¶ … 1970's, in an era acknowledged far and wide as the renaissance of American filmmaking, hardly any filmmaker enjoyed the degree of prominence that Robert Altman did. Altman was an iconoclast, and his art severely altered, if not undermined, moviemaking conventions. Altman revived, as well as parodied, musical, Western, and crime drama genres. He openly challenged the sterile pretense that was mainstream cinema by developing a world of cinema that was strikingly expansive and intentionally messy, bursting with characters, plot lines, images, and sounds. Famous for his innovative brand of improvisational and overlapping dialogue, and recognized as a master of contemporary camera technique, Robert Altman's overly idealistic career has, at best, been bumpy. However, he is still a key personage of modern cinema, and a true individualist responsible for several defining motion films of his era (Robert Altman, n.d.). Robert Altman's background, the start of his career, the similarity in his movies, his shots, directorial style, and the major awards received by him in his lifetime are described in this essay. Robert Altman, the director, was born to Helen and B.C. Altman (an insurance sales person), on the 20th of February, 1925, in Missouri's Kansas City. He joined St. Peter's Catholic School when he turned six. He attended a Catholic high school early on, before going on to study at Rockhurst High School. This was when he began delving into sound exploration through inexpensive tape recorders that could be found in that period. Altman attended Junior College at Lexington, Missouri's Wentworth Military Academy. He joined the United States (U.S.) Air Force in 1945, where he copiloted a B-24.
After leaving the military, Altman became spellbound by movies; he and LaVonne Elmer, his first wife, moved to Hollywood. Here, Altman tried his hand at acting (an appearance in the 1947 movie, The Secret Life of Walter Mitty), screen-writing (he was co-writer of the screenplay for a 1948 movie, Bodyguard, and although uncredited, penned the 1947 movie, Christmas Eve's story ), songwriting (Altman wrote a musical "The Rumors are Flying," meant for Broadway). In spite of all these efforts, however, Altman could not establish himself in 'Tinsel town'. After working briefly as a publicity director for a firm in the dog-tattooing business, Altman quit and went back to Kansas City, his hometown, where he ultimately decided to seriously take up filmmaking.
An old pal of Altman's offered a recommendation to the Calvin Co., a Kansas City production company. He was hired there in 1950, where he worked for some months scripting and editing movies, after which he started work as film director. At Calvin, Altman gained profound knowledge and experience in moviemaking, while making advertisements, documentaries, educational and industrial films, and employee training videos. Altman made a total of around 60-65 short movies while at Calvin, on diverse subjects ranging from car accidents to football; however, he was always on the lookout for challenging ventures. Altman is credited with penning the screenplay of 1956 feature film, Corn's-A-Poppin', produced in Kansas City. He also directed and produced numerous TV commercials, including an ad with the Eileen Ford Agency, and was co-creator and director of 1953 soap opera The Pulse of the City, which had a single-season run on the DuMont Television Network. Altman even began his foundation in theatre directing for the local community. Altman's directorial debut on the big screen came with the 1957 movie, The Delinquents, while he was still working for Calvin. He resigned in 1956 to direct a TV show for Alfred Hitchcock. From here onwards, Altman began on the path of directing various TV shows, until MASH's (1970) script was offered to him in 1969. This script had been turned down by over fifteen other movie-makers; that is to say, Altman was obviously not the first choice of the producer. Though this motion picture wasn't Altman's debut film, it was undoubtedly his very first success. Beginning from this success, Altman directed a medley of successful and unsuccessful films. His 1992 movie, The Player, and a more recent 2001 flick, Gosford Park, received particular acclaim (Robert Altman Biography, n.d.).
In 2006, the Academy Of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences awarded Robert Altman with a lifetime-achievement award. Altman passed away at the age of 81, from cancer complications, 8 months after this Oscar win, and less than 5 months after 'A Prairie Home Companion', his final film, was released (Robert Altman, n.d.). It would be inaccurate to claim that Altman emerged out of the blue with MASH, his hit war comedy. At the time of making MASH, Altman was already aged 45, and had...
The famous canvasses are omnipresent but usually left in the background, kept in Theo's salon or, strangely, subjected to repeated mutilation: smeared, thrown, smashed to demonstrate their (and the artist's) fragility. In the painting scenes, occasionally the image on the easel fails to match the landscape that Roth-as-van-Gogh is nominally depicting: in the first 1890 painting sequence, a row of trees disappears from the canvas in what appears to
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