Flowing bodies, between fairytale and horror - The Shape of Water
These notes are a little old by now. When I watched Guillermo del Toro's highly praised film, I was writing about the concept of the fairy tale body, its grotesque flux as found in the old tales and taken up again by Gaiman and Henson. For carreer reasons, that research is unlikely to continue as such, but here's how I found its tropes in this particular movie. 1. An off voice, announcing a narration, is heard framing the entire film. The fact of using a narrative voice is in itself already a resource commonly used to distance the action from reality, as a subjective an hypermedial narration. The voice in SoW also clearly quotes fairytale tropes: "The reign of the good prince", "a faraway place" and "an endless love" refer both to an dislocation of the action in time and space, which is unspecific but distant from the narrator's current position. (Cfr. Antonsen) It also constructs the narrated space as a compensatory heterotopia (Cfr. Fo...