The traditionally American genre of the road movie has been explored and reconfigured in the French context since the later 1960s. Comparative in its approach, this book studies the inter-relationship between American and French culture and cinemas, and in the process considers and challenges histories of the road movie. It combines film history with film theory methodologies, analysing transformations in social, political and film-industrial contexts alongside changing perspectives on the meaning and possibilities of film. At once chronological and thematic in structure, The French Road Movie provides in each chapter a comprehensive introduction to key themes emerging from the genre in the French context – liberty, identity and citizenship, masculinity, femininity, border-crossing – followed by detailed, innovative and often revisionist readings of the chosen films. Through these readings the author justifies the place of the road genre within French cinema histories and reinvigorates this often neglected and misunderstood area of study.
Tabella dei contenuti
Acknowledgements
Note on translations
Introduction: Locating the Road Movie
Chapter 1. Road to Autopia: Les Valseuses and Le Plein de super
Chapter 2. ‘Capturing Freedom’: Marginality and the Road Movie
Chapter 3. No Place Like Home: Camping it Up in Drôle de Félix
Chapter 4. Nowhere Men: Masculinity and the Road Movie
Chapter 5. From Flânerie to Glânerie : The Possibilities of a ‘Feminine Road Movie’
Chapter 6. Travel and the Transnational Road Movie in the Twenty-First Century
Afterword: ‘Welcome to France!’: The Road Movie and French National Cinema
Filmography
Bibliography
Circa l’autore
Neil Archer teaches Film Studies at Anglia Ruskin University. He is the author of a study guide to The Bourne Ultimatum (Auteur, 2012) and is currently undertaking long-term research into the relationship between European and American cinemas, with a particular interest in the recent films of Woody Allen.