Term
|
Definition
(SKAL // FRANKENSTEIN) -shift in public mood in 1931 (depression) --> "end of all earthly possibilities" -gangster films became popular with public -monsters = gangsters of human psyche -surrealism --> monsters = blurring lines between human and animal -"dracula", "frankenstein", "dr jekyll & mr hyde", "freaks" |
|
|
Term
The Hollywood Studio System: 1930-1949 |
|
Definition
(SCHATZ // FRANKESTEIN) -goal of hollywood --> make money (oligopoly: controlled production, distribution, and exhibition) -big 5: warner, mgm, paramount, 20th century fox, rko -little 3: universal, columbia, united artists -studios made hella money from exhibition (theaters) -1920s era: presentation cinema (1/3 live performance 2/3 film) -great depression goal --> attract audiences for money -people broke during depression -1938: FDR filed anti-trust suit against studios --> 1948: paramount antitrust act (broke oligopoly) |
|
|
Term
Bullets, Beers, and the Hays Office: Public Enemy |
|
Definition
(JOWETT // PUBLIC ENEMY) -people don't care about glamour anymore -"little caesar", "scarface", "public enemy" --> classic gangster films -1930s, studios bought up a bunch of theaters only to be screwed because no one can go to movies anymore -depression effect on hollywood = catharthis -archetypical american man became the fast-talking temperamental lower-class immigrant man -people related with the gangster because he rejected americanism (the very thing that caused depression and failed the people) -synch sound (gunfires, yelling, snappy dialogue) -upper-class vying for domination and power over lower class (and lower class gangster protagonist is praised) -1922: Hays pushes for production code -no one goes to movies --> HW uses sex/violence --> PCA |
|
|
Term
The Gangster as Tragic Hero |
|
Definition
(CAWELTI // PUBLIC ENEMY) -tragedy is norm during depression -people relate to gangster's experience (not crime) -we live vicariously through the gangster and get satisfaction from seeing him fail -gangster represents human psyche that rejects americanism/modern life (since it failed during depression) -failure of rugged individualism (Hoover) -gangster is obligated to succeed, success is punished |
|
|
Term
War, Prosperity, Divorce and Loss |
|
Definition
(IZOD // BEST YEARS) -war effort Hollywood rules -HW just used same old stories but in military uniforms -HW began to market to Latin America (since European market was closed off) -through war effort: unemployment fell, workers got increased wages, women joined workforce -people looking for more recreation --> double bills, 24/7 theaters -film noir -baby boom + mortgages + commute from suburb + TV --> declining attendance at movie theaters -film audience changed to younger, well-educated (but studios thought opposite and made movies that made fun of that group) -1938-1948: anti-trust act breaks up oligopoly -studios become distributors, paired with independent producers |
|
|
Term
The Uncertain Peace: The Best Years of Our Lives |
|
Definition
(JACKSON // BEST YEARS) -postwar america = limitless power + nagging inability to find comfort/joy in unfamiliar future -"glory for me" picked up by wyler who wanted to make a social conscious film (after coming from war) -location shooting, gregg toland, "realistic"/minimal hair and makeup -glorifies "good" women and punishes "bad" women |
|
|
Term
The Lady in the Tutti Frutti Hat: Carmen Miranda, a Spectacle of Ethnicity |
|
Definition
(ROBERTS // WEEKEND IN HAVANA) -miranda = acceptable/nonthreatening Other -miranda = personification of good neighbor policy (illusion of racial harmony) -miranda = conflation of latin america (robs her of own ethnicity and power) -miranda = sexy visual (del Rio) + comic (velez) -ethnic performative drag -speculation of miranda's subversive agency in creating her own image |
|
|
Term
Are All Latins from Manhattan? Hollywood, Ethnography, and Cultural Colonialism |
|
Definition
(LOPEZ // WEEKEND IN HAVANA) -way in which minorities are represented are reflective that given time -HW doesn't represent minorities but creates their own image of them based on what they think should be their image -latinas = racial & sexual threats (to be contained) -HW needs latin american market (money + allies) -del Rio / Velez -white people are narrative subjects, miranda is the spectacled object |
|
|
Term
|
Definition
(SCHATZ // RED RIVER) -normalcy is impossible to return to after ww2 -studios become distributors of independently-produced films -rise of independent producer -no more block booking / blind buying -TV --> HW was complacent, competitive, and colluded with TV (renting and telefilms) -new generation of cine-knowledgeable directors -fall of PCA --> films granted 1st amendment rights |
|
|
Term
Wild in the Streets: Juvenile Delinquency |
|
Definition
(BISKIND // REBEL) -delinquents = shame of America (backlash against conservatism?) -teens are a huge market for HW so no making fun of teens -30s/40s criminals --> victims of poor society -50s teen criminals --> victims of shitty home life -pluralist JD films: good vs bad JDs -conservative JD films: all JDs are bad and must die -left-wing JD films: kids vs. adults and kids win (generation gap) |
|
|
Term
|
Definition
(DOHERTY // REBEL) -"rebel without a cause" = quintessential rep of 1950s JDs -james dean = new kind of masculinity -teenpic double bills (drag racing + rocknroll) -drive-in theaters to contain teen delinquency -softie JD films: victims of shitty home lives + cure -hard-nosed JD films: teen psychopaths that deserve punishment, not understanding |
|
|
Term
|
Definition
(GOMERY // GOLD DIGGERS) -picture palaces with huge shows of orchestra, vaudeville, shorts, etc (film was only 1 part of the show) -synch sound replaced shorts at first -soon major studios took up sound (and indie theaters did more live shows) |
|
|
Term
Some Warner's Musicals in the Spirit of the New Deal |
|
Definition
(ROTH // GOLD DIGGERS) -Hoover --> depression denial, rugged individualism (and failure of --> gangster) -Roosevelt --> new deal, american dream, working together (--> musicals) - |
|
|
Term
|
Definition
(SCHRADER // OUT OF THE PAST) -1946: french critics notice dark, cynical, corrupt, hopeless, fatalistic themes in postwar US films -4 film noir influences: war/postwar disillusionment, postwar realism, german expatriates, hard-boiled writers -style -war-time period (41-46): lone wolf -post-war realism (45-49): crime in streets -final phase (49-53): psychotic chaos -1950s --> end of film noir (suburbia, white flight, TV, consumerism, communism) |
|
|
Term
|
Definition
(BOGLE // ODDS AGAINST TMRW) -1950s --> change from glamour to auteuristic/social conscious -ethel waters: 40s mammy, suffering black character personification -dorothy dandridge: tragic mulatto, good girl gone bad -sidney poitier: integranionist hero, white-black person -harry belafonte |
|
|
Term
Movies and the Racial Divide |
|
Definition
(KNIGHT // ODDS AGAINST TMRW) -3 reasons harbel wasn't huge: rise of belafonte & poitier, belafonte's characters go against white racists, 11 yr hiatus -slow integration -williamsburg vs chicago -white flight -civil rights movement |
|
|
Term
Glorious Technicolor, Breathtaking, Cinemascope, and Stereophonic Sound |
|
Definition
(BELTON // INVASION OF BODY SNATCHERS) -new tech --> throwback to cinema as event -widescreen actively engages audiences (was passive before) -cinerama, ersatz, vistavision, todd-ao, cinemascope -cinemascope becomes new norm (and loses the novelty) |
|
|
Term
Age of Conspiracy / Conformity: Invasion of the Body Snatchers |
|
Definition
(SAMUEL // INVASION OF BODY SNATCHERS) -films either 1) reflect/embody ideology, or 2) produce their own ideology -IBS is "a statement about the collective paranoia and issue of conformity widely discussed in the period" (McCarthyism / Red Scare) -replicas of humans --> communists in disguise -threats of universal annihilation --> conformity, paranoia, alienation -pods --> nonhuman (giving up individuality) -feeling of constraint |
|
|
Term
Hollywood at War for American and at War with Itself |
|
Definition
(SKLAR // WATERFRONT) -no matter what HW does, --> un-Americanness -purge of "radically oriented" HW people -HW was particularly weak at this time (antitrust, senate, TV, Hays retirement) --> easily succumbed to HUAC pressure -film noir -movies not protected by 1st amendment -friendly + unfriendly --> Hollywood Ten and Blacklist (guilty until proven innocent) -HUAC attacked the "risque, violent, comic, and fantastic" version of America that Hollywood portrayed --> conservatism |
|
|
Term
The Politics of Power in On the Waterfront |
|
Definition
(BISKIND // WATERFRONT) -prolificness of Elia Kazan in the 1950s -auteurist Kazan -Kazan testified as friendly witness at HUAC trials --> anti-communist --> Kazan screwed others over -individualism = bad, conformity = good -"On the Waterfront" = child of HUAC from Kazan -ethics of testifying (testifying is honorable for the just man) -nuclear family solution |
|
|
Term
The Social Problem Film in the 1950s |
|
Definition
(BYARS // NOT WANTED) -aesthetics linked to ideology -"woman's film" --> woman's structure (based on courtship / revolving around men) -social conscious film addressing taboo topics by indie producers -but lupino's narrative/form rein scribe back to heteronormative ideology |
|
|
Term
|
Definition
(WALDMAN // NOT WANTED) -unwanted pregnancy vs unwed motherhood -female sexuality as a social problem -originally titled "Bad Company" --> not approved by PCA -sin must be depicted as WRONG -protagonist is granted female sexuality via stylization |
|
|
Term
Strange Brew: Hollywood & The Fabrication of Homosexuality in Tea and Sympathy |
|
Definition
(CUSTEN // TEA & SYMPATHY) -homosexuals = america's most hated Other -PCA --> heteronormativity -LGBTQ audience can "read" straight characters as queer -producer and censor direct the types of messaging that come from films -3 requirements for "Tea & Sympathy" by playwright: 1) Tom bullied for homosexuality 2) Mrs. Reynold's offering Tom sex to make him straight 3) Tom going to town whore -homosexuality = effeminacy --> substituted for adultery -gender norms |
|
|
Term
Here we go! Down and Dirty! |
|
Definition
(MILLER // TEA & SYMPATHY) -society loosening (conformity on outside, darkness on inside) -1948: paramount antitrust act -1952: film industry granted 1st amendment rights ("The Miracle") -TV --> less movie audience --> Hollywood uses more risque themes/adult material -Breen/PCA: films are FAMILY entertainment (question of taste, not morality) -concerned more about sex than violence -Shurlock succeeds Breen --> no more black and white morality question of films -censorship is no longer about certain explicit scenes; entire narratives are changing |
|
|
Term
Psycho: The Making of Hitchcock's Masterpiece |
|
Definition
(REBELLO // PSYCHO) -Hitchcock depressed, despite success of "North by Northwest" -ennui from "Vertigo" -sick of "average man in bizarre situations" theme -inspired by Bloch's "Psycho" -Paramount wanted another "North by Northwest" --> Hitchcock wanted "Psycho" --> low-budget (self-funded), TV crew -joseph stefano screenwriter --> Anthony Perkins as Bates and a big name actress killed off in first 1/3 -TV crew -nudity/blood -new rule for films: "no one will be admitted to the theater after the start of each performance" |
|
|
Term
The Grapes of Wrath: Thematic Emphasis Through Visual Style |
|
Definition
(SOBCHAK // GRAPES OF WRATH) -film was widely appraised for thematic depiction of depression era america --> people don't consider the style in this claim -novel and film are opposites -novel: presence, harsh reality, radical politics, need for social/political change, focus on larger picture/families/land -film: nostalgic past, nostalgic reality, apolitical/atemporal, harmony/community, isolated yet universal family -visual is contrastive --> space is constricted to family w/o big picturesque landscapes of dust bowl |
|
|
Term
The Golden Age of Turbulence and of Order |
|
Definition
(SKLAR // GRAPES OF WRATH) -Hollywood "called into question sexual propriety, social decorum, and institutions of law and order" -new deal -1st golden age of 1930s hollywood (1930 - 1934): luring audiences with all shit (no conservatism), sound = noise = thrills, sex! violence! horror!, gangsters -2nd golden age of 1930s hollywood (1935 - 1941): screwball comedy --> romcom with sexual innuendo, return to tradition |
|
|
Term
|
Definition
Leroy, 1933 -sound --> exploitation of sound / humor from dialogue / class differences -visual pleasure --> female bodies -regular harsh reality --> male bodies -musical as escapism -explicitly talks about depression effects |
|
|
Term
|
Definition
Whale, 1931 -time/setting is stylized/purposefully ambiguous --> adapted to any time --> scary -dr frankenstein's negligence of taking responsibility for the monster --> HE is very monstrous -german expressionist style --> inhospitable/alienating to humans (enormous architecture, crooked sets, distorted angles, shadows, lighting) -frankenstein/fritz/monster --> on outskirts of town/edge, stylized, producing life together outside heterosexual norm -frankenstein/elizabeth/family --> conventional/classically shot, heteronormativity -sympathy moves from frankenstein/fritz to monster |
|
|
Term
|
Definition
Wellman, 1931 -chronology of Tommy Powers' criminality --> pushes blame to poor society -sexuality is violent + violence is eroticized -violence via off-screen sound --> sound is harder to censor (MPPDA came out with code around this time) |
|
|
Term
|
Definition
Capra, 1934 -screwball comedy = post-code film -self-censoring (characters AND editing) -but full of sexual innuendo via snappy dialogue -class difference --> women = higher class, men = lower class -upper class dependent on lower class (who are praised) -realistic depression |
|
|
Term
|
Definition
Ford, 1940 -gregg toland as cinematography (also did "citizen kane" and "best years of our lives") -stylized, very dark, close-ups of individual faces, natural/realistic/minimal hair/makeup/costume, location shooting, etc -no showing of actual dust-bowlness -individualized |
|
|
Term
The Best Years of Our Lives |
|
Definition
Wyler, 1946 -hollywood war effort -gregg toland as cinematographer -long takes, deep focus, clear/light --> puts all characters together (unity) -veterans alienated from the world -reality will never be the same --> accept it -redomestication of women in post-war period (having to mother/take care of their husbands) |
|
|
Term
|
Definition
Curtiz, 1945 -flashback structure --> unreliable narrator --> undermines her subjectivity -noir present / confessional frames the narrative -emphasizes traditional gender roles (because mildred is punished) -racial politics (toddy) -anticipation of re-domestication |
|
|
Term
|
Definition
Lang, 1941 -latin america framed as weekend getaway for white americans -racial performativity (ethnic performative drag) --> racial masquerade -Othering of language (miranda's gibberish) -spanish = eroticized love language (latin america as location of sexual awakening) -musical form as containment for Other (nonthreatening) -POC as spectacle objects for white romance/narrativity/subjectivity |
|
|
Term
|
Definition
Tourneur, 1947 -nonlinear structure/voiceover --> visual demarcation of past and present (like mildred pierce) -no implication of gangster-ism --> EVERYONE is criminal |
|
|
Term
|
Definition
Hawks, 1948 -john wayne vs. montgomery clift (2 kinds of masculinity) -independent production (big budget, big name) |
|
|
Term
|
Definition
Lupino, 1949 -unwed motherhood vs unwanted pregnancy (female sexuality becomes a problem for society) -stylization of childbirth scene --> female subjectivity -low-budget, b/w, social conscious film --> long takes/close-medium shots -other end of indie spectrum from "Red River" (Hawks) |
|
|
Term
|
Definition
Kazan, 1954 -child of HUAC (people involved testified at trials) -ethics of testifying (and how it's good for justice) -method acting |
|
|
Term
|
Definition
Wise, 1956 -black stars shifted to big-budget hollywood films in 1950s -film doesn't deal with structural racism --> individual racism (relegating that to a generation gap thing) -white racism + emasculation --> predatory hypersexual/hyperracism (earl) -film noir/stylization -mutual destruction (led by earl's racism / refusal to give johnny the key) -dave's sacrifice = representative of integration (doom) |
|
|
Term
|
Definition
Ray, 1955 -parental problems -jim --> rich, no emotional support, switched gender roles -judy --> strict, father can't deal with her sexuality -plato --> divorced / nonexistant parents -dystopic mentality from teenage angst -no place for plato's love for jim --> plato killed off to restore heterosexual ending for jim/judy -delinquency: -jim --> morally good -judy --> criminalized sexuality -plato --> "bad"/crazy teen -widescreen works to either separate adults and teens or put teens together -tilts/scanted camera angles in home --> domestic home is claustrophobic/disorienting -red |
|
|
Term
Invasion of the Body Snatchers |
|
Definition
Siegal, 1956 -flashback structure --> original ending is bennell yelling at camera "you're next!" -new ending --> conservative reassurance of authority -50s alien invasion films --> fear of communism (silent infiltration)/cold war -critique either of complacency or conformity -mass hysteria/paranoia/skepticism (can't trust ANYONE) -fear of technology annihilating humans -visual style underscores confusion/skepticism (low angle, unfocused, distorted framing and lighting) -claustrophobic spaces within widescreen format -descent into darkness over film |
|
|
Term
|
Definition
Kazan, 1957 -tv vs film -film demographic --> younger, better-educated -tv demographic --> older, less-educated -tv is the enemy -film is above the consumerist culture of tv -anonymity of the mass tv audience |
|
|
Term
|
Definition
Minnelli, 1956 -frame narrative --> heteronormativity of frame colors the main narrative (paints tom's "homosexuality" as a memory/imagination) -mrs reynolds' is made to be the deviant and is banished (sexually active) -film equates/substitutes effeminacy with homosexuality -homosexuality is erased and turned into adultery (which is passable by the PCA but not homosexuality) -no heterosexual relationship is successful however -homosocial/eroticized male environment -transgressive relationship between mrs reynolds and tom --> fake home -performative masculinity -3 requirements: 1) bullying because of homosexuality 2) mrs reynolds offering tom sex to make him straight 3) tom going to town whore |
|
|
Term
|
Definition
Hitchcock, 1960 -death of production code --> nudity, sexuality (voyeuristic and in bed), violence, blood, toilet, "transvestitism", freudian (voyeurism, oedipal) -low-budgetness --> black/white, TV crew, etc -film vs. TV --> tv crew, tv sensibility |
|
|
Term
|
Definition
1930: production code 1934: catholic legion of decency / breen & pica 1944: motion picture alliance for the preservation of ideals 1948: paramount antitrust act 1952: films granted 1st amendment rights 1953: "The moon is blue" without code approval |
|
|
Term
|
Definition
1938: HUAC formed by congress 1947: friendly/unfriendly witnesses --> HW10/blacklist 1951: 2nd HUAC hearings --> 324 blacklsited |
|
|
Term
Empire to the West: Red River |
|
Definition
(SKLAR // RED RIVER) -"red river" = quintessential american western film -upholds same ol' ideology of american values without any explicit social messaging (like most independent films did at the time) -filmmakers coming back from war wanted to make social conscious independent films -"red river" is the big-budget, big name, independent film opposite end of spectrum of "not wanted" -contracts (between dunson/matthew and them with women) -john wayne/dunson: cold, hard masculinity with little emotion (only around women) -montgomery clift/matthew: androgynous masculinity (tough and soft) -matthew's manliness = having a woman = fighting dungeon -matthew WAS the feminine partner to dunson until he had to "man up" and lead others --> matthew broke from their homosocial friendship and became a man for a heterosexual relationship -contract of land is broken since native people are depicted as savage/nonhuman, so it's not a real contract, so dunson can take the land -"red river" is about capitalism, old american values, imperialism |
|
|
Term
Some Visual Motifs in Film Noir |
|
Definition
(PLACE & PETERSON // OUT OF THE PAST) -noir = visual style, not a genre -noir moods: claustrophobia, paranoia, despair, nihilism... -high contrast low-key lighting and weird lighting placement (not 3/4 style) -night-for-night shooting --> realism -close-ups to intensify looks of terror -unstable mies-en-scene meant to unsettle, jar, and disorient the viewer -fatalistic camera angles, oppressively looking down from high angles at its victims |
|
|
Term
The Woman's Film: Possession and Address |
|
Definition
(DOANA // MILDRED PIERCE) -"filling up" past history with different stories (woman's stories) -HW narratives function to defend male psyche from woman (male gaze for the male spectator, objectifying the woman) -woman's film --> female spectator / female subjectivity & agency -gendered spaces (woman = home) -woman's film --> paranoia; institution of marriage is haunted by murder (sexuality + murder) (home = space of dread/horror) -female image = threat of male castration ??? -female subjectivity granted through POV shots/voiceovers (but also unstable and shadowed as unreliable) -medical male gaze objectifies women's stories |
|
|
Term
Feminist Film Theory: Mildred Pierce and the Second World War |
|
Definition
(WILLIAMS // MILDRED PIERCE) -present is in film noir --> male discourse of dark underworld -flashback/past in classical style --> female discourse of mildred's story -script written by woman; film noir frame added later by men -female authorship is undercut 2 fold: scriptwriter + mildred's narration is unreliable b/c of film noir image -marketing preps audience into criminalizing mildred from the beginning ("don't ever tell anyone what she did") -film noir casts suspicion on everything mildred says -resolution: everything goes back to its "normal" place (heterosexual domesticity, race) -no reference to any specific time frame (ex-hub's unemployment could be during depression or wartime) -office of war dictates stories of unity/community for war effort --> "mildred pierce" must be decontextualized from the war in order to make itself an individualized story (about mildred) |
|
|
Term
Screwball Comedy within American Humor |
|
Definition
(GEHRING // IT HAPPENED ONE NIGHT) -5 characteristics of comic anti hero: abundant leisure time (wealthy characters, can't mention jobs (too serious)), childlike nature (separation from responsibility of marriage), urban life (romance can only happen in country), apolitical outlook, basic frustration -childhusband + motherwife -domination of the woman (reversal of sex roles) |
|
|
Term
Frank Capra and the Screwball Comedy, 1931-1941 |
|
Definition
(BERGMAN // IT HAPPENED ONE NIGHT) -early 30s: gangster films (explosive) -mid-late 30s: screwball comedies (implosive) -melting of class barriers (ellen depending on warne; upper depending on working) -"it happened one night" takes place in social/economic vacuum --> FANTASY (aka not real duh) -upper class mentality is still upheld despite those people becoming poor too -individualistic heroes --> goes against new deal idea of unity (reinforced by the fantasy theme of social unity) |
|
|