How
is media language including intertextuality used in burn the witch to construct
representations of groups, message and values?
Burn
the witch is a narrative music video by Radiohead which depicts the horrific experiences
of a man who observes a tyrannical society concealed under the face of an
idealistic British town. The video was released before the EU referendum hence
it focuses on themes of social exclusion during the immigration crisis. The
video uses aspects of media language such as mise en scene and intertextuality
to construct alternative messages and values regarding immigration and social
exclusion.
Mise
en scene is used in Burn the witch constructs messages about the oppression and
the theme of appearance vs reality. The video begins by showing a traditional
rural British village where the townspeople and mayor seem to agree on an
issue. Shots of citizens carrying out daily tasks such as mowing the lawn,
painting the post-box further reinforce the happy and normal village life. The setting implies feelings of warmth and
safety in the town which contradicts the concealed oppression, seen in the
shots which follow. A man is seen marking someone’s front door with a red
cross, eradicating a member, and waving at him at the end , children joyfully play
on a dunking chair traditionally used to punish witches, and a beautifully
decorated pastry is seen from which blood is dripping. All of these shots are
clear examples of oppression in the town, however they appear in a manner which
makes it seem that there is nothing wrong, for example the reality of an animal
being slaughtered is neatly hidden under the sheet of pastry. Burn the Witch’s
use of mise en scene such as setting location, bright lighting give an
important message about the reality of oppression which is often concealed
under the appearance of stability.
A
significant intertextual reference made in Burn the Witch is to the 1973 film
The Wicker man, which shows the journey of Sergeant Howie, an outsider on a
remote island. The reference is clearly
seen in the final shots of the video where the townspeople show the tourist a
wooden effigy, similar to the one shown in the film. This scene is the final act
committed to remove the tourist from the town, hence it is a strong message
about social exclusion. Throughout the video thbe mayor of then town is seen
leading the tourist and showing him the different acts of oppression practiced
in the town. For example, towards the middle of the video a woman is seen tied
to a tree and men in swords cover her, two women joyfully are seen decorating
some wood with flowers which turns out
to be a hanging rope, showing how normal pubic execution is in in town.
However, the tourist not once questions the towns idea of justice and
punishment, and his silence eventually leads to his death, as he is burned in
the effigy. This intertextual reference is perhaps the bands way of spreading
the message of people needing to shed light on injustices.
The
final piece of intertextual reference made in Burn the Witch is to 1960s
animated children’s programmes; Trumpton and Camberwick Green. Both series
depicted idyllist communities, created to teach the young values of social
solidarity. However Burn the witch seems to mock such traditions through the dark
narrative. The video uses similar bright lighting, slow editing and steady
camera work, and even characters such as the mayor to construct the same
peaceful world. However, the acts of cruelty committed and normalised during
the video, for example, children on dunking chairs, the bloody cow pie and the
tourist burned in the effigy criticises the ideal worlds the programmes build.
Perhaps the band uses the village as a metaphor to give the message of hidden
oppression in society, which people often fail to recognize because they are
brainwashed into the idea that they exist in a perfect community.
Overall
it can be said that Radiohead uses three different pieces of media language to
construct messages around the idea of community, hidden oppression and social exclusion.
The band plays with various elements of genre to not only criticise the stereotypes
regarding immigration and exclusion but also build a rather alternative viewpoint.
An excellent essay with a clear and logical structure and you draw on a range of examples to illustrate your argument. You identify contextual influences as well as intertextual references. Very well done. V
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