Figure 7. Temporary communitas is threatened in this visual arrangement, but it is subsequently shattered by social intervention and the restoration of structuring. |
Figure 8. Using the most emotive of language, Shelly’s performance is inexpressive, as a “mannequin”, in its avoidance of explicit expressive signs. |
Figure 9. Jude’s (Martin Donovan) swing on the gate is connotative of a musical performance tradition, although it lacks the obvious performative signs. |
Figure 10. The dance again quotes from a preexisting musical performance tradition and from a repertoire of masculine gestures. |
Figure 11. The dance’s final tableau actualises images from elsewhere in the film, reflecting narrative imagery feeding into the dance sequence. |
Figure 12. Elina’s (Elina Löwensohn) central position in the dance grants her a dominant position that others struggle to follow. |
Figure 13. The appearances of Bill (Robert Burke) and Dennis (Bill Sage) conform to the roles that they intend to project; it is a coherence that they will struggle to maintain. |