In the 1970s, the higher reaches of film criticism were invaded by an insidious virus of jargon, stemming from the application to the movies of the terminology of largely French-based literary theories, such as Post-Structuralism and semiotics. This resulted in such opaque sentences as: A movement from the film-makers observation to the audiences seeing地t once permits a move towards a metalanguage which can engage with spectator-text relationships and the ways in which documentaries inscribe an audience in their mode of address. (This is from the summer 1978 issue of the quarterly Screen, journal of the Society for Education in Film and Television and locus classicus for such solemn obfuscation.)
From its subtitle, Edward Tomarkens book might appear to be a belated contribution to this unlamented trend; but in the event it aims to be something less hermetic and rather more accessible. Tomarken, an emeritus professor of English literature at Miami University in Ohio, tells us that his inspiration came from his own students who, finding literary theory impossibly abstruse, discovered that the ideas of Jacques Lacan, Michel Foucault, Jacques Derrida et al. made much clearer sense when applied to popular cinema. Or, as one of his students memorably put it: Dr T, Derrida sucks, you should see Kill Bill 2!
Having followed that students brash exhortation, Tomarken now explores the primary theses of Derrida (deconstruction), Foucault (power-knowledge), Wolfgang Iser (reception theory), Lacan (post-Freudianism), Fredric Jameson (post-Marxism) and H矇l癡ne Cixous (post-feminism) via a selection of films released over the past 20 years - among them Quentin Tarantinos Inglourious Basterds and the aforementioned Kill Bill Vol. 2, Woody Allens Deconstructing Harry and Vicky Cristina Barcelona, and a range of other cinematic works including Shakespeare in Love, Lost in Translation, The Devil Wears Prada and The Kings Speech. His choices, he assures us, are all blockbuster mainstays and nothing artsy, although a few subtitled European films do slip through the net, among them Il Postino, Run Lola Run, 插鳥矇梭勳梗 and The Lives of Others.
Popular movies, or blockbuster mainstays, are rarely noted for the profundity or subtlety of their ideas
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As Tomarken readily admits in his introduction, hes no expert on cinema, merely using films as a tool for teaching and learning, so it would be unreasonable to expect any startling cinematic insights from his book. Some of his comments on cinema, indeed, betray a surprising naivety about the whole process of film-making. We may be tempted to believe, he remarks in considering Inglourious Basterds, that a film with fast-paced action and clipped dialogue is largely improvised. On the contrary, a moments thought would suggest that a film of that kind must, of practical and financial necessity, be scripted within an inch of its life. Its the slow-moving, talky, ruminative movies, like the current US indie mumblecore school, that leave room for improvisation.
Still, misapprehensions of this kind hardly detract from the main purpose of the book, which focuses on the teaching of literary theory, not film studies. And if Tomarken finds that popular movies can make for a serviceable teaching aid, more power to his PowerPoint. But popular movies, or blockbuster mainstays, are rarely noted for the profundity or subtlety of their ideas; if they were, they probably wouldnt be so popular. Of course, it doesnt necessarily follow that ideas drawn from shallow artefacts must themselves be shallow. But the risk is there; and when deconstruction, which Tomarken tells us is used as a strategy by all six of his eminent theorists, is defined as nothing more complex or radical than questioning traditional assumptions, we might begin to doubt whether were still swimming in the deep end.
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At one juncture, the author seems about to address this point, suggesting that the reader may feel that my interpretation of the movies goes too far, making more of them than is warranted, particularly considering that they are all commercial ventures, and adding that his students once raised this same objection. He answered them, he tells us, by pointing out that Shakespeare also wrote for money. Whether they were satisfied by this shameless non sequitur he doesnt say.
Film critics sometimes disparagingly refer to mindless crowd-pleasing blockbusters as popcorn movies. The cover of Filmspeak shows a candy-striped book with a mass of popcorn bulging out of the top of its pages. It would be unfair to characterise Tomarkens book in such dismissive terms, of course, but one cant help reflecting that, like the cinema-going publics favourite in-house snack, it contains rather less nourishment than might at first appear.
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