¶ … True Romance in Real Life
True Romance is awash in fantasy. From the protagonists' attraction to comics to the hero's delusions of an Elvis (the patron saint of pop culture) who guides him on his fantastic journey to the sexually-charged, hooker with a heart of gold (male fantasy) to the uber-machismo (yet extraordinarily sensitive) male (female fantasy) to the white suburban middle class fantasy of a sex and violence-fueled escape from the bland world of McLiving to the fantasy land of Hollywood (and then Mexico), the film bears no resemblance to reality in the least. Instead, it is like a school boy's daydream. This paper will show why the kind of romance in True Romance would be impossible in the real world.
The two characters meet in a movie theater where Clarence is watching a triple feature. Alabama literally stumbles into him, nearly spilling her cleavage out of her dress, and all but announcing that sex is in the air as she wipes the popcorn from his lap as he attempts to tell her about the movie showing on the screen. This is supposed to be the innocent love/romance that Alabama has announced in voice over narration the audience can expect to see, as images of gritty Detroit are intercut together during the opening credits sequence. The film pretends to be rooted in realism for a moment -- but this is pure romance/fantasy. Clarence's dream is to resemble a character once played by Elvis Presley and not "give a fuck about anything." This is supposed to be machismo but it comes across as stilted, self-centered and inauthentic. It has none of the grim realism of Malick's Badlands, which Scott attempts to pay tribute to (and fails), even as it copies...
Bonding Over Bullets: Gun Fu is the Way to a Better Tomorrow John Woo redefined the action film genre with his 1986 Hong Kong film A Better Tomorrow. Staring the Asian TV star Chow Yun Fat and movie star Ti Lung, the film transcended the action genre already well-established in the West by using the various tropes of the genre (gangsters, the conflicted family, brother-against-brother, friend-in-peril, reformed hood, betrayal, and so
High Fidelity Looking for fidelity in Nick Hornby's High Fidelity Nick Hornby's Rob is a creature of hierarchy (note his power rankings which start off his confessional narrative), and being such he is more a man of medieval sensibilities than one might at first realize. Rob, is after all, a (not-so-young-anymore) man in modern day England, whose exploits seem to have little if anything to do with Thomistic scholasticism or feudal arrangements.
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