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Date: | Mon, 8 Aug 1994 16:02:56 -0700 |
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On Thu, 4 Aug 1994, Edward R. O'Neill wrote:
> Several posts have also pointed out specific economic differences
> between, say, the studio era and the contemporary scene. Donna
> Cunningham's point about the rapport between theme parks and films is
> particularly apt, since the blockbusters in question resemble rides
> more and more, rather than literary texts.
> My earlier question about the pleasure in watching such massive
> expenditures still stands. Is there not something in the massive
> display of capital which is somehow fetishistically pleasurable?
> EVEN when what is presented is destruction...
> Edward R. O'Neill, UCLA
>
*Especially* the destruction. Aren't all so-called teen movies about
destroying the parents' house, car, etc., which to a teenager is often a
"massive display of capital?" Perhaps it's
not so much fetishism as it is symbolism, but seems to give pleasure;
that's often the most popular part of the movie (e.g., Ferris Buehler's
Day Off).
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