Re: Filmic references to Thelma & Louise
Wed, 6 Sep 1995 13:45:52 -0400
On Mon, 4 Sep 1995, DAVID MOON wrote:
>
> Mistress fate was certainly on their side against
> incredible odds right up to the end and happily made their final flight
> into the next world (Butch Cassidy style) an honourable one.
>
It seems to me that David Moon makes an interesting observation in noting
the *Butch Cassidy* nature of the ending. There is a
very telling contrast between these two endings. The Butch Cassidy
ending is consistent with the western-macho genre. The *heros* move out
TOWARD the source of violence and death (other males), their phallic
symbols ready to shoot. Freeze frame and we hear the infinite shots of
orgasmic gunfire.
In T&L, the women make their final moves AWAY from the source of violence
(males) but toward death (while a male is chasing after them). This is a
female ending, but it is hardly a liberating one. Its iconography
belongs to a film tradition which goes back to the early silent era, when
the fair damsel, pursued by a rapacious male (often with a racist
subtext), rather than submit, jumps off the cliff or into the raging river.
Liberation through death is an old theme, but it is hardly liberation in
the sense I understand feminism. Whether or not the fact that two women
go off a cliff together (in buddy movie fashion) makes a differnce as a
text, one which can be read as *liberation* and *freedom,* seems doubtful.
Ron Hoffman
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