Visions of Empire explores film's function as a medium of political
communication, recognizing not just the propaganda film, but the
various ways that conventional narrative films embody, question, or
critique established social values underlying American attitudes
toward historical, social, and political events. Stephen Prince
discusses Hollywood film productions of the 1980s in terms of salient
political issues of the period, including anxieties about declining
U.S. military power, the wars in Central America and the prospects for
U.S. intervention, the legacy of the Vietnam War, and urban decay. In
analyzing these images and narratives, the author also describes and
evaluates the cinematic styles available in the Hollywood tradition to
filmmakers who address political issues. Chapter 1 establishes the
theoretical framework by considering features of the political
landscape of the Reagan era. Theories about political representation
and the place of ideology in film are also examined. Chapters 2
through 5 focus on the major cycles of political films. Chapter 2
examines the new Cold War films which played upon fears of the Soviet
menace (Rambo, Invasion USA, Red Dawn, and Top Gun). Chapter 3
discusses the small group of films--Under Fire, Salvador, El Norte and
others--that addressed the wars in Latin America and the ways they
explained the origins of the conflicts and the U.S. role therein.
Various histories and mythologies on film of the Vietnam War are
examined in Chapter 4 as examples of the symbolic reconstruction of
social memory. Chapter 5 looks at politicized science fiction films
(Blade Runner, Aliens, Robocop, and Total Recall) offering critical
commentaries on the pathologies of contemporary urban society and
capitalism.
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Political Imagery in Contemporary American Film
Produktdetaljer
ISBN
9780313391064
Publisert
2023
Utgave
1. utgave
Utgiver
Vendor
Praeger
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Digital bok
Forfatter