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Created by
Sadie Harvey
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Cards (24)
What emotional connection do spectators feel towards Chris in the film "Get Out"?
Intense
empathy
and emotional connection
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How is Missy portrayed in relation to Chris?
As
a villain who controls
Chris
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What does the
teacup
symbolize in the film?
Old southern values and systemic power
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How does the film encourage
spectators
to confront their
biases?
By presenting situations that evoke
double
consciousness
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What happens to Chris when he falls in the film?
He feels
trapped
and loses
control
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How does Chris experience life in the Sunken Place?
As a
passive
spectator of his own life
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What does the
hypodermic
needle
theory suggest about the film's impact on spectators?
It encourages
sympathy
for Chris
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What does the motif of Chris gripping the chair represent?
Resistance against the family's
hypnosis
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What does the cinematography reveal about Missy's power over Chris?
It places Missy in a
position
of dominance
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How does Missy's gaze affect the viewer's experience?
It creates uncomfortable
confrontation
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How does the editing enhance the emotional tension in the film?
By
cutting
between Chris crying and the teacup
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What does the sound design contribute to Chris's trauma?
It creates a link to his
flashback
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How does the film's opening sequence subvert stereotypes?
By placing a
black man
at risk in a
white area
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What does the
wide
shot
of suburbia establish in the film's opening?
A sense of place and social environment
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How does the cinematography create unease in the opening sequence?
By
tracking
the character and revealing danger
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What role does sound play in establishing tension in the opening sequence?
It highlights
Andre's
feelings of being out of place
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How does the film depict the violence in the suburban neighborhood?
As
unnoticed
and
hidden
in society
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What does the closing shot of the opening sequence convey?
It forces
spectators
to witness the
abduction
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How does the film's use of genre conventions affect audience perception?
It leads to
unnoticed
race issues
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How does the film's editing style affect the viewer's experience of Chris's trauma?
It creates
disorientation
and shock
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What does the term "
double
consciousness"
refer to in the context of the film?
The awareness of one's identity in a biased society
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What does the non-diegetic sound of rain signify during Chris's trauma?
A link to his emotional
flashback
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What are the key themes explored in "Get Out"?
Racial identity
and
systemic racism
Spectatorship
and empathy
Power dynamics
and control
The experience of being
'the
other'
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How does "Get Out" utilize horror conventions to address race issues?
Subverts
stereotypes
Creates tension through
suspense
Engages audience in
racial dynamics
Highlights the
brutality of racism
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