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Film Genres - Criticism, Sex Role & the Media, Social Themes in Motion Pictures, International Film, Film History & Criticism - General & Miscellaneous, Women and Film
Double Takes by Carolyn A. Durham β€” book cover

Double Takes

by Carolyn A. Durham
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Overview

During the past decade or more the American remake has increasingly characterized Hollywood's relationship with the French cinema, as films ranging from classics like A Bout de Souffle (Breathless) to contemporary comedies like Trois Hommes et un Couffin (Three Men and a Baby) and La Cage aux Folles (Birdcage) are adapted for US screens.

In this comparative, interdisciplinary study Carolyn Durham shows how the remake phenomenon reveals striking differences not just in film theory but also epitomizes larger issues of competition, political and economic tensions, and social, gender, and aesthetic constructs. Durham establishes the metaphor of Euro Disney, which American investors envisioned as the quintessential transcultural entertainment but many French denounced as "a cultural Chernobyl," and then applies it to a close analysis of the films, showing how significant changes between original and remake further our understanding of national identity in both countries. France's belief in its own cultural superiority, she writes, leads to a perceived duty to "disseminate French culture worldwide in the guise of civilisation itself," an attitude that clashes with Hollywood's filmmaking hegemony and its "openness to new ideas, including the foreign." While the central concern is the meaning of cross-cultural differences, this engaging and incisive book also outlines an ongoing battle between a nation convinced of its aesthetic and cultural patrimony and an American industry driven by its own sense of global destiny.

About the Author, Carolyn A. Durham

CAROLYN DURHAM is Inez K. Gaylord Professor of French at the College of Wooster in Ohio and author of The Contexture of Feminism: Marie Cardinal and Multicultural Literacy (1991).

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Editorials

Library Journal

Starting with Godard's A Bout de Souffle (1959), French films have been regularly remade by studios in the United States. Durham (French, Coll. of Wooster, OH) focuses on the narrative structure of recent films (e.g., Three Men and a Baby and The Birdcage) to examine cross-cultural Franco-U.S. sociopolitical differences. She places special emphasis on gender constructs. Although most of the films studied are "popular" films, their cultural translations often underline basic societal visions of gender models, particularly the masculine/feminine polarities. Feminist and gay studies scholars especially will find much useful commentary here, regardless of the lack of "serious" films covered. Recommended for all comprehensive film studies collections.--Anthony J. Adam, Prairie View A&M Univ. Lib., Houston

Book Details

Published
November 30, 1998
Publisher
Hanover, NH : Dartmouth : c1998.
Pages
260
Format
Paperback
ISBN
9780874518740

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