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1950s - Late 60s: Studio Decline

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1950s - Late 60s: Studio Decline 1963: Worst year for US film prod. w/ 121 films 1969: Hello, Dolly! flops, ends Gene Kelly s career Late 60s - Late 70s: New ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: 1950s - Late 60s: Studio Decline


1
  • 1950s - Late 60s Studio Decline
  • 1963 Worst year for US film prod. w/ 121 films
  • 1969 Hello, Dolly! flops, ends Gene Kellys
    career
  • Late 60s - Late 70s New Hollywood Era
  • Hollywood goes bankrupt Auteurs go mainstream
  • Late 70s - Present Blockbuster Era
  • 1970s Jaws, Star Wars bring back big movies
  • 1980s Home Video Helps Studios and Indies
  • 1990s Emergence of Indiewood
  • The Tarantino Effect New Money for Odd Movies
  • 2000s You wanna just stay home?
  • Netflix, On Demand, New Markets?

2
American History Cliffs Notes
  • 1959-1975 Vietnam War
  • 1964 Civil Rights Act
  • 1967-1968 Assassinations of Malcolm X, MLK,
    Bobby Kennedy
  • 1969 Stonewall Rebellion
  • 1974 Nixon Resigns
  • 1981-1989 Reagan
  • 1981 First U.S. AIDS Case
  • 1980s War on Drugs
  • 1989/1991 Fall of Berlin Wall/Fall of USSR
  • 1993-2001 Clinton

3
New Hollywood Era
  • Who Makes Hollywood New?
  • Independent, Film-School-Educated, Auteur-Style
    Directors like Coppola, Scorsese, Kubrick, Woody
    Allen
  • Thematically
  • Moral Ambiguity, Rebellion and Anti-Heroism
  • Sex, Drugs, Rock n Roll
  • Revision of Established Genres
  • Ex. McCabe and Mrs. Miller (Western), Bonnie and
    Clyde (Gangster Picture), Chinatown (Film Noir)
  • Aesthetically
  • Experimental use of sound (rock n roll!)
  • Flashback and forward, Jump Cuts, Long takes
  • Lyrical treatment of violence
  • Politically
  • Paranoia and General Distrust of Authority
  • Skepticism Toward American Dream
  • Disillusionment with Consumerism

4
Hollywood Blockbuster Era
  • Growing Budgets
  • Batman (1989) 50 Million
  • Titanic (1997) 200 Million
  • Pirates (2007) 300 Million
  • Franchise pictures
  • Sequels, Action/Adventure Movies
  • Target Audience 12-29 year-olds (75)
  • Fast-Paced, Special effects-driven
  • CGI, Motion Capture, Digital Sound, 3-D 3-D
    Animation
  • Quick Cuts Fom 4-6 seconds/shot in 85 to 2-3
    seconds/shot in 2000s

5
1970s 1980s
  • Star Wars (1977)
  • Jaws (1975)
  • The Exorcist (1973)
  • Grease (1978)
  • The Sting (1973)
  • National Lampoon's Animal House (1978)
  • The Godfather (1972)
  • Superman (1978)
  • Close Encounters of the Third Kind (1977/80)
  • Smokey and the Bandit (1977)
  • E.T (1982)
  • Return of the Jedi (1983)
  • The Empire Strikes Back (1980)
  • Batman (1989)
  • Raiders of the Lost Ark (1981)
  • Ghostbusters (1984)
  • Beverly Hills Cop (1984)
  • Back to the Future (1985)
  • Indiana Jones and the Last Crusade (1989)
  • Indiana Jones and the Temple of Doom (1984)

6
1990s 2000s
  • Avatar (2009)
  • The Dark Knight (2008)
  • Shrek 2 (2004)
  • Pirates of the Caribbean Dead Man's Chest (2006)
  • Spider-Man (2002)
  • Transformers 2 (2009)
  • Star Wars Episode III - Revenge of the Sith
    (2005)
  • The Lord of the Rings The Return of the King
    (2003)
  • Spider-Man 2 (2004)
  • The Passion of the Christ (2004)
  • Titanic (1997)
  • Star Wars Episode I - The Phantom Menace (1999)
  • Jurassic Park (1993)
  • Forrest Gump (1994)
  • The Lion King (1994)
  • Independence Day (1996)
  • The Sixth Sense (1999)
  • Home Alone (1990)
  • Men in Black (1997)
  • Toy Story 2 (1999)

7
What makes a movie independent?
  • Its Funding
  • Does funding from a major studio disqualify a
    film from the independent category?
  • Its Audience
  • Smart people and cinephiles? A micro-targeted
    market segment?
  • Its Distribution
  • Does it get a theatrical release? Does it play in
    multiplexes? Art house theaters?
  • Its Director/Writer/Actors
  • Are auteur-driven films independent? Is a David
    Lynch movie automatically independent? What
    about Michael Mann?
  • Its Aesthetics
  • Does deviation from classical Hollywood
    conventions make a film independent?

8
The Indie Umbrella
9
History of the Indie
  • Late 1970s
  • U.S. Alternative/Art films go underground
  • Ex. Eraserhead (1977)
  • 1980s
  • Mini-Majors and Major Indies
  • Ex. Sex, lies, and videotape (1989)
  • 1990s
  • Hollywood conglomerates establish specialty
    divisions
  • Ex. Pulp Fiction (1994)
  • 2000s
  • Most Indies are produced and/or distributed
    through major studios
  • Indie becomes a genre descriptor
  • Ex. Juno (2007)

10
Why The American Indie Grew
  • 1. Home Video
  • 1976 VHS introduced
  • 1988 Majority of U.S. Households own VCR
  • 1997 DVD Introduced Netflix launches, currently
    at 23 million subscribers
  • 2000 Hollywood takes in 20 billion in home
    video revenue (3x domestic box office)
  • 2010 Blockbuster Video files for bankruptcy
  • 2. Hollywood Funders Seek Niche Markets
  • Big pictures dominate, but theres still money on
    the table
  • Mini-Majors, Specialty Divisions, Indiewood
  • 3. Film Festivals Connect Buyers and Sellers
  • Connecting independent films and major
    distributors
  • Ex. Steven Soderberghs sex, lies, and videotape
    debuts at Sundance 1989, Grosses 100 million

11
What Does a Typical Indie Film Look Like?
  • Thematically
  • Focus on the offbeat and quirky
  • Marketed to audiences not served by Blockbusters
  • More likely to have
  • Anti-heroes, Ambiguity, Non-Mainstream Values and
    Politics
  • Aesthetically
  • Formal flourishes (i.e., discontinuous editing)
  • But usually w/ some kind of narrative or
    character-based justification
  • Strong personal vision of director
  • Lower budgets
  • Non-Professional and Character Actors
  • Politically
  • All over the map, really
  • Often designed to challenge viewers, make them
    think

12
This Week The Watermelon Woman (1996)
  • Director Cheryl Dunye
  • Country United States (filmed in Philadelphia)
  • Movement New Queer Cinema
  • Formal Focus Sound (Ch. 9)
  • Why Are We Watching It?
  • Good intro to the low-budget American indies of
    the 1990s (think Clerks, Reservoir Dogs, etc.)
  • Raises questions about race and sexuality in
    American cinema
  • It works well in dialogue with other films weve
    watched, esp. Perfumed Nightmare, 8½, and
    Sherlock Jr.
  • Its smart and fun

13
The Watermelon Woman (1996)In Three Claims
  • 1. Cinema is a way of creating and validating
    personal identity.
  • 2. American Film History does not represent the
    history and lived experiences of
    African-Americans or LGBT people.
  • 3. When your history seems to be absent, you
    either have to dig it up or create a totally new
    history.

14
African Americans And Hollywood
  • History of Hollywood Racism
  • e.g. Al Jolson in The Jazz Singer (1927),
    Disneys Song of the South (1946)
  • All-Black Film Productions
  • Oscar Micheaux (1920s and 30s)
  • Black Actors in Hollywood
  • Hattie McDaniel (1939), Sidney Poitier (1963)
  • Blaxploitation and African-American Indies
  • Sweet Sweetbacks Baadasssss Song (1971), Shaft
    (1971), Foxy Brown (1974)
  • William Greavess Symbiopsychotaxiplasm (1968),
    Burnetts Killer of Sheep (1977)
  • African-American Indies in the 1990s
  • Spike Lees Do The Right Thing (1989), Malcolm X
    (1992) John Singletons Boyz n the Hood (1991)

15
New Queer Cinema
  • Avant-Garde Roots
  • Kenneth Angers Fireworks (1947)
  • Early 1990s New Queer Cinema
  • Todd Hayness Poison (1991), Gus van Sants My
    Own Private Idaho (1991), Rose Troches Go Fish
    (1994)
  • Themes
  • Documenting (mostly young, mostly urban) LGBT
    Life and Love We Exist
  • Often subtle critiques of discrimination,
    Response to AIDS
  • The NEA Debates (1990s)
  • Some New Queer films funded by federal grants
    Congress defunds NEA
  • 2000s Queer Cinema Goes Mainstream
  • Brokeback Mountain (2005), Milk (2008)

16
Questions To Consider
  • Why does Cheryl want to find the Watermelon
    Woman?
  • When is the sound conspicuous? When is it
    diegetic and when nondiegetic?
  • How does this film compare with other films weve
    watched to this point?
  • What makes this movie Indie?
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