Film Theory
Film theory encompasses the scholarly frameworks used to understand, analyse, and interpret cinema. From formalism to psychoanalysis to cultural studies, it asks not just what films mean but how they produce meaning.
Embodied Spectatorship
Watching a film is not a purely intellectual experience. Your body responds to what is on screen in ways that run ahead of conscious interpretation — flinching, holding your breath, feeling something in your chest during a close-up that reading a description of the same moment would not produce. Embodied spectatorship is the theoretical framework that accounts for this, and for why the same film means something different to different viewers.
conceptThe Punctum
Roland Barthes' concept of the punctum describes the detail in an image that pierces a specific viewer in a way that cannot be explained by the image's general content. It is personal, involuntary, and non-transferable — and it has profound implications for how we think about why films affect different people in different ways.
conceptRedemptive Fatherhood
A critical framework describing a specific cycle of 1990s Hollywood films in which a father who has failed or been absent performs an extraordinary act of devotion — and is restored to his family through that devotion. Understanding the pattern reveals something about what these films assume fatherhood is, what men must do to prove it, and whose perspective the camera consistently takes.