This article offers a study of the phenomenon of automotive destruction in American movies. It offers a critical reading of the spectacular pile-up sequence in The Blues Brothers 2000 (John Landis, 1998) which takes account of the development of screen car crashes from their earliest days in the silent Keystone, Laurel and Hardy shorts and Harold Lloyd features, through to their ubiquitous presence in contemporary Hollywood movies. Screen car crashes testify to both the iconic status of the automobile and the centrality of violence to American culture. This article suggests that the staged accident and the onscreen destruction of the car (the American technological consumer object ne plus ultra) can be read as a ‘working through’ of concern...
International audienceThis article examines the repeated appearance of scenes showing the partial or...
The car and crime become entrenched in the cultural imagination with the widely circulated images of...
This article examines Edgar G. Ulmer\u27s Detour (1945) as an example of film noir\u27s exploration ...
This article offers a study of the phenomenon of automotive destruction in American movies. It offer...
312-314pp The research field is film history. This commissioned chapter on ‘road movies’ and the hu...
This interdisciplinary analysis of America’s car culture is looking at the contemporary cinematic de...
International audienceThis article examines the repeated appearance of scenes showing the partial or...
This article profiles the violence that occurs in the films that compose the most popular (top-gross...
ABSTRACT. This article examines the repeated appearance of scenes showing the partial or complete de...
Tematem artykułu jest motywy samochodu jako ważnego elementu świata przedstawionego w niektórych wiz...
Artists, writers, and filmmakers from Andy Warhol and J. G. Ballard to Alejandro González Iñárritu a...
This article argues that Carnival of Souls (1962), is a foundational text in the ‘Highway Horror’ su...
This article argues that Carnival of Souls (1962), is a foundational text in the ‘Highway Horror’ su...
This dissertation examines the myriad of ways automobility and the cinema are interconnected: how th...
The car and crime become entrenched in the cultural imagination with the widely circulated images of...
International audienceThis article examines the repeated appearance of scenes showing the partial or...
The car and crime become entrenched in the cultural imagination with the widely circulated images of...
This article examines Edgar G. Ulmer\u27s Detour (1945) as an example of film noir\u27s exploration ...
This article offers a study of the phenomenon of automotive destruction in American movies. It offer...
312-314pp The research field is film history. This commissioned chapter on ‘road movies’ and the hu...
This interdisciplinary analysis of America’s car culture is looking at the contemporary cinematic de...
International audienceThis article examines the repeated appearance of scenes showing the partial or...
This article profiles the violence that occurs in the films that compose the most popular (top-gross...
ABSTRACT. This article examines the repeated appearance of scenes showing the partial or complete de...
Tematem artykułu jest motywy samochodu jako ważnego elementu świata przedstawionego w niektórych wiz...
Artists, writers, and filmmakers from Andy Warhol and J. G. Ballard to Alejandro González Iñárritu a...
This article argues that Carnival of Souls (1962), is a foundational text in the ‘Highway Horror’ su...
This article argues that Carnival of Souls (1962), is a foundational text in the ‘Highway Horror’ su...
This dissertation examines the myriad of ways automobility and the cinema are interconnected: how th...
The car and crime become entrenched in the cultural imagination with the widely circulated images of...
International audienceThis article examines the repeated appearance of scenes showing the partial or...
The car and crime become entrenched in the cultural imagination with the widely circulated images of...
This article examines Edgar G. Ulmer\u27s Detour (1945) as an example of film noir\u27s exploration ...