

Many of my films involve humour, but unlike the earlier work Shepherdâs Delight attempts to confront the problem of humour head-on, referring directly (since a large part of the film is composed of jokes and their analysis) to the viewerâs perception of the film itself. The film is largely concerned with how context determines the reading of information. Since the filmâs statements oscillate between the deadly serious (concentrating particularly on an examination of the more sinister aspects of humour) and the totally bogus, with no clearly defined points of changeover, the context is often ambiguous. Hopefully, this strategy undermines both the authority of the âseriousâ statements and any predictable effect of the âjokesâ. John Smith, 1984
Language
English
Country
United Kingdom