Thursday, November 14, 2019
Film Analysis of All That Heaven Allows Essays -- Papers Movie Film Ci
Film Analysis of All That Heaven Allows         Chosen sequence: Golden Rain Tree/Cary's bedroom scene.       Before the emergence of 'auteur theory' the director Douglas Sirk was     a renowned exponent of classical Hollywood narrative, particularly in     the genre of romantic melodrama, of which his film All That Heaven     Allows is a classic example. However, he is now regarded as a master     of mise-en-scene, one of the few tools left to a director working     within the constraints of the Hollywood studio/institutional system     who is now thought to have been highly critical of American mainstream     culture and society in this prosperous era. 1, 2       The 'Golden Rain Tree' sequence occurs early on in the film after the     opening panoramic, establishing shot - showing the scene of the     action, a small middle-class New England town in autumn. The main     protagonists are soon introduced of which the prime causal agent is an     unsettled woman, Cary Scott (Jane Wyman), in keeping with romantic     melodrama. As a widow, she is a victim of circumstance who is eager to     change her life. Her friend visits (Mona) and hopes to persuade Cary     to take a conventional route out of widowhood but, by chance, she     meets the gardener, Ron Kirby (Rock Hudson) and from the mise-en-scene     in these opening scenes it is obvious that she would prefer a romantic     affiliation of some sort with Ron. After a few pleasantries, some tea     at the table outside Cary's house and some profound references to     gardening, Ron goes to hand Cary a small brance/twig, evidently a     token of deep affection.       The film so far displays all the conventions of classical narrative     and maintains all the dominant ideologies o...              ...lassical narrative cinema. In Being There, the character     and motives of Gardiner are made much clearer to the viewer through     the imaginative use of mise-en-scene, as illustrated above.     NOTES       1. Carroll. Essay The Moral Ecology of Melodrama: The Family Plot and     Magnificent Obsession. p. 170.       2. Cook. p. 76-79.       BIBLIOGRAPHY       An Introduction to Film Studies Jill Nelmes (ed.) Routledge 1996       Anatomy of Film Bernard H. Dick St. Martins Press 1998       Key Concepts in Cinema Studies Susan Hayward Routledge 1996       Teach Yourself Film Studies Warren Buckland Hodder & Stoughton 1998       Interpreting the Moving Image Noel Carroll Cambridge University Press     1998       The Cinema Book Pam Cook (ed.) BFI 1985       FILMOGRAPHY       All That Heaven Allows Dir. Douglas Sirk Universal 1955       Being There Dir. Hal Ashby 1979                        
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