Dunkirk and the Battlefield Gothic (original) (raw)

The Aesthetic Pleasure of the War Film Interrupted

This paper examines five American war films (Green Zone, The Hurt Locker, Body of Lies, Rendition, and Jarhead) with stories distinctly counter to the dominant war, government, and soldier narratives promoted by government and mass media. Each of these films, although commercial failures in the U.S., serves as an example of the very acts of defiance of pro-war propaganda and the counter thinking that is called for by the scholarly work that grounds my analysis: James Der Derian’s Virtuous War, Judith Butler’s Frames of War, and Peace Journalism, War and Conflict Resolution (eds. Keeble, Tulloch, and Zollman). As such, the films can be viewed as a powerful interruption to the status quo useful tools for exploring the role of fiction, media, “truth,” and memory in a networked age.

Ground_breaking expressive strategies in the war films of classical realism_ Laura Fernandez-Ramirez.pdf

L'Atalante. Revista de estudios cinematográficos, 2019

Classical Hollywood cinema applied a stylistic formula that would come to shape cinematic realism. This article offers a detailed analysis of the cinematographic and editing techniques that diverged from classical conventions in some of the battle scenes produced between 1942 (after the United States entered the Second World War) and the end of the classical period (around 1970). The study shows how techniques derived from war documentaries and Soviet montage shaped a new kind of cinematic realism. War realism broke away from the classical style to increase the emotional impact on a viewer who had to become emotionally engaged with the protagonists in order to identify with an ideological message. The ground-breaking strategies of some of the most famous battle scenes of classical cinema laid the foundations for what has evolved into the hyperrealism of the contemporary war film or of the action film in general.

Representations of war: from the New Wave to the New Millennium

2009

This article will analyse how cinema can be used to challenge dominant representations of war by comparing two French coordinated portmanteau films, and examine the role of the film-makers as public intellectuals in France. Its starting point will be Chris Marker's Loin du Vietnam (Far From Vietnam, 1967), which was primarily about America's war in Vietnam. This film will be compared with Alain Brigand's 2002 film 11'0901 September 11 (known in French under the title 11 minutes 9 seconds 1 image), which uses the portmanteau format as a means of exploring representations of the 2001 World Trade Center attacks and the ensuing War on Terror. It will be shown that both works share several cinematic and political preoccupations, notably concerning the use of images in justifying and opposing war. It will be concluded that both films demonstrate how challenging representations of war can provoke a great deal of aesthetic as well as political debate on both sides of the Atlantic.

AESTHETIC AND NARRATIVE USES OF THE TRENCH IN HOLLYWOOD FILMS FROM 1918 TO 1930

Throughout the history of painting, landscape depiction has been considered a laboratory of the human gaze on the world. The First World War, with the new view of the ba- ttlefield that it introduced, profoundly altered the classical forms of depiction, replacing them with a mechanised and fragmented view closely associated with the development of photography and cinema. As Vicente J. Benet has sugges- ted, Hollywood echoed these profound changes in their film versions of the war, although it organised them according to a narrative logic. In this paper we seek to analyse how the battlefield and, particularly, the trench, fit within this logic of the history of landscape painting, using several Hollywood films from the period from 1918 to 1930 as case studies. We consider the trench, first of all, as a compositional element, which can structure the image and orient the mobility of the camera. Secondly, we analyse the implications of the trench for the creation of a dialogue between its interior space, as a stage for melodrama, and the exterior space where the battle rages and danger lurks. In both cases, we propose that the trench as a form and as a narrative element plays a role in structuring and integrating the logic of the narrative.