2025
Behind The Green Mask
VAŠKŮ, Petr; Petendra EMMA; Burdich PHILLIP and Elise Michelle KÖNIGOVÁBasic information
Original name
Behind The Green Mask
Authors
VAŠKŮ, Petr; Petendra EMMA; Burdich PHILLIP and Elise Michelle KÖNIGOVÁ
Edition
2025
Other information
Type of outcome
Audiovisual works
Confidentiality degree
is not subject to a state or trade secret
References:
Marked to be transferred to RIV
No
Organization unit
Theatre Faculty
Changed: 9/5/2025 14:36, MgA. Petr Vašků
In the original language
Our video essay explores the emotional and symbolic portrayal of characters with green complexions, skin, or masks through a re-editing of iconic films. By weaving together scenes from Shrek, The Grinch, The Mask, The Lord of the Rings, Frankenstein, Hulk, the Wizard of Oz and many others, we examine how the color green—often associated with madness, wickedness, toxicity, death, rot, and disgust—is both reinforced and subverted in popular narratives. Beyond its prejudiced symbolism, green also signifies vitality, transformation, and the unexpected capacity to love. Technically and aesthetically, we were drawn to the textures and shades of green, investigating how different hues and surfaces convey emotion and moral identity in movies spanning over almost a century. We sought to explore how characters initially marked by social prejudice undergo profound changes. From Shrek’s journey from ostracized ogre to unlikely hero, to Hulk’s monstrous rage channelled for good, to the Freudian liberation of the id in The Mask. Our essay reflects on the complex interplay between appearance, emotion, and societal judgment in the popular cinema while utilizing and manifesting the power of film montage. Developed during Theory Into Practice workshop under the guidiance of Bernd Herzogenrath (Uni Frankfurt), Eugenia Brinkema (MIT) and Brian Price (Princeton).
In English
Our video essay explores the emotional and symbolic portrayal of characters with green complexions, skin, or masks through a re-editing of iconic films. By weaving together scenes from Shrek, The Grinch, The Mask, The Lord of the Rings, Frankenstein, Hulk, the Wizard of Oz and many others, we examine how the color green—often associated with madness, wickedness, toxicity, death, rot, and disgust—is both reinforced and subverted in popular narratives. Beyond its prejudiced symbolism, green also signifies vitality, transformation, and the unexpected capacity to love. Technically and aesthetically, we were drawn to the textures and shades of green, investigating how different hues and surfaces convey emotion and moral identity in movies spanning over almost a century. We sought to explore how characters initially marked by social prejudice undergo profound changes. From Shrek’s journey from ostracized ogre to unlikely hero, to Hulk’s monstrous rage channelled for good, to the Freudian liberation of the id in The Mask. Our essay reflects on the complex interplay between appearance, emotion, and societal judgment in the popular cinema while utilizing and manifesting the power of film montage. Developed during Theory Into Practice workshop under the guidiance of Bernd Herzogenrath (Uni Frankfurt), Eugenia Brinkema (MIT) and Brian Price (Princeton).