Pastoral paradises and social realism: cinematic representations of suburban
Registro en:
978-1780932231
Autor
Huq, Rupa
Institución
Resumen
Th e cinema in its literal sense has been both a landmark of the suburban-built
environment and staple source of popular culture in the post-war era: with the
Regals, Gaumonts, UCGs and ABCs off ering relatively cheap escapism from
everyday mundanity and routine. Th e cinema has served the function of a venue
for suburban courtship for couples and entertainment for fully formed family
units with the power to move audiences to the edge of their seats in suspense or
to tears – be that laughter or of sadness. While the VHS and advent of domestic
video recorders was seen to threaten the very existence of the cinema, many
suburban areas have seen the old high street picture palaces replaced/displaced/
succeeded by out-of-town complexes where suburbia has sometimes been the
subject on the screen as well as the setting of the multiplex they are screened
in. In the United States the suburb has variously equated with idyllic family
dreamhouse, horror-laden land of dark undercurrent and stomping ground
for adolescent angst in fi lms from which changes can be tracked from the
innocence of the suburbia of the all-American goodlife in the 1950s to its more
recent portrayal as shopping mall-dominated territory from the 1980s onwards
overrun by slackers by the 1990s. British cinema has tended to pride itself by
being in a more ‘slice of life’ social realism vein. Th is chapter turns to the silver
screen (or DVD release) to discuss full-length feature fi lms featuring suburbia.
Th e consideration of suburbia onscreen will continue in Chapter 5 addressing
televisual (small-screen) representations.