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AMERICAN FILM GENRES

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Spagetti westerns: Sergio Leone. Osterns - East European westerns ... Spagetti western: Sergio Leone. Once upon a Time in the West/C'era una volta il West (1968) ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: AMERICAN FILM GENRES


1
AMERICAN FILM GENRES
  • THE WESTERN
  • 21.4.2008

2
The Western characteristics
  • Time 1865-1890
  • place U.S. Western Frontier, Mexico
  • Monument Valley for John Ford
  • characters nomadic wanderer hero, gunslinger,
    townspeople, farmers and rancher, Indians, U.S.
    Cavalry, damsel in distress
  • Visual motifs
  • Weapons revolver and rifle
  • The technology of the era such as the
    telegraph, printing press, and railroad
  • Stetson hats, bandannas, spurs, and buckskins
  • the vast landscape

3
Genre evolution 3
  • early formative stage
  • the classical period of archetypal expression
  • a more intellectual phase in which conventions
    are examined and questioned rather than merely
    presented
  • ironic, self-conscious mode typically expressed
    by parody
  • Note these do overlap
  • The Great Train Robbery, dir. Edwin S. Porter,
    1903
  • Stagecoach (Ford, 1939) John Fords cavalry
    westerns Rio Bravo, Howard Hawks 1959 Red
    River, Howard Hawks, 1948
  • The Searchers, John Ford, 1956
  • Robert Altman's McCabe and Mrs. Miller, Mel
    Brookss Blazing Saddles (1974), Unforgiven,
    Clint Eastwood. 1992

4
Edward Buscombe
  • iconography - the visual conventions of Westerns
    are highly distinctive and coded
  • but in this sense Western is a generic exception
  • the Western has an imaginative relationship to
    the American geography and history -gt mythology
    moving western frontier where Anglo-Saxon vs.
    other meet, opportunity and danger, Manifest
    Destiny

5
Jim Kitses semantic analysis (1969)
  • original Anthony Mann, Budd Boetticher and Sam
    Peckinpah
  • recently revised, additions new chapters on John
    Ford, Sergio Leone and Clint Eastwood
  • these directors found their essence in the
    Western
  • structuralist method based on the anthropology by
    Lévi-Strauss (1967)
  • civilisation versus the wilderness binary, around
    which the binary chart is built
  • the collision of the structure and motifs of
    melodrama where the community is seen as
    invariably the endangered family in the Westerns
    of Ford

6
Kitses binaries
  • THE WILDERNESS
  • (desert)
  • The Individual
  • freedom
  • honor
  • self-knowledge
  • integiry
  • self-interest
  • solipsism
  • CIVILIZATION
  • (garden)
  • The Community
  • restriction
  • institutions
  • illusion
  • compromise
  • social responsibility
  • democracy

7
Kitses binaries 2
  • Nature
  • purity
  • experience
  • empiricism
  • pragmatism
  • brutalization
  • savagery
  • Culture
  • corruption
  • knowledge
  • legalism
  • idealism
  • refinement
  • humanity

8
Kitses 3
  • The West
  • America
  • the Frontier
  • equality
  • agrarianism
  • tradition
  • the past
  • The East
  • Europe
  • America
  • class
  • industrialism
  • change
  • the future

9
John Cawelti (1970)
  • setting on or near the frontier
  • a moment in the development of Amer.
    civilization law taking over lawlessness
  • 3 central roles the townspeople (agents of
    civilization), the savages or outlaws who
    threaten this group, the hero(es) who are men in
    the middle
  • narratives w/ violent confrontations central

10
Wright
  • in a classic western plot the hero uses his
    savage skills to combat savagery, to thus protect
    the civilized community who will finally accept
    him, hero joins the community
  • Lévi-Strauss the hero possesses characteristics
    of both sides
  • Die Hard, dir. John McTiernan, 1988

11
Rick Altman (1984)
  • semantic analysis
  • basic elements of the genre (characters,
    locations, shooting style etc.)
  • In 1999 Altman added production (for ex genre
    cycles) and audience (interpretation) into this
    schemata
  • syntactic approach looks at the relationships
    between these elements and how they are
    structured in narratives gt
  • thematics such as the opposition of East and
    West or garden and desert (Kitses)

12
Western sub-genres
  • Classical westerns Ford, Hawks
  • Spagetti westerns Sergio Leone
  • Osterns - East European westerns
  • Revisionist western positive representation of
    Native Americans, Sam Peckinpah, Unforgiven
    (Clint Eastwood, 1992)
  • question the simple hero-versus-villain dualism
  • Acid Western Mon Helmans Shooting, Jim
    Jarmuschs Dead Man Walking
  • Contemporary western the story placed in
    contemporary West Brokeback Mountain, No Country
    for Old Men

13
Contemporary Western Misfits, dir. John Huston
with Marilyn Monroe and Clark Cable
14
Schatz Ritual approach
  • Thomas Schatz has argued that genres can be seen
    as a form of collective cultural expression and
    as a vehicle for exploring ideals, cultural
    values and ideas within American society. This
    has led critics including Schatz to postulate
    that some genres take place in different social
    spaces as a symbolic arena of action such as
    the cowboy or gangster film. In these films
    specific social conflicts are acted out.
  • But ...evidence from contemporary audience
    surveys suggests that westerns were produced in
    large numbers during the studio era despite the
    fact that they were popular only with rural
    audiences and adolescent boys and despite the
    fact that they were actively disliked by a
    majority of the viewing population as a whole (
    Steve Neale 2000 225 ) .

15
The Wild Bunch, dir. Sam Peckinpah
16
Spagetti western Sergio LeoneOnce upon a Time
in the West/C'era una volta il West (1968)
For a Fistful of Dollars
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