Cameron, Kenneth M., 1931-. America on film : Hollywood and American history / Kenneth M. Cameron. [0826410332 (hardcover : alk. paper)] New York : Continuum, 1997.
Call#: Van Pelt Library PN1995.9.H5 C36 1997
Call#: Van Pelt Library PN1995.9.H5 C36 1997
In this book Kenneth Cameron goes through the 20th century, attempting to create an appropriate historical and cultural context for the film produced in each decade. Of particular interest in the chapter entitlted “1940-49: Good War, New World.” Cameron claims that despite war, the forties produced a wide variety of films that were difficult to analyze. Some generalizations he was able to draw were between films made before 1942 and those after 1946. Particularly, the movies made after 1946 and the end of the war tended to be more forward-looking and socially contemplative. Cameron sites The Beginning or the End? as a film that confonts the moral issues of the day, particularly the decision to drop the atomic bomb and its implications. He also praises Pride of the Marines for counterring the prevailing attitude of portraying war as glorious. Though limited by the Production Code, it attempted to reveal the harsh realities of war, in addition to difficult subject of a returning veteran who suffered an injury that made him blind.
Though The Best Years of Our Lives is never explicitly mentioned in the chapter, one can easily see how it fits into Cameron’s perception of what films were trying to do after the war. Rather than a nostalgic and glorious rendition of the return of war heroes, it examines the lives of three more or less ordinary men, who in their diverstity represent the socio-economic and age spectrum. The film concerns itself not with their heroes’ reception, but with the difficulties and harsh realities to adjusting to life at home, accompanied by alcoholism, adultery, ostracism, and alienation. It is also a socially conscious film, containing cultural critique and commentary in its exploration of questions such, should we have dropped the bomb?, or, did we really fight the good war? Though patriotic in nature, the film does not shy away from interjecting the varying ideas of Americans regarding the war.
belongs to The Best Years of Our Lives project
tagged american_history culture hollywood film
by adesai2
...and 1 other person
...on 06-APR-06
Cameron, Kenneth M., 1931-. America on film : Hollywood and American history / Kenneth M. Cameron. [0826410332 (hardcover : alk. paper)] New York : Continuum, 1997.
Call#: Van Pelt Library PN1995.9.H5 C36 1997
Call#: Van Pelt Library PN1995.9.H5 C36 1997
Chapter 8 deals with American historical films of the 1970’s. Cameron argues that this decade ushered in the decline of traditional histories about 19th century events that focus on “poetic justice and the rightness of America,” and it marked the beginning of a trend for movies to focus on more current issues. A section called Outsiders deals with films about people outside traditional areas of power. All the President’s Men certainly fits this criterion, portraying journalists as the underdogs against the most powerful men in politics.
Cameron states that this film is somewhat narcissistic, perhaps as a result of being based on the book that the main characters had written a couple of years earlier; it uncritically depicts the acts of Bob Woodward and Carl Bernstein and belittles the importance of others’ actions by omission. As Cameron complains “All the President’s Men would have us believe that Woodward, Bernstein, and Ben Bradlee [managing editor of the Washington Post] were all that stood between the republic and its end.” As Toplin also pointed out in his book History by Hollywood, the typewriter at the beginning and end of the film represents a weapon of war against corruption in government, and places the journalist in role of the soldier. Unlike Toplin and Sorlin, Cameron does not excuse the films glorification of Woodward and Bernstein. He asserts that the film tells us more about “the vanity of the filmmakers and of two newsmen” than about the history of the event.
belongs to All the President's Men (1976) project
tagged bob_woodward carl_bernstein film historical_film
by jmklein
...and 1 other person
...on 25-MAR-06


