Although best known as an Academy Award winning actor, Sean Penn’s directorial works
The Indian Runner (1991),
The Crossing Guard (1995),
The Pledge (2001), and
Into the Wild (2007), consist of some of the most interesting and singular films made in the United States over the past twenty years. Each of Penn’s directorial films and much of the cinema he has acted in are set in an immediate past in which a ‘stalled’ time and a restricted locale apply narrative constraints. At the same time, these films all feature a sophisticated web of intertextual relations, involving actors, songs, books, films, and directors, and the political lineage to which Penn belongs, which reveal the deep cultural structures that concern each particular film.
Table des matières
Acknowledgements
Introduction
1. Politics
2. Penn’s Performance Places
3. The Indian Runner
4. The Crossing Guard
5. The Pledge
6. Interlude: ‘U.S.A.’
7. Into the Wild
Conclusion: Places of Hope
Filmography
Bibliography
Index
A propos de l’auteur
Deane Williams is associate professor in film and screen studies at Monash University in Melbourne. He is editor of the journal
Studies in Documentary Film and coauthor (with Noel King and Con Verevis) of
Australian Film Theory and Criticism.