Fourth Wall Breaks, Gaze, and the Feminine J’Accuse
Published by Reblogs - Credits in Posts,
By Meg Shields · Published on March 22nd, 2023
Welcome to The Queue — your daily distraction of curated video content sourced from across the web. Today, we’re watching a video essay that explores the relationship between the gendered cinematic gaze and the rise of fourth-wall-breaking narrators.
A character addressing the audience directly is nothing new. On the stage, actors have been winking at the audience since (at least) ancient Greece, where the chorus would often occupy a privileged position in theatrical limbo, aware of both the audience and the unfolding story.
While the term metafiction was coined in 1970, characters being aware of their status as a subject being watched is nothing new. The same cannot be said of cinema, which is, relatively speaking, the new kid on the block.
Even so, examples of fourth wall breaking in movies go back at least as far as the early 20th Century. In 1918’s Men Who Have Made Love to Me (which is presently lost), Mary MacLane addresses the audience directly, staring straight down the barrel of the camera and enumerating her multiple love affairs.
Tempting as it may be to dismiss fourth wall breaks as "crass" or "unserious" (Enlightenment-era thinker Denis Diderot would be right there alongside you), the reality is that winking nods to the camera are actually fertile ground for feminist and psychoanalytic film theory. Jacques Lacan and Bell Hooks have entered the chat.
The essay below does a stellar job of untangling all the theoretical threads beneath the feminine fourth wall-breaking gaze. Enjoy, and don’t forget to look straight down the lens.
Watch "Fourth Wall Breaks & Gaze"
Who made this?
This video essay on how the female gaze is relevant to fourth wall breaks is by wit and folly, a.k.a. Ty, an American creator who focuses on mythical storytelling and feminine gaze media. Her work does a noble job of paying academic and critical care to media that might be otherwise dismissed. You can follow her on Twitter here. And you can subscribe to her on YouTube here.
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Meg Shields is the humble farm boy of your dreams and a senior contributor at Film School Rejects. She currently runs three columns at FSR: The Queue, How'd They Do That?, and Horrorscope. She is also a curator for One Perfect Shot and a freelance writer for hire. Meg can be found screaming about John Boorman's 'Excalibur' on Twitter here: @TheWorstNun. (She/Her).