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American Beauty dir. Sam Mendes 1999

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... of shot repeats with the first image of Lester in bed. Rose Petal Imagery ... Lester goes beyond the stereotypes of a suburban male having a mid-life crisis. ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: American Beauty dir. Sam Mendes 1999


1
American Beauty dir. Sam Mendes 1999
2
Film Style
  • Based on our discussion about film style, where
    do we place American Beauty?
  • Is this film realist?
  • Is it classicist?
  • Is it formalist?
  • Remember that it is nearly impossible to create
    an absolutely formalist or realist film.

3
Questions about Narrative Voice
  • Often seen as a cheat in narrative or story
    films.
  • Certain genres and film types use narrators
    documentaries, detective films, westerns, science
    fiction (eg. Blade Runner).
  • Do you find Lesters voice intrusive or
    informative? Some critics felt it should not be
    necessary (or are audiences too dumb to figure
    out the filmmakers message?). The use of this
    voice is what we call didactic or teacherly.
  • Is the use of a male voice a way of colouring the
    visuals and the story in favour of a male
    perspective? At which points in the film is the
    male POV favoured, especially at Carolyns
    expense?

4
Genre Film as MysteryFilm as Social Satire
  • Before we know the truth about Carolyn (Annette
    Bening), we might suspect her as Lesters killer.
    Note that Carolyn wears a red dress in the final
    sequence.
  • Jane (and Ricky) are framed by the film for
    Lesters death because of the opening video
    clip.
  • Because we see both women as plausible killers,
    the satire turns on us. Below the surface, is the
    truth both love Lester and want his love in
    return.
  • The red door of the Burnhams house is also
    symbolic of the familys yearning for passion,
    meaning, and love.

5
Tone and Formalist Design
  • Tone is the emotional quality of the images (mise
    en scene, action, photography, editing, lighting
    etc.) sound (dialogue, music, etc.).
  • If a dual perspective comes through (especially
    due to the voice-over narration), we say the tone
    is IRONIC.
  • Irony can distance an audience emotionally by
    showing us a perspective detached from the visual
    and aural components of the film.
  • Can you think of distancing devices used in
    this film?

6
Look Closer
  • The poster in Lester Burnhams cubicle asks us to
    look closer.
  • In fact, the beginning of the film uses several
    disorienting shots to encourage us to look
    closer.
  • The birds-eye-view shot of Lesters
    neighbourhood.
  • This type of shot repeats with the first image of
    Lester in bed.

7
Rose Petal Imagery
  • At the right, we see one of Lesters fantasies of
    Angela, though less removed.
  • Her image has the added eroticism of the bath.
  • Where does the rose-petal image repeat?

When Lester imagines kissing Angela, he slowly p
ulls a red rose petal from his mouth. He has
tasted innocence.
8
Roses and the American Beauty
  • When combined with the image of Angela, the red
    roses symbolize beauty, attraction, eroticism,
    but also innocence, hope, and vitality, as well
    as love.
  • The shot on the right is a reverse birds-eye of
    Angela on the ceiling of Lester Burnhams bedroom.

Note how the rose petals discreetly cover
Angelas body.
9
Formal Elements Parallel Shots
10
Fantasy and Reality
  • Formalism is used in the fantasy sequences.
  • However, reality is quite different. Lester
    realizes that he should not have sex with a girl
    his daughters age because he would be spoiling
    something beautiful.
  • He takes on the fatherly role of comforter,
    instead, by making her a sandwich.

11
Mise en Scene
  • The film plays with the theme that surface
    appearances are deceiving.
  • If the film is about the American Dream gone
    awry, then suburban nuclear family life seems to
    be a root cause of decay.
  • Mise en scene (framing of images) is a crucial
    formal element that communicates confinement and
    sterility or alternatively, warmth and power.

12
Analyse this Shot
13
Try this One
14
Pedestals and the Lowest of the Low
15
Camera Placement and Power Relationships Shift
16
Mise en Scene and Formal Elements
  • Mise en scene refers to placing on stagewhat
    appears within the frame.
  • Formalist films arrange items in precise
    repetitive ways to communicate regularity,
    rigidity, sterility, order, and regimentation. Or
    alignment.

17
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18
Turnabout is Fair Play
Does Ricky get closer to his subjects via the
camera, or does the camera keep him at arms len
gth? At a safer distance?
19
Mirrors and Windows
  • We often see characters faces (including the
    upper body) through windows and via reflections
    in mirrors.
  • What is the symbolic significance of such shots?
  • What do these types of images tell us about
    surface appearances in the film?

20
American Beauty
  • What does the title of the film suggest?
  • What or who is the American Beauty in the film?
  • What are some common symbolic meanings of red
    roses?
  • What is suggested by the red rose in the image on
    the right?

21
Red Rose Imagery
  • Red roses appear on the dining room table at the
    Burnhams house, but disappear later when we see
    an increasing breakdown in the marriage.
  • Also, the Burnhams garden consists predominantly
    of red roses, and they are therefore the source
    of the flowers on the table.

22
Tender of Roses
  • Carolyn Burnham (Annette Bening) is in charge of
    tending the roses in the garden, symbols of life,
    growth and vitality.
  • Her neighbours, a gay couple, wonder what her
    secret is.
  • As the American Beauty or Mother, she is in
    charge of keeping love in the home, yet here she
    is cutting roses.
  • Her clogs match her pruning shearsan indication
    that Carolyn has bought into the need to keep up
    appearances.

23
More Rose Imagery
  • Notice the return of the vase of red roses in the
    confrontation scene.
  • Lester is more at ease with himself, having quit
    his job at the magazine he also feels freer
    after having discovered his wife is having an
    affair, while she discovers he is working at a
    fast-food place.

Red symbolizes Lesters growing
sense of his own life-force, his return to
consciousness and vitality. The roses are
also symbols of his awareness of beauty
and his own sense of passionnot just
for sex, but for life itself.
24
Love on the Couch?
  • Lester feels amorous toward Carolyn, but her
    insistence that he not spill beer on the silk
    couch stifles his attempt at lovemaking.
  • His shirt is a rather drab version of red.
  • This scene on the couch parallels Lesters
    aborted love-making scene with Angela.

Although she doesnt mean to, Carolyn sucks the
life out of Lester. Perhaps this is a comment on
the American suburban family? Is this portrait
antithetical to feminist concerns?
25
Mr. Smiley
  • The name Mr. Smiley connotes certain
    ironiesthat part of the American myth that says
    were all smiling. People look happy on the
    outside, but in reality are crying on the
    inside.
  • Note the red cap and belteven Mr. Smiley is red.
    Lester is feeling free enough to work in a job
    most wouldnt consider at his stage in life.

The yummy smile with the tongue showing also
suggests that American culture is not only
food-oriented, but driven by carnal pleasures.
26
Theres More to the Use of Red than Roses
  • An often missed use of red in American Beauty is
    the red recording light on Ricky Fitts (Wes
    Bentley) camera.
  • The camera substitutes for his eyes, and as he
    tells us, allows him to see things he might miss
    otherwiselike theres more to Jane (Thora Birch)
    than we think.

The tonal range of the colours in American Beauty
is deliberately subdued, making red stand out.
Note also Janes dark red lipstick.
27
Voyeurism and Beauty
  • Both neighbouring families are dysfunctional.
    (Why is Rickys mum so catatonic?)
  • Rickys father, Colonel Fitts (Chris Cooper), is
    a homophobe who is attracted by what repels him.

  • He is the opposite of Lester a father who is in
    supreme control of his sons life. A man who
    operates out of fear, assuming the worst.
  • Voyeurism runs in the family.

28
Voyeurism and the Eye
  • The image of the eye and screen within a screen
    are obvious signals that remind us of our own
    voyeuristic tendencies (as in watching this
    film).
  • The films tag-line exhorts the viewer to look
    closer.

People are much more complex than they seem on
the surface. Jane definitely.
Even Angela.
29
The Search for Beauty
  • Ricky and Lester are not the only ones searching
    for beauty in a world that often seems drab and
    even hurtful. Note Carolyns red slip.
  • Note also the plastic gloves, the sterile home
    and the furious vacuuming!

30
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31
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32
Form is Content
  • AndrĂ© Bazin, the famous editor of Cahiers du
    Cinema, admired films that present a discourse
    on method. However, as a realist, he might have
    taken exception to some of Mendes formalist
    flourishes in this film.
  • Ultimately, to make a narrative Hollywood-style
    film that would win an Academy Award, you need to
    tell a good story with believable characters
    whose interior life is reflected in their faces
    and actions on screen. As such, the camera acts
    in aid of the characters and the story.
  • This style is most often called Hollywood
    Classicism.

33
Andre Bazin Form is Content
  • Ultimately, American Beauty is about finding
    beauty in our own lives, brief and seemingly
    ordinary as they are.
  • See the red bottle? The scene is a confrontation
    and ultimately voyeuristic, but not without
    hope.

34
The Climax
  • Here, the red car is both a signifier of Lesters
    renewed passion and mid-life crisis while also
    foreshadowing the Colonels attack as well as
    Lesters blood.
  • Another motif (recurring imagery) worth tracing
    in the film is the repeated reference to
    deaththe dead bird, the funeral procession

Note how the Colonel stands in the rainhe is a
sad man, a defeated man, and the wet T-shirt
signifies he is also a sexual being, while
foreshadowing the kiss.
35
Formal Elements and the Gun Shot
  • Lester goes beyond the stereotypes of a suburban
    male having a mid-life crisis.
  • He awakens to the beauty in his world (which
    includes his family) and in himself.
  • We see the reaction of the other characters to
    his death by the repetition of the gun shot (we
    hear the shot 4 times).
  • His death, although tragic, indicates that death
    is inevitable, and simply put, life is for
    living.
  • Rickys complex facial expressions upon seeing
    Lester dead reveal the beauty in Lesters
    expression, that beauty and tragedy can be
    intermingled.
  • Life and death are two of the greatest
    mysteries.

36
Zen and the Suchness of Reality
  • Rickys videotape of the plastic bag dancing in
    front of a red brick wall shows us beauty and
    passion in ordinary things "Sometimes there's so
    much beauty in the world, I can't take it..." We
    can glimpse what lies behind surface reality.
  • Zen asks us to be mindful in the moment.
  • The sound of a gong used to end meditation in Zen
    practice is meant to awaken the sleeper to
    being in the moment.
  • Mendes, who has an interest in Eastern
    philosophies, believes that without this sense of
    vitality, we are caught up in surface appearances
    and do not penetrate the illusion of the
    material world (as a Zen monk might say).

37
Themes in American Beauty
  • The American gun-mentality
  • Machismo and homophobia
  • Male power structures and Feminist concerns
  • Human Neurosis and Fantasy Life
  • The cult of materialism, surface beauty and the
    fakeness of the American Dream
  • Spiritual Awakening (and hope in the moment of
    Transition)
  • Passion for Living

38
Film as Medium
  • American Beauty is a useful introduction to film
    as a medium of entertainment that also offers us
    a chance to look at how films are constructed to
    form meaning.
  • Stylistically, it is a film that uses formalist
    techniques in aid of its meaning, its narrative
    and its characters, and thus it is a fine example
    of Hollywood Classicism.
  • Do you agree?
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