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Hollywood & Cultural Imperialism. Fall 2013 Prof. Karl J. Skutski Department of Modern Languages & Literatures. The World Cinema Market: Admissions, worldwide. Source: Focus 2010 World Cinema Market Trends, Marche du Film Festival de Cannes.
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Hollywood & Cultural Imperialism Fall 2013Prof. Karl J. SkutskiDepartment of Modern Languages & Literatures
The World Cinema Market:Admissions, worldwide Source: Focus 2010 World Cinema Market Trends, Marche du Film Festival de Cannes
The World Cinema Market:Number of screens(sample listing—not ranking)
The World Cinema Market:Market share European Union France Germany Italy NationalUS Spain United Kingdom Russia
The World Cinema Market:Market share North America India China NationalOther Turkey Japan
(all time) • 2012 The World Cinema Market:
The World Cinema Market:Top-grossing filmsof all time 1. Avatar (2009) $2,781,505,847 2. Titanic (1997) $1,835,300,000 3. The Lord of the Rings: The Return of the King (2003) $1,129,219,252 4. Pirates of the Caribbean: Dead Man's Chest (2006) $1,065,896,541 5. Toy Story 3 (2010) $1,062,984,497 6. Alice in Wonderland (2010) $1,023,285,206 7. The Dark Knight (2008) $1,001,921,825 8. Harry Potter and the Sorcerer's Stone (2001) $968,657,891 9. Pirates of the Caribbean: At World's End (2007) $958,404,152 10. Harry Potter and the Order of the Phoenix (2007) $937,000,866 11. Harry Potter and the Half-Blood Prince (2009) $933,956,980 12. Star Wars: Episode I - The Phantom Menace (1999) $922,379,000 13. The Lord of the Rings: The Two Towers (2002) $921,600,000 14. Jurassic Park (1993) $919,700,000 15. Harry Potter and the Goblet of Fire (2005) $892,194,397 16. Ice Age: Dawn of the Dinosaurs (2009) $887,773,705 17. Spider-Man 3 (2007) $885,430,303 18. Shrek 2 (2004) $880,871,036 19. Harry Potter and the Chamber of Secrets (2002) $866,300,000 20. Finding Nemo (2003) $865,000,000
The World Cinema Market: “The Yanks have colonized our subconscious.”--Wim Wenders German director
The World Cinema Market: “Americans have turned every cinema in the world into the equivalent of an American consulate.” --UK government report
The World Cinema Market: “The average Western film requires nothing from the viewer. Its narrative sets up a series of questions in order to preserve an air of suspense...“Will Lassie bring the insulin to the diabetic hunter with the broken leg before he dies?” Then it logically answers each question ...Thus the typical Western film gives us what we want by telling us what we already know.”--Stuart Hancock
The Hollywood Machine Production Distribution Megaplexes Video sales Video rentals Cable and pay-per view Merchandise
The Hollywood Machine Titanic Harry Potter Star Wars Forest Gump Matrix Oceans 11 Meet the Parents $1.8 billion $1.0 billion 900 million 700 million 500 million 400 million 300 million
The Hollywood Machine $1.8 billion $1.0 billion 900 million 700 million 500 million 400 million 300 million 80 million 20 million 7 million 4 million 1 million Titanic Harry Potter Star Wars Forest Gump Matrix Oceans 11 Meet the Parents Trainspotting Secrets & Lies Run Lola Run Red No Man’s Land
The World Cinema Market:Representative listing of “foreign” films in the world market Source: worldwideboxoffice.com
The Hollywood Machine AT Austria GR Greece BE Belgium IE Ireland DK Denmark IT Italy FR France LU Luxembourg FI Finland NL Netherlands DE Germany NO Norway SE Sweden PT Portugal CH Switzerland ES Spain CEE Central Europe & Turkey UK United Kingdom
The Hollywood Machine US = 36,000
The Hollywood Aesthetic • The aesthetic of pretense • Studio system (films as products) • Star-centric • Formula approach to narrative • Hero - Problem - Overcome- Happy Ending • Rapid montage editing • Special effects • Non-diegetic music
HollyŁódź: • “It’s all about how we have suffered and been oppressed” No middle class • Struggle for survival; pursuit of tolerable dignified existence • Wars happen here • Distrust of all governments • Film as mirror of harsh existence • Not many happy endings • “Dark, somber, ironic, existential” • Life can be tough Hollywood “It’s all about me”/ Star-centric Obsession with status, personal success and freedoms Pursuit of happiness Wars happen elsewhere America is the greatest Film as entertaining products Formula, “happy-ending” plots Aesthetic of pretense All is well
A Matter of National & Cultural Identity • Migration of international directors to Hollywood(e.g., Forman, Polanski) • Expatriate productions (e.g., Nair, Mehta) • Co-national productions • International financing • Anti-Hollywood quotas (pro-national) • Government subsidization • TV as a funding and creative outlet (e.g., BBC Films and Film 4) • The Hollywoodization of world cinema • Globalization (e.g., SONY Pictures)
Cultural Imperialism, Globalization& Contemporary World CinemaContemporary World CinemaSpring 2011
Cultural Imperialism Cultural Imperialism: A critical introduction, defines the term as "the use of political and economic power to exalt and spread the values and habits of a foreign culture at the expense of a native culture.”
Cultural Imperialism Cultural imperialism proposes that a society is brought into the modern world system when its dominating stratum is attracted, pressured, forced, and sometimes bribed into shaping its social institutions to correspond to, or even promote, the values and structures of the dominating center of the system.(Hebert Schiller, 1976).
Cultural Imperialism Cultural Imperialism Theory states that Western nations dominate the media around the world which in return has a powerful effect on Third World Cultures by imposing on them Western views and therefore destroying their native cultures. (Theorist: Herb Schiller) Source, White, Livingston. “Reconsidering cultural imperialism theory.” Florida State University
Cultural Imperialism or Globalization? Irving Kristol, in The Emerging American Imperialism, presents imperialism as an unintended consequence of market expansion rather than a conscious goal…he later argues that…in fact many nations have facilitated and welcomed American cultural values along with American products and ways of life: "it happened because the world wanted it to happen." To him, the American missionaries live in Hollywood, which is different from the Old European imperialism, which was based on bureaucratic colonial governments and resource extraction. Source, White, Livingston. “Reconsidering cultural imperialism theory.” Florida State University
Cultural Imperialism or Globalization? Some theories of globalization see, instead of cultural imperialism, the movement of products and ideas from across national and cultural borders in ways that produce real changes in cultures like that of the United States. In 1994, MacQuail wrote in his book Mass Communication Theory that not only was United States influencing other cultures, but other cultures were also influencing the US…In that perspective, we can talk about an interpenetration of cultures instead of the invasion of American culture in the world. Source, White, Livingston. “Reconsidering cultural imperialism theory.” Florida State University
The World Cinema Market:Market share European Union France Germany Italy NationalUS Spain United Kingdom Russia
The World Cinema Market:Market share North America India China NationalOther Turkey Japan
Parallels the Spread of Western Values Free market economics Democracy Secularism Cultural materialism Multiculturalism Gender equality Religious tolerance Postmodernism Artistic freedom
Parallels the Spread of Western Values Free market economics Democracy Secularism Cultural materialism Multiculturalism Gender equality Religious tolerance Postmodernism Artistic freedom Plus impact of technology and communications- Internet- Social media- Satellite TV
A Matter of National Identity “Recent national cinema studies emphasize that national identity is not a fixed and unchanging ‘essence’ but is actively constructed in films, which project national imaginaries, creating imaginary bounds holding the nation together.” Source: Chaudhuri, Shohini. Contemporary World Cinema. Edinburgh: Edinburgh University Press, 2005.
A Matter of National Identity “There are a number of similar themesacross the region’s [Europe’s] cinema. These include nationalism and national identity, borders and frontiers, migration…” Source: Chaudhuri, Shohini. Contemporary World Cinema. Edinburgh: Edinburgh University Press, 2005.
A Matter of National Identity “A rich vein running through these films…is their enlarged definition of Britishness.” Source: Chaudhuri, Shohini. Contemporary World Cinema. Edinburgh: Edinburgh University Press, 2005.
A Battle of World Views Communism Fundamentalism
National “Defense” Strategies • Government subsidies • Government-supported film schools • Government protection (quotas on national productions versus foreign imports) • Taxes on foreign films • Censorship boards • National festivals • Co-production with other nations • 1993: Uruguay GATT discussions (French led campaign to exempt films from trade agreements) Source: Chaudhuri, Shohini. Contemporary World Cinema. Edinburgh: Edinburgh University Press, 2005.
Co-Productions • UK:Director, Danny BoyleCelador Films (production)Film 4 (production)Fatts (post-production) • France:Pathe Pictures (production) • US:Modern Video Film (post-production)Fox, Warner (distribution) • India:ActorsTake One Productions (production services)FinancingMusic production
Battle of World Views First World Nations - United States- Europe- Australia - Japan - S. Korea • Second World • - Russia • Eastern Europe • China • Third World • - India - Africa- Parts of S. America
Seven Worlds Theory India SecularismDemocracyCultural materialismGlobalizationMulticulturalism FundamentalismTheocracyMonoculturalism
Third Cinema Theory • First Cinema:Commercial, studio-based cinema based upon the Hollywood model (including Bollywood) • Second Cinema:European art cinema and cinema of “auteurs” • Third Cinema:Third-world production that is ideologically opposed to the filmmaking practices of both the First and Second Cinema- Manifesto by Argentinian film directors- Anti-American-European discourse- Post-colonial (celebration of “the Other”)- Africa, Latin America, and Asia- “Militant” (freedom for the repressed)- Political
Cultural Imperialism, Globalization…or the Dynamic Nature of Cultures?