अपनी भाषा में प्लॉट जोड़ेंRich Hall hits the road as he takes a personal journey through the road movie, which, from the earliest days of American cinema has been synonymous with its culture.Rich Hall hits the road as he takes a personal journey through the road movie, which, from the earliest days of American cinema has been synonymous with its culture.Rich Hall hits the road as he takes a personal journey through the road movie, which, from the earliest days of American cinema has been synonymous with its culture.
फ़ोटो
- Self - Scholar-in-Residence, National Steinbeck Center
- (as Dr. Susan Shillinglaw)
- Self
- (आर्काइव ध्वनि)
- Self
- (आर्काइव फ़ूटेज)
- (बिना क्रेडिट के)
कहानी
क्या आपको पता है
- भाव
Rich Hall: Do you know why there's never been a decent British road film? I'll tell you why, cos there's nothing remotely exhilarating about having to eat a rancid chicken salad sandwich from a BP station at the Bolton West services on the M61, that's why. There's nothing romantic about having an Eddie Stobart truck with the name of some mail order bride stenciled onto the front grille trying to ram itself up your ass at 80mph. Nothing! Have you ever been to a Happy Eater? No one's happy! In America, the automobile evokes individualism. It's a manifestation of the pioneer spirit. In Britain, it's a source of frustration and defeat. What the point of owning a fast, expensive car when there's nowhere to drive it? There's a reason that Top Gear is so disgustingly popular in Britain, it's grown men watching other grown men do what they'll never get to do themselves, you know, road porn. They should make a British road film. It'd be two guys stuck in an eight mile tailback waiting for roadworks to end. You won't even need dialogue, it'll just sound like this:
[sounds of car horns start playing]
- कनेक्शनFeatures The Wizard of Oz (1939)
This film tries to cover a lot of ground in terms of cultural context, the history of the road network within the US and then of course the films themselves and as a result it is not totally successful for anyone looking for an in-depth documentary into any one of those subjects. Instead Hall tries to present everything needed in the simplest terms so that the viewer comes away with more of an appreciation of the roots of the genre and what it became over the decades, rather than really drilling down to cover all the details. The focus is this appreciation and it has to be done in a way that is entertaining too. So we get constant comedic presentation of the subject as well as asides where he digs at Jeremy Clarkson and George Lucas (not at the same time). As the subject is simpler than his film on Native Americans, I didn't think this approach worked quite as well as it had there but this is because I didn't find the subject to be as engaging. It was still consistently amusing though and Hall's presentation and humor gives the film a good rhythm throughout.
There are a lot of clips and a lot of films discussed but unfortunately too many are discussed very generically and it would have been better to have drawn more specific points out, dropping a few nuggets the viewer doesn't know along the way, but as I say, the lighthearted tone and steady pace it had made it engaging as a general overview. This wasn't quite as strong as his most recent film then, but still an engaging 90 minutes and Rich Hall makes very good company across it.
- bob the moo
- 25 जन॰ 2013
- परमालिंक
टॉप पसंद
विवरण
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- रंग