Starting in the early 1990s, artists such as Quentin Tarantino,
David Foster Wallace, and Kurt Cobain contributed to a swelling
cultural tide of pop postmodernism that swept through music, film,
literature, and fashion. In cinema in particular, some of the art's
most fundamental aspects--stories, characters, and genres, for
instance--assumed such a trite and trivialized appearance that only
rarely could they take their places on the screen without provoking
an inward smirk or a wink from the audience. In horror films,
characters knew what was coming next from having already studied
the horror genre themselves; in Westerns, new plots developed out
of an assortment of old ones; and in action features, few heroes
came without a strong hint of the anti-hero as well. Out of this
highly self-conscious and world-weary environment, however, a new
group of filmmakers began to develop as the decade wore on, with a
new set of styles and sensibilities to match. In Post-Pop Cinema
author Jesse Fox Mayshark takes us on a film-by-film tour of the
works of Wes and P. T. Anderson, Sofia Coppola, Richard Linklater,
Alexander Payne, and David O. Russell, and reveals how a common
pool of styles, collaborators, and personal connections helps them
to confront the unifying problem of meaning in American film. Wes
Anderson's Bottle Rocket (1996) and Paul Thomas Anderson's Boogie
Nights (1997) were ultimately about their characters' lives-even
though their characters often dealt with highly contrived
environments and situations. And soon after Wes Anderson scored his
first success, others like David O. Russell (Flirting With
Disaster, Three Kings), the screenwriter Charlie Kaufman (who
collaborated with SpikeJonze on such projects as Being John
Malkovich and Adaptation), Alexander Payne (Election, Sideways),
Richard Kelly (Donnie Darko), and Sofia Coppola (Lost in
Translation) began to tread their own paths over this same ground.
Although these men and women represent a wide range of styles and
subject matter, all their films revolve in different ways around
the difficulty of establishing and maintaining connections. This
theme of connection also runs deeper than the films made: the
directors share actors (Mark Wahlberg, Bill Murray, Ben Stiller,
Jason Schwartzman), collaborators (the musician Jon Brion) and
sometimes even personal connections (Spike Jonze starred in
Russell's Three Kings, and was married to Coppola). Together these
filmmakers form a loose and distinctly American school of
filmmaking, one informed by postmodernism but not in thrall to it,
and one that every year becomes more important to the world of
cinema both within and beyond the United States. Author Jesse Fox
Mayshark has been reviewing these filmmakers from their debut
features to the present day This book represents not only the first
prolonged study devoted to several of these very important
filmmakers, but also the first effort to chronicle the efforts of
this group as a whole
General
Imprint: |
Praeger Publishers Inc
|
Country of origin: |
United States |
Release date: |
May 2007 |
First published: |
May 2007 |
Authors: |
Jesse Fox Mayshark
|
Dimensions: |
235 x 156 x 21mm (L x W x T) |
Format: |
Hardcover
|
Pages: |
208 |
ISBN-13: |
978-0-275-99080-0 |
Categories: |
Books >
Arts & Architecture >
General
|
LSN: |
0-275-99080-X |
Barcode: |
9780275990800 |
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