The following article deals with the representation of Hollywood as a dystopian place, for women in particular, where glamour is a utopian façade for both literal and figurative corruption, where the lifespan of an actress is severely limited and the process of discarding “useless” artists is systemically implemented. My main point of reference will be Donald Wolfe’s 1970 Savage Intruder, one of the lesser known hag horrors. Moreover, I will allude to other films exploring a similar motif, not to mention Angela Carter’s 1977 novel entitled The Passion of New Eve, which also analyzes the falseness of Hollywood and its capacity for dystopia
In this article, I claim that Sam Mendes' Revolutionary Road is a recent version of the film genre t...
This article analyses how the protagonists of films such as Saturday Night and Sunday Morning (1959)...
Referring to the discussion on the critical potential of dystopias in fiction, the article examines ...
The following article deals with the representation of Hollywood as a dystopian place, for women in ...
This article highlights that the new visibility of older female Hollywood stars is fully bound up in...
As a recent article on The Raw Story suggests, contemporary filmmakers are becoming more interested ...
Any effort to assess, analyze, or even describe “Hollywood” inevitably begins with a definitional di...
The article offers a reading of three recent Hollywood films, There Will Be Blood (Anderson), No Cou...
Conventional literary and filmic representations of the American suburbs depict a space that is eith...
The passage from novel to film is often a difficult one. When it comes to feminist fiction, the prob...
Unlike more celebrated Hollywood-on-Hollywood films, Walter Wanger’s neglected screwball comedy Stan...
The article continues researching the apocalypse film genre. The first results of such research were...
International audienceThis article examines the repeated appearance of scenes showing the partial or...
The present paper modestly attempts to study Angela Carter’s Heroes and Villains (1969) as a dystopi...
Utopian literary expressions are typically hopeful narratives that depict a socialist society as the...
In this article, I claim that Sam Mendes' Revolutionary Road is a recent version of the film genre t...
This article analyses how the protagonists of films such as Saturday Night and Sunday Morning (1959)...
Referring to the discussion on the critical potential of dystopias in fiction, the article examines ...
The following article deals with the representation of Hollywood as a dystopian place, for women in ...
This article highlights that the new visibility of older female Hollywood stars is fully bound up in...
As a recent article on The Raw Story suggests, contemporary filmmakers are becoming more interested ...
Any effort to assess, analyze, or even describe “Hollywood” inevitably begins with a definitional di...
The article offers a reading of three recent Hollywood films, There Will Be Blood (Anderson), No Cou...
Conventional literary and filmic representations of the American suburbs depict a space that is eith...
The passage from novel to film is often a difficult one. When it comes to feminist fiction, the prob...
Unlike more celebrated Hollywood-on-Hollywood films, Walter Wanger’s neglected screwball comedy Stan...
The article continues researching the apocalypse film genre. The first results of such research were...
International audienceThis article examines the repeated appearance of scenes showing the partial or...
The present paper modestly attempts to study Angela Carter’s Heroes and Villains (1969) as a dystopi...
Utopian literary expressions are typically hopeful narratives that depict a socialist society as the...
In this article, I claim that Sam Mendes' Revolutionary Road is a recent version of the film genre t...
This article analyses how the protagonists of films such as Saturday Night and Sunday Morning (1959)...
Referring to the discussion on the critical potential of dystopias in fiction, the article examines ...