American Eccentric Cinema

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American Eccentric Cinema
Years activeEarly-1990s–present
CountryUnited States
Influences
  • New Hollywood
  • Art film
  • Experimental film
  • Independent Film

American Eccentric Cinema is a mode of contemporary American filmmaking that emerged in what has been termed the metamodern or New Sincerity. Its attachment to indie cinema has led some to consider it a movement and genre of cinema in the United States. Its key filmmakers, including Wes Anderson, Charlie Kaufman, and Spike Jonze, are at times referred to as "The American Eccentrics". It occurred during the 1990s and 2000s, when indie directors sought to create films that diverted from the style and content of Hollywood franchise films.[1] American Eccentric Cinema came in opposition to the mainstream ideas of formulaic narratives[2] and the digitisation within films and new technologies that came about during the time period.[3] American eccentric cinema is marked by films that are “deeply concerned with ethics and morality, the obligations of the individual, the effects of family breakdown, and social alienation."[3]

Background[]

American Eccentric Cinema is critically conceived in response to traditional Hollywood and films of popular culture[1] which often had clear, predictable characters and narratives. American Eccentric Cinema has been framed as influenced by the New Hollywood era.[1] Both traditions have similar themes and narratives of existentialism and the need for human interaction.[1] New Hollywood focuses on the darker elements of humanity and society within the context of the American Dream in the mid-1960s to the early 1980s.[1] with themes that were reflective of sociocultural issues and were centered around the potential meaninglessness of pursuing the American Dream as generation upon generation motivated to possess it.[1] In comparison, American Eccentric Cinema does not have a distinct context, its films show characters who are very individual and their concerns are very distinctive to their own personalities.[1] American Eccentric cinema is considered a shift in contemporary American cinema in the 1990s and 2000s driven by metamodern philosophical and moral beliefs. Far Out Magazine critic, Swapnil Dhruv Bose, writes that "As a response to the suffocating excesses of the mainstream, many directors sought to examine the alienation imposed by modernity through fresh perspectives and unconventional methods. Although the creative consciousnesses of the artists vary to a great extent, their works have been collectively labelled as the ‘American Eccentric Cinema’ movement".[4]

American Eccentric Cinema is also known as "American Smart Cinema",[5] a tradition delineated by Jeffrey Sconce and Claire Perkins. Both film traditions consist mostly of American indie films from the 1990s and 2000s and have similar aesthetic strategies, particularly the focus on irony. However, as Kim Wilkins notes, despite the crossovers between the two forms of cinema, American eccentricity "uses irony not primarily for its tonal qualities but, rather, for dramatic and thematic functions."[6]

At a period of American history where postwar communities were growing older, many ideals were being re-evaluated and looked at critically in American Eccentric Cinema.[3] The genre's films look at emotions and where they come from as well as expectations for what a happy life should be.[3] American Eccentric Cinema sees happiness as not necessarily being in a domestic life; in a marriage or family. The filmmakers of the genre were influenced by their own lives where their perception of the domestic world could include feelings and emotions of "abandonment, alienation and frustration."[3]

The film tradition also takes influences from Postmodernism through the movement's attitudes of irony and sensations of "detachment" to society.[1] But whilst filmmakers of American Eccentric Cinema position themselves in a critical manner, they also strive to create significant and unique art forms through various techniques and film features employed.[1]

Films of American Eccentric cinema are also made around the before, during and after phases of the September 11 attacks where social desires were primarily concerned with being safe and secure.[3] At this time the rights and principles of American liberalism were being challenged and ideas of existentialism were common within art.[3]

Characteristics[]

While American eccentric cinema films have distinct individual and stylistic visions, they share common themes and textual practices. American Eccentric Cinema are concerned around an individual's internal dilemmas and existentialism as a human being, regardless of the context.[3] The film techniques of the genre use aspects of mainstream cinema but alter the mainstream conventions slightly through characterisation, tone and style.[3] American Eccentric cinema is also known for its use of inter-textual references, quotations and irony.[3] By doing this, an audience's expectation of what may happen is subverted.[3] Filmmakers go into the depth of a protagonist's journey finding their sense of self as the narrative.[3]

American Eccentric Cinema falls within 'Independent Cinema' culture .[1] Independent Cinema are types of films whose conventions oppose to Hollywood mainstream films[7] with characteristics such as no "forwardmoving narrative drive" where the structure is not as ordered or bound by a sense of needed fast pace.[7] Characters in Eccentric cinema divert from those in Mainstream Hollywood of being comprehensible[7] with journeys having a distinct beginning, complicated middle and happy ending. 'Indie' characters, as well as American Eccentric Cinema characters, do not necessarily have goals to achieve in the films, or feel defined by them, and a sense of strength of morality may not be as present.[7]

This type of cinema has been called "quirky", "cute" and "smart".[8]

There are many alternate methods of exploring romantic love and sexuality within American Eccentric Cinema. The films explore gender roles as changing and often take a postfeminist stance.[3] Characters often challenge and explore the expectations of marriage prior to the 1990s within the narrative as well as the complexities of sex and how society views it.[3] Most characters are heterosexual and the complications of love are dealt with from the man-woman relationship perspective.[3] However, director Todd Haynes, whom Swapnil Dhruv Bose labels a pioneer of the American Eccentric movement, [9] comes as an exception as he explores LGBT relationships, with films that were part of the beginning of the New Queer Cinema movement.[3]

Race is not explored as prevalently within American Eccentric films.[3]According to Jesse Fox Mayshark portrayals of characters of a different race, that is not white, are categorised within a "comic ethnic type".[3] Mayshark perceives lack of diversity as a direct correlation within the genre's directors being primarily white Americans who may think of "other races and cultures" as only outsiders, alien in their comedic nature.[3] Kim Wilkins states that to date the politics and style of American Eccentric Cinema has been informed by the overwhelmingly white male middle-upper demographic of its key filmmakers. She writes "The focus in American eccentric films (like those in the “smart” tendency) on “white male urban sophisticates” situates them as a form of “men’s cinema,” in Stella Bruzzi’s terms. While neither existential anxiety nor irony is, in reality, the sovereign domain of white men, their cinematic articulation in the key films of the American eccentric mode, such as P.T. Anderson’s Magnolia or Punch Drunk Love, David O. Russell’s I Heart Huckabees or films by Wes Anderson or Charlie Kaufman, has largely evolved as a form “grounded in the relationship between, masculinity—its ideology as well as its representation—and aesthetics.” Indeed, many of these films position masculinity as bound to the inability to directly articulate anxiety. Thus, the use of irony in these films—both by characters and through aesthetic and formal strategies—is conveyed as a particularly masculine strategy; a means by which “ugly” feelings can be repackaged as intellectual gameplay while simultaneously begging to be recognized for what it truly is."[10] She goes on to note that the focus on white, urban, heterosexual men in American Eccentric Cinema adds to its relationship with neoliberalism: "It cannot be ignored that the protagonists of American eccentric films are not only male but, on the whole, tend come from socioeconomically privileged backgrounds. The socioeconomic (and gendered) status of these characters situates them as those most likely to succeed within capitalist systems. Unlike indie films within realist modes, such as the neorealist works of Kelly Reichardt or Sean Baker’s The Florida Project (2017), American eccentric cinema does not tend to portray characters at crossroads where decisions made or changing circumstances have the capacity to fundamentally affect their livelihoods, safety, or personal agency. Often the absurd narrative goals of characters are only possible within these films because these characters are not beholden to the financial imperatives that drive more naturalistic characters toward what may be considered more realistic goals."[11]

Politics is explored within the films, through the characters and their journeys.[3] Rather than preaching political messages and creating controversial debates about political issues, they create subtle means to explore politics.[3] Major events such as the September 11 attacks meant that the sense of American uncertainty that was pervading the national was reflected in themes such as self-doubt and insecurity within the characters.[3]

Interpretations on defining the genre[]

Scholars Kim Wilkins and Jesse Fox Mayshark have written extensively on American Eccentric Cinema and its place within film genre in their books: American Eccentric Cinema[1] and Post-Pop Cinema: The Search for Meaning in New American Film.[3]

Kim Wilkins, a film scholar at the University of Oslo, maintains that American eccentricity is a mode rather than a genre.[12] She demarcates five criteria for the American eccentric mode: "1 the presence of allusion, parody, and intertextuality formally (in terms of genre and meta-cinematic depiction) and playfulness/cinephilia; 2 sincere thematic underpinnings that are presented at a distance due to the film’s perceived “quirkiness,” amusing occurrences, and/or absurd aesthetic; 3 a form of ironic expression that is both reflexive and sincere; 4 characters and cinematic worlds that are designed to encourage audience alignment despite being clearly constructed; and, above all 5 affective and intellectual engagement with an experience of existential anxiety". Wilkins analyses these textual tactics through four analytic lens—genre (with a focus on the road film), characterization, hyper-dialogue, and eccentric worlds. Although Wilkins states that American eccentricity is not an auteurist demarcation, she pays particular attention to the films of Spike Jonze and Wes Anderson.[13] Wilkins explains that there is a distinct relationship between Neoliberalism and American Eccentric Cinema.[1] Neoliberalism is a set of principles proposing "that human well-being can be best advanced by liberating entrepreneurial freedoms and skills".[14] In a neoliberal world, the person will constantly be shifting and altering facets of their life such as expertise and abilities and even their own sense of self to keep up with what is happening within the economy.[15] Within American Eccentric films, this idea of neoliberalism aligns to the films' desire to portray individuals as their own selves rather than purely "national or community citizens".[1] Wilkins states that because of this, and individuals not belonging in a community, it provides a foundation for many existential tensions and anxieties that are explored in the films.[1] Thus, she concludes that American Eccentric cinema responds to neoliberalism, as well as the existential concerns that were present during the New Hollywood era through means that are presented as ahistoric and primarily concerned with the characters' own experiences rather than broader socio-cultural or political concerns.[1]

Jesse Fox Mayshark, an editor at the New York Times, [16][3] writes on American Eccentric Cinema filmmakers and analyses specific films within the genre. Mayshark says that the group of filmmakers were not explicitly categorised within any genre at the beginning of the movement because their films were extremely niche and individual, with vary styles and conventions. Their work defied convention and saw a new-found exploration of dark human themes through being idiosyncratic and individual.[3] They wanted the audience to feel like they were a part of the stories and have a "transcendent connection."[3]

As technologies emerge so to have discussions surrounding the expansion of the Independent Cinema genre and subsequently, American Eccentric Cinema. In a 1999 keynote address at the Independent Spirit Awards in California, screenwriter and film producer, James Schamus “voiced the common concern that” commercial and major studios’ “empires would ultimately threaten the existence” of Independent Cinema.[17] “In Schmaus’ evaluation, independent film is...in decline” however, other commentators see evolution and cultural “transition…to give way to new and different possibilities.”[17]

List of notable films[]

Title Year Director
Marie Antoinette[18] 2006 Sofia Coppola
Bottle Rocket[3] 1996 Wes Anderson
Boogie Nights[3] 1997 Paul Thomas Anderson
Slacker[3] 1990 Richard Linklater
Dazed and Confused[3] 1993 Richard Linklater
Poison[3] 1991 Todd Haynes
Safe[3] 1995 Todd Haynes
Spanking the Monkey[3] 1994 David O. Russell
Flirting with Disaster[3] 1996 David O. Russell
Being John Malkovich[3] 1999 Spike Jonze
Adaptation[3] 2002 Spike Jonze
Human Nature[3] 2001 Michel Gondry
Eternal Sunshine of the Spotless Mind[3] 2004 Michel Gondry
Fight Club[3] 1999 David Fincher
Lost in Translation[3] 2003 Sofia Coppola
Donnie Darko[3] 2001 Richard Kelly
Your Friends & Neighbors[3] 1998 Neil LaBute
The Life Aquatic with Steve Zissou[3] 2004 Wes Anderson
The Squid and the Whale[3] 2005 Noah Baumbach
Citizen Ruth[3] 1996 Alexander Payne
Election[3] 1999 Alexander Payne
About Schmidt[3] 2002 Alexander Payne
Sideways[3] 2004 Alexander Payne
Before Sunrise[3] 1995 Richard Linklater
I Heart Huckabees[3] 2004 David O. Russell
Waking Life[3] 2001 Richard Linklater
Magnolia[3] 1999 Paul Thomas Anderson
Velvet Goldmine[3] 1998 Todd Haynes
Far From Heaven[3] 2002 Todd Haynes
Anomalisa[1] 2015 Charlie Kaufman and Duke Johnson
Happiness[17] 1998 Todd Solondz
Very Bad Things[17] 1998 Peter Berg
Storytelling[17] 2001 Todd Solondz
Welcome to the Dollhouse[17] 1995 Todd Solondz
In the Company of Men[17] 1997 Neil LaBute
The Unbelievable Truth[17] 1989 Hal Hartley
Trust[17] 1990 Hal Hartley
Henry Fool[17] 1997 Hal Hartley
Simple Men[19] 1992 Hal Hartley
The Ice Storm[17] 1997 Ang Lee
2 Days in the Valley[20] 1996 John Herzfeld
Rushmore[20] 1998 Wes Anderson
The Royal Tenenbaums[20] 2001 Wes Anderson
The Sweet Hereafter[20] 1997 Atom Egoyan
Punch-Drunk Love[21] 2002 Paul Thomas Anderson
The Grand Budapest Hotel[22] 2014 Wes Anderson
Damsels in Distress[23] 2011 Whit Stillman
Juno[24] 2007 Jason Reitman
Synecdoche, New York[25] 2008 Charlie Kaufman
Lady Bird[26] 2017 Greta Gerwig
The Darjeeling Limited[27] 2007 Wes Anderson
Barcelona[28] 1994 Whit Stillman
The Last Days of Disco[29] 1998 Whit Stillman
The Chumscrubber[30] 2005 Arie Posin
Metropolitan[31] 1990 Whit Stillman
The Savages[32] 2007 Tamara Jenkins
Ghost World[33] 2001 Terry Zwigoff
Clerks[34] 1994 Kevin Smith
Palindromes[35] 2004 Todd Solondz

List of notable figures[]

Filmmakers[]

Actors[]

  • Ben Stiller[3]
  • Mark Wahlberg[3]
  • Bill Murray[3]
  • Julianne Moore[3]
  • Jason Schwartzman[3]
  • Owen Wilson[3]
  • Luke Wilson[3]
  • Elliot Page[45]
  • Frances McDormand[3]
  • Tilda Swinton[3]
  • Anjelica Huston[3]
  • Adrien Brody[3]
  • Adam Sandler[46]
  • Scarlett Johansson[47][48]

Legacy[]

Rushmore, Slacker and Clerks were each inducted into the National Film Registry.[49]

Three films of Wes Anderson (Grand Budapest Hotel, Royal Tenenbaums and Moonrise Kingdom) alongside Before Sunset, Lost in Translation, Eternal Sunshine of the Spotless Mind, Far From Heaven and Synecdoche, New York were listed on the BBC's 100 Greatest Films of the 21st Century.[50][51][52]

References[]

  1. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p Wilkins, Kim. American eccentric cinema. ISBN 978-1-5013-3694-2. OCLC 1090782214.
  2. ^ Wilson, D. Harlan (2010). Walters, James (ed.). "Diegetics of Mainstream Hollywood". Science Fiction Studies. 37 (1): 143–145. ISSN 0091-7729. JSTOR 40649603.
  3. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z aa ab ac ad ae af ag ah ai aj ak al am an ao ap aq ar as at au av aw ax ay az ba bb bc bd be bf bg bh bi bj bk bl bm bn bo bp bq br bs bt bu bv bw bx by bz ca cb Mayshark, Jesse Fox. (2007). Post-pop cinema : the search for meaning in new American film. Praeger Publishers. ISBN 978-0-313-08141-5. OCLC 231678018.
  4. ^ 10 essential films from the 'American Eccentric Cinema' movement|Far Out Magazine
  5. ^ American Smart Cinema - Claire Elizabeth Perkins - Google Books
  6. ^ American Eccentric Cinema, by Kim Wilkins. Bloomsbury Academic, 2019, 214 pp.
  7. ^ a b c d King, Geoff (2005). American independent cinema. Bloomington: Indiana University Press. ISBN 0-253-34702-5. OCLC 61455170.
  8. ^ American Eccentric Cinema - Google Books
  9. ^ 15 brilliant LGBTQ+ filmmakers you need to know|Far Out Magazine
  10. ^ Wilkins, Kim. American Eccentric Cinema First edition. London ;: Bloomsbury Academic, 2019. (page 39).
  11. ^ Wilkins, Kim. American Eccentric Cinema First edition. London ;: Bloomsbury Academic, 2019. (page 40)
  12. ^ Wilkins, Kim. American Eccentric Cinema. Bloomsbury Publishing USA, 2019.
  13. ^ Dixon, W.W. "Wilkins, Kim. American eccentric cinema." CHOICE: Current Reviews for Academic Libraries, vol. 56, no. 11, 2019, p. 1359+. Gale Literature Resource Center, link.gale.com/apps/doc/A593352438/LitRC?u=oslo&sid=LitRC&xid=828be7c7. Accessed 26 May 2021.
  14. ^ Harvey, David (2007). A brief history of neoliberalism. Oxford: Oxford University Press. ISBN 978-0-19-153618-2. OCLC 138749545.
  15. ^ Meeuf, Russell (2017-03-28). Rebellious bodies : stardom, citizenship, and the new body politics (First ed.). Austin, TX. ISBN 978-1-4773-1180-6. OCLC 956947588.
  16. ^ "Jesse Fox Mayshark". Linkedin.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: url-status (link)
  17. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n Perkins, Claire (Claire Elizabeth) (2012). American smart cinema. Edinburgh: Edinburgh University Press. ISBN 978-0-7486-4654-8. OCLC 827944898.
  18. ^ Kim Wilkins, American Eccentric Cinema - OpenEdition Journals
  19. ^ Wilkins, Kim. American Eccentric Cinema. Bloomsbury Publishing USA, 2019 (pgs.127-8).
  20. ^ a b c d e Sconce, Jeffrey (2002-12-01). "Irony, nihilism and the new American 'smart' film". Screen. 43 (4): 349–369. doi:10.1093/screen/43.4.349. ISSN 0036-9543.
  21. ^ Kim Wilkins, American Eccentric Cinema - OpenEdition Journals
  22. ^ Kim Wilkins, American Eccentric Cinema - OpenEdition Journals
  23. ^ Wilkins, Kim. American Eccentric Cinema. Bloomsbury Publishing USA, 2019 (pg.96-7).
  24. ^ Wilkins, Kim. American Eccentric Cinema. Bloomsbury Publishing USA, 2019 (pg.124-5).
  25. ^ Wilkins, Kim. American Eccentric Cinema. Bloomsbury Publishing USA, 2019 (pg.150)
  26. ^ Wilkins, Kim. American Eccentric Cinema. Bloomsbury Publishing USA, 2019 (pgs.189-90).
  27. ^ Wilkins, Kim. American Eccentric Cinema. Bloomsbury Publishing USA, 2019 (pg.116).
  28. ^ Wilkins, Kim. American Eccentric Cinema. Bloomsbury Publishing USA, 2019 (pg.148).
  29. ^ American Smart Cinema - Claire Elizabeth Perkins - Google Books
  30. ^ American smart cinema / Claire Perkins | National Library of Australia
  31. ^ Wilkins, Kim. American Eccentric Cinema. Bloomsbury Publishing USA, 2019 (pg.150).
  32. ^ American Smart Cinema - Claire Elizabeth Perkins - Google Books
  33. ^ American Smart Cinema - Claire Elizabeth Perkins - Google Books
  34. ^ American Smart Cinema by Claire Perkins – Senses of Cinema
  35. ^ American Smart Cinema - Claire Elizabeth Perkins - Google Books
  36. ^ Wilkins, Kim. American Eccentric Cinema. Bloomsbury Publishing USA, 2019 (pg.148).
  37. ^ Wilkins, Kim. American Eccentric Cinema. Bloomsbury Publishing USA, 2019 (pg.39).
  38. ^ Kim. American Eccentric Cinema. Bloomsbury Publishing USA, 2019 (pg.39).
  39. ^ Kim. American Eccentric Cinema. Bloomsbury Publishing USA, 2019 (pg.39).
  40. ^ Wilkins, Kim. American Eccentric Cinema. Bloomsbury Publishing USA, 2019 (pg.182).
  41. ^ Wilkins, Kim. American Eccentric Cinema. Bloomsbury Publishing USA, 2019 (pg.182).
  42. ^ Wilkins, Kim. American Eccentric Cinema. Bloomsbury Publishing USA, 2019 (pg.50).
  43. ^ Wilkins, Kim. American Eccentric Cinema. Bloomsbury Publishing USA, 2019 (pg.124-5).
  44. ^ American Smart Cinema by Claire Perkins – Senses of Cinema
  45. ^ Wilkins, Kim. American Eccentric Cinema. Bloomsbury Publishing USA, 2019 (pg.124-5).
  46. ^ 10 essential films from the 'American Eccentric Cinema' movement|Far Out Magazine
  47. ^ 10 essential films from the 'American Eccentric Cinema' movement|Far Out Magazine
  48. ^ America's 50 best independent movies|AV Club
  49. ^ Brief Descriptions and Expanded Essays of National Film Registry Titles|Library of Congress
  50. ^ The 21st Century's 100 greatest films - BBC Culture
  51. ^ BBC unveils 100 Best Movies of the 21st Century List|Collider
  52. ^ Are These the 100 Best Movies of the 21st Century?|Vanity Fair

See also[]

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