Genre Films and Cultural Myth

2003 ◽  
Vol 1 (1) ◽  
pp. 27-35 ◽  
Author(s):  
Barry Keith Grant
Keyword(s):  
2015 ◽  
Vol 121 (3) ◽  
pp. 783-825 ◽  
Author(s):  
Bernice A. Pescosolido ◽  
Jack K. Martin ◽  
Sigrun Olafsdottir ◽  
J. Scott Long ◽  
Karen Kafadar ◽  
...  

2019 ◽  
pp. 106-116
Author(s):  
David MacDougall

This chapter addresses the problem of portraying space in the cinema and the position the film viewer imagines himself or herself to occupy when watching a film. Beginning with the rendering of depth in early films, the author argues that this was never the important question; rather it was the question of how the viewer related to sensations of being included or excluded by the images on the screen. The sense of exclusion was partly resolved through editing techniques such as the shot/counter-shot technique that incorporated the viewer into the action and also by employing deep focus and proximity to close objects, as in the films of Orson Welles. Equally important were narratives that involved the viewer through identification with the characters, as well as the culturally-constructed ‘cinema of familiarity’ of genre films and the work of certain filmmakers such as Ozu. Although none of the methods employed fully succeeded in overcoming the problem of cinematic space, the author argues that at least in nonfiction cinema filmmakers can limit it by being more open about their own intentions and the limitations of the medium.


Author(s):  
Bryan Turnock

This chapter details how the mid-1990s saw a substantial increase in the number of horror films being produced in Asian countries, and in particular Japan and Korea. At the same time, globalisation and the introduction of worldwide distribution channels meant that such films became much more accessible to western audiences, with the surprise success of Hideo Nakata's Ringu (1998) bringing Japanese horror into the mainstream of western cinema. Often used to describe genre films from across Asia, so-called 'J-Horror' is now a recognised sub-genre in the west, with a number of scholarly books dedicated to its analysis. Although many of the more recent films feature modern trappings and a preoccupation with technology, they draw heavily from Japan's long tradition of folklore and ghost stories, while stylistically referencing the aesthetics of traditional Japanese theatre. The chapter considers Masaki Kobayashi's Kaidan (Kwaidan, 1964). It traces the evolution of Japan's unique national film industry and examines how cultural differences can affect genre production and consumption.


Author(s):  
Ian Cooper

This chapter presents a background of Michael Reeves, the director of Witchfinder General (1968). Perhaps the best way to understand Reeves is to regard him as a home-grown ‘Movie Brat’. This was the name given to the geeky American cinephiles who were inspired by the critics-turned-directors of the French New Wave. These film-school-educated ‘Brats’ would make a number of innovative genre films which were to revolutionise Hollywood in the 1970s and beyond. Witchfinder General is not notable solely due to its strange status as ‘a disreputable classic’. It also draws on a number of British and American popular forms (such as the costume melodrama, the horror film and the Western). Moreover, it is a striking example of an auteur sensibility in what Robin Wood calls ‘that most discouraging of areas — the British commercial cinema’. Reeves' love of mainstream, Anglophone cinema went hand-in-hand with a rejection of the then-voguish European art cinema.


2020 ◽  
pp. 190-207
Author(s):  
Nevena Daković ◽  
Aleksandra Milovanović ◽  
Iva Leković

The chapter on Serbia examines the significance of the new opportunities for Serbian cinema offered by the country’s inclusion in the Eurimages and MEDIA programs and identifies major turning points and thematic markers within recent Serbian films. It analyses several distinct facets of recent cinematic developments: the emergence of a new wave of young directors whose films contain innovative cinematic and social perspectives; the rise in popular historical genre films supporting nationalist values; and the abundance of commercial – but often unpopular - filmmaking, marked by repetitive genre formulas and stereotypical themes.


Author(s):  
Todd Berliner

Hollywood makes quintessential genre films, and chapter 10 tackles the aesthetics of genre filmmaking. It demonstrates the ways in which genre eases viewers’ grasp of narrative information and offers the pleasure of returning, as experts, to familiar scenarios. The chapter also explains the ways in which genres develop novel and complex aesthetic properties that counter a culture’s growing genre expertise. To fully exploit the pleasures of genre filmmaking for a mass audience, a genre film must fit recognizably within its genre, offering easy recognition, but it must also differ enough from previous films to make it moderately challenging for average spectators. Star Wars offers an exemplary instance of Hollywood genre filmmaking: The 1977 blockbuster found the optimal area between unity and complexity, familiarity and novelty, easy recognition and cognitive challenge for a mass audience.


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