on the third. There is a situation in the movie where two other agents who think are the best gang up on Max to make jokes out of his expense, jokes that he can’t really make a comeback from without the help of his friend Agent 23 who is always looking out for him. Max has two sayings that are always funny they are would you believe… and missed it by that much. Those are always funny with the action that he was trying to do. For instance, when Max and Agent 99 swing towards the window of the next building they hit the wall and Max says, "Missed it by that much!" Also, when he is keeping a look out for Agent 99, the bead curtain on the door way ends up falling with the beads scattering every where. When Agent 99 says, "Did I hear something?" Max says, "Yes, there were some tap dancers in the hallway."
In conclusion, I believe that this movie is one of the best and it’s actually funny with all the action and dialogue. Max’s sayings are always funny and so are the ways he is clumsy that makes things seem funny in the most dangerous situations. Also the play on words in the movie plays a big part with the action to make it funny. There are certain things in the movie that can be compared with Freud, Roth, and Perelman.

Thursday, January 28, 2010

Weekly Reflection

1/25-27/10

Comedy is doing the Freudian theory. There are more to jokes than people think. There are Dream-works and joke-works. Dreams, the state of the unconsciousness.
There is a difference between women and men when hearing a joke, it is more likely for the woman to be offended by an obscene joke. The woman is the target and the man is the exivitor in a joke.
Freud 101...
There is the Ego, ID, and the Superego. From the ego comes the id, which is the animal of a person, then the superego comes forth which controls the animal instinct.

In the Oedipus complex, the son falls in love with the mother and starts to dislike the father. In early childhood the boy has a better relationship with the mother and relates to her far better than with the father. The relationship of the mother and son is a diatomic relationship. There is a certain kind of love triangle between the father, mother, and son. Those feeling from the son comes from the unconscious, then it forms into repression, and desire. So then they represent themselves through society.
Desire can then manifest itself in aggression. For example, the little boy who is trying to get the attention of the little girl will only show aggression because he thinks that it is the only way to get her attention.

Wednesday, January 20, 2010

Woody Allen

This site is devoted to Woody Allen and the works that figure into Allen's major works.