National Repository of Grey Literature 3 records found  Search took 0.02 seconds. 
Street Gore Food
Ponomarevová, Daniela ; Zálešák, Jan (referee) ; Mikyta, Svätopluk (advisor)
The thesis Street Gore Food thematizes the banal motif of the excavation inside a common local road, represented by a sidewalk, and themes of fast food culture. The project is set within a conceptual and visual framework inspired by fairground attractions such as the Haunted House or Ghost Train, the trashy premises of B-movie and C-movie horror films. The work thus combines the scary and absurd elements of genre structures, grotesque entertainment and the cheap commercialism of popular culture. Its main subject is the implicit mediation of a street scene: a pedestrian walks on the stone surface of a road while eating a baguette he bought at a fast food kiosk. During his routine walk, when he is bound to mindlessly consume his lunch, he is stopped by a fall into a strange trench. This takes the form of a grotesque digestive system made from the likeness of kitchen equipment used to grind up food, or a bizarre menu having the character of a tasty menu from popular fast food chains. Street Gore Food is thus a stylized 3D model section of a sidewalk created using recycled-found cardboard material and drawing techniques.
The first gore scenes in the American mainstream cinema
Šrajer, Martin ; Čeněk, David (advisor) ; Přádná, Stanislava (referee)
The Bachelor's Thesis The First Gore Scenes in the American Mainstream Cinema analyses the cinematography of the USA in the sixties through the topic of film violence. Its primary concern are explicitly violent scenes classified as "gore". Their emergence was connected with deeper social and industrial context, shaped since the end of the Second World War. The goal of the work is to describe factors which were crucial for the shift to a more graphical depiction of film violence and to present how these factors influenced Bonnie and Clyde and The Wild Bunch, two movies chosen for case studies.
The first gore scenes in the American mainstream cinema
Šrajer, Martin ; Čeněk, David (advisor) ; Přádná, Stanislava (referee)
The Bachelor's Thesis The First Gore Scenes in the American Mainstream Cinema analyses the cinematography of the USA in the sixties through the topic of film violence. Its primary concern are explicitly violent scenes classified as "gore". Their emergence was connected with deeper social and industrial context, shaped since the end of the Second World War. The goal of the work is to describe factors which were crucial for the shift to a more graphical depiction of film violence and to present how these factors influenced Bonnie and Clyde and The Wild Bunch, two movies chosen for case studies.

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