2. Gender
• One of the main social groups we
represent is gender and it challenges the
gender stereotypes of woman
• Our main character challenges the
stereotypes of woman
• goes against her family and tradition as
well as taking her life matters in her own
hands
3. Supported by…
• way she acts around the
policeman (a figure of authority),
• we see this in the close ups of her
facial expressions being smiley
and teasing him in a flirtatious
manner
• diegetic sounds of speaking in the
script when she sarcastically says
"you're good at your job".
4. • 16-30 year olds
• both genders
• ages limit up to 16 because it is for mature
audiences to understand the deep internal
struggle of the psychology behind the main
characters mind
• both genders because there are many
leading male characters the main character
is a female and the film does contain some
"girl power" qualities as well as "alpha male"
qualities
5. • Colombina
• young woman, after witnessing her
parents' murder as a child in Bogota,
grows up to be a stone-cold assassin
• consider their marketing techniques
because their film contains many
elements that Caleidoscopio has.
6. • mise en scene
• interrogation room: walls have
chipped paint on them, the table
looks battered.
• editing: in the first shot, camera at a
security camera angle, black and
white effect, added noise to make it
look worse quality.
• creates a feeling of low funding and
suggests the people that work in the
police station are of a lower class
7. • girl is high class
• mise en scene of the
costume she is wearing
• wearing a fur vest
• suggests she has the money
to spend on expensive
clothes.
8. • many different social classes targeted as
our audience
• large range of characters that different
social classes can relate to
• beneficial because it means we could get
more sales in the box office seeing as we
are targeting more then one group in
society due to the fact that our thriller
represents most people in England.