Spectatorship

Spectatorship 


Spectatorship is an important concept in film theory. It is an active response from someone when viewing a film, the spectators tend to engage in the film and then begin to form a response whereas an audience member would just say the film was good or bad this would be without forming a response or engaging. 


The factors that affect how spectators respond to the films they see, are things like who they see the film with whether that be friends or family or even on their own and where they see the film whether it be in a cinema or at home they will react different because the cinema is not a personal viewing whereas at home is. Peoples ethnicity, gender, political and social believes cultural believes age Spectators will be affected differently by a film also based on what they have experienced throughout their lives because for example if they watch a film which has a mother die and they have experienced their mother or a close family member die then they may feel more affected by it. 


In Captain Fantastic the opening scene may be very controversial because spectators who are vegans and people who believe animals have rights would completely disagree with this scene when it a very tribal and right of passage for Bo to become a man. Some other spectators may believe that they is the circle of life people and animals are born and then they die which will seem shocking that this is the opening scene. This scene is shocking no matter what you views are the fact it is the opening scene and then they are playing in the stream playing with each other and splashing each other which makes the killing seem more brutal. 



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