For three decades, no American filmmaker has been as prolific --
or as paradoxical -- as Woody Allen. From Play It Again, Sam (1972)
through Celebrity (1998) and Sweet and Lowdown (1999), Allen has
produced an average of one film a year, yet in many of these films
Allen reveals a progressively skeptical attitude toward both the
value of art and the cultural contributions of artists. In
examining Allen's filmmaking career, The Reluctant Film Art of
Woody Allen demonstrates that his movies often question whether the
projected illusions of magicians/artists benefit audience or
artists. Other Allen films dramatize the opposed conviction that
the consoling, life-redeeming illusions of art are the best
solution humanity has devised to the existential dilemma of being a
death-foreseeing animal. Peter Bailey demonstrates how Allen's
films repeatedly revisit and reconfigure this tension between image
and reality, art and life, fabrication and factuality, with each
film reaching provisional resolutions that a subsequent movie will
revise. Merging criticism and biography, Bailey identifies Allen's
ambivalent views of the artistic enterprise as a key to
understanding his entire filmmaking career. Because of its focus
upon filmmaker Sandy Bates's conflict between entertaining
audiences and confronting them with bleak human actualities,
Stardust Memories is a central focus of the book. Bailey's
examination of Allen's art/life dialectic also draws from the off
screen drama of Allen's very public separation from Mia Farrow, and
the book accordingly construes such post-scandal films as Bullets
Over Broadway and Mighty Aphrodite as Allen's oblique cinematic
responses to that tabloid tempest. By illuminating the thematic
conflict at the heart of Allen's work, Bailey seeks not only to
clarify the aesthetic designs of individual Allen films but to
demonstrate how his oeuvre enacts an ongoing debate the
screenwriter/director has been conducting with himself between
creating cinematic narratives affirming the saving powers of the
human imagination and making films acknowledging the irresolvably
dark truths of the human condition.
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