L295 25926 AMERICAN FILM CULTURE
Jocelyn Marsh
2:30p-3:45p MW (30 students) 3 cr., A&H.
Film screenings 7:15p-10:00p M
TOPIC: "American Mirrors"
The American cinema has been both a crucible and a reflecting pool
for American culture for more than a century. This course
investigates great historical cruxes and enduring cultural complexes
of the twentieth century in the light of the great films that both
represented and re-envisioned them. In each unit, study of our
central film text will work side by side with study of relevant, and
sometimes urgent, literary and print material (including Joseph
Conrad's Heart of Darkness, an exemplary dime Western,
publicity materials, script extracts, and newspaper reports on
lynching) as well as secondary films, shorts, and substantial clips
(from works by, among others, Von Stroheim, Gloria Swanson, King
Vidor, John Ford, Howard Hawks, and Stanley Kubrick). Topics and
central films will be: race hatred and the legacy of the Civil War in
D.W. Griffith's 1915 masterwork, The Birth of a Nation (the
foundational text of modern cinema and a recruiting tool for the Ku
Klux Klan); the killing fields of Flanders and the trauma of World
War I as envisioned in Lewis Milestone’s All Quiet on the Western
Front (1930); mechanized city life and the plight of the
urban "Tramp" in Chaplin's Modern Times (1936); the
Hollywood "Dream Factory" run amuck in Billy Wilder's cynical film
noir, Sunset Boulevard (1950); sex, violence, and Freudian
gender relations in Hitchcock's Vertigo (1958); Sergio Leone's
satirical extravaganza Once Upon a Time in the West (1969),
American frontier-lust, and the American Western genre; Francis Ford
Coppola's Vietnam revisiting of Conrad's British Imperialist
nightmare in Apocalypse Now (1979); and Ridley Scott’s
dystopian return to the themes of Frankenstein in the film
noir, urban-gothic, sci-fi classic Blade Runner. Mandatory
weekly screenings (Monday, 7:15p-10:00p); mandatory discussion
questions; two midterms, paper, and final.