American Film Cycles: Reframing Genres, Screening Social Problems, and Defining Subcultures

American Film Cycles: Reframing Genres, Screening Social Problems, and Defining Subcultures

by Amanda Ann Klein (Author)

Synopsis

A series of movies that share images, characters, settings, plots, or themes, film cycles have been an industrial strategy since the beginning of cinema. While some have viewed them as subgenres, mini-genres, or nascent film genres, Amanda Ann Klein argues that film cycles are an entity in their own right and a subject worthy of their own study. She posits that film cycles retain the marks of their historical, economic, and generic contexts and therefore can reveal much about the state of contemporary politics, prevalent social ideologies, aesthetic trends, popular desires, and anxieties.

American Film Cycles presents a series of case studies of successful film cycles, including the melodramatic gangster films of the 1920s, the 1930s Dead End Kids cycle, the 1950s juvenile delinquent teenpic cycle, and the 1990s ghetto action cycle. Klein situates these films in several historical trajectories-the Progressive movement of the 1910s and 1920s, the beginnings of America's involvement in World War II, the birth of the teenager in the 1950s, and the drug and gangbanger crises of the early 1990s. She shows how filmmakers, audiences, film reviewers, advertisements, and cultural discourses interact with and have an impact on the film texts. Her findings illustrate the utility of the film cycle in broadening our understanding of established film genres, articulating and building upon beliefs about contemporary social problems, shaping and disseminating deviant subcultures, and exploiting and reflecting upon racial and political upheaval.

$33.59

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More Information

Format: Paperback
Pages: 255
Edition: Reprint
Publisher: University of Texas Press
Published: 10 Dec 2012

ISBN 10: 0292747608
ISBN 13: 9780292747609
Book Overview: Exploring how political sentiments, popular desires, and social anxieties have been reflected in movies from the Dead End Kids serial to the ghetto action flicks of the 1990s, this book offers the first full-length study of the American film cycle and its relation to film genres and contemporary social issues

Media Reviews
One sign of a successful work of scholarship is, oddly enough, that it inspires readers to think about other things, drawing connections from the book's topics to issues that might be more within the reader's own frame of reference and research interests. Thus American Film Cycles is a great book to think with, making a convincing case for the importance of cycles in film history beyond just her particular case studies, and highlighting how the study of cycles can strengthen our understanding of a range of issues, including cultural representations, taboo topics, censorship, production strategies, and fan subcultures. In short, Klein's engagingly-written book should become a must-read for scholars and students interested in film history and the role of genre, and will hopefully inspire further explorations of cycles as a vital aspect of understanding film and media. * Cinema Journal *
But as a work in its own right, American Film Cycles is plenty compelling....It is Klein's achievement to not only suggest a new evolutionary model for the way topical movies operate, but also to sketch a plausible symbiosis between movies, studios, and audiences that offers fresh insights into both the film industry and the larger society. It remains for other writers to pick up her example, and apply to it additional film cycles, moving beyond the current author's necessary limited focus on films dealing with the fears and fascinations of American urban life. * Cineaste *
As one of the first scholars to directly confront the phenomenon of film cycles, Klein makes a compelling argument for other scholars to continue to address the subject head on. * The Velvet Light Trap *
The strength of American Film Cycles is its precise and thorough intervention in genre studies with a new form of taxonomy and analysis. * The Velvet Light Trap *
Author Bio
Amanda Ann Klein is an associate professor of film studies at East Carolina University.