PULP – COMMON PEOPLE
The music video
begins with a black screen opening up to a group of people still then dancing,
this takes away elements of realism from the video as the audience sees doll
like people then moving as the screen is fully open. The singer and creator of the video, Jarvis
Cocker comes walking down though an aisle between the people dancing, there is
then a close up on his face and him doing dance moves as he sings
‘She’ comes down and lip-syncs
her words to the music, there is then a close up of her mouthing the words
about what she wants to do. Having her
close up creates a relationship between the viewer and her as she’s basically
the only thing they can see, so all focus is on her.
As the song goes on
about going to a supermarket, there is a shot of them there, cocker in a
shopping trolley representing a prison like façade with her laughing above him.
Behind them are boxes with the band name, ‘PULP’ written on them and people
shopping, stealing, waiting or doing their job. Cocker being in the shopping
trolley makes him seem trapped, another interpretation is him being seen as
childlike
The scene then
changes to cocker in a street in front of houses with people in and in front
of. Not only are the clips of people reused and come up several times, but
multiple clips of Cocker are also presented as the camera pans along the set
When there’s no
singing in the song we cut to the dance floor where people start leaving, then
a fight starts. Cocker and several other people then dance together
simultaneously. It then goes back to the supermarket where ‘she’ is above him
laughing and the man in the background is stealing a box of PULP’. The video
then closes alike to how it starts, people stop dancing and the screen closes
to blackness.
MEDIA REPRESENTATION
AND AUDIENCE: It tells a story of an interaction between Jarvis Cocker (singer)
and another student at Central Saint Martins and her middle-class view on life
compared to his. This and how patronising she seemed is represented through how
he’s seen being pushed around in a shopping cart by her, as well as the
repeated use of people outside flats and in the shops representing the real
world she’s saying she wants to be exposed to.
This music video is
representing the working class, broke students and Pulp’s audience. It shows people
stealing, in love and fighting. The audience are Pulp fans, most commonly teens
from the mid-nineties and onwards
MEDIA LANGUAGE: a
supermarket signifies normal, basic needs, food, and a usual and casual area. Houses signify usual, everyday places, shelter, home, living
area. A
club esq place signifies fun, music, dancing, drinking, and night out. A band on stage signifies excitement, fun, and something to look forward
to, yet this is contrasted when people begin to leave while the song is still
going on. Repeated
use of clips of the same people – makes them and where
they are seem repetitive and dull, normal actions, sometimes relatable. It
signifies everyday life. NEST SLIDE
CONTEXT: There
is a mention of cms in the song, an art university in London. This relates to
their audience and style
The video and song
portray the differences between expectations ‘she’ had and the reality as well
as class differences and tension created due to it
Band name used
throughout – the band’s name, Pulp, is shown throughout the
supermarket scenes as brand names on things such a cereal boxes. This makes
them seem like products and usual everyday items
Great analysis. How could you incorporate visuals now to really strengthen this? Ms Cope
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