Vintage Cinema presents
Drama film
Drama film genre is a narration or a presentation of a real-life situation using characters in conflict. The conflict can be within the characters themselves or with nature or with other characters. Basically, drama genre realizes on character relational development and emotions to create a relevant situation or character. This genre portrays humanity at their worst, best and anything amidst.
Drama
films are probably the largest genre of movies since they cover a wide scope of
the film industry. Drama movie’s plot is taken from real life issues with the
aim of telling the audience the real story of humankind life struggle.
Dramatic
themes often include current issues, societal ills, and problems, concerns or
injustices, such as racial prejudice, religious intolerance (such as
anti-Semitism), drug addiction, poverty, political unrest, the corruption of
power, alcoholism, class divisions, sexual inequality, mental illness, corrupt
societal institutions, violence toward women or other explosive issues of the
times. These films have successfully drawn attention to the issues by taking
advantage of the topical interest of the subject. Although dramatic films have
often dealt frankly and realistically with social problems, the tendency has
been for Hollywood, especially during earlier times of censorship, to exonerate
society and institutions and to blame problems on an individual, who more often
than not, would be punished for his/her transgressions.
Fire! (1901) World's first
drama film by James Williamson
Social Problem Dramas:
Social dramas or "message films"
expressed powerful lessons, such as the harsh conditions of Southern prison
systems in Hell's Highway (1932) and I Am a Fugitive From a Chain Gang (1932),
the plight of wandering groups of young boys on freight cars during the
Depression in William Wellman's Wild Boys of the Road (1933), or the
lawlessness of mob rule in Fritz Lang's Fury (1936), or the resourcefulness of
lifer prisoner and bird expert Robert Stroud (Burt Lancaster) in John
Frankenheimer's Birdman of Alcatraz (1961), or the tale of a framed, unjustly
imprisoned journalist (James Cagney) in Each Dawn I Die (1939). In Yield to the
Night (1956), Diana Dors relived her life and crime as she awaited her
execution. A tough, uncompromising look at New York waterfront corruption was
found in the classic American film, director Elia Kazan's On the Waterfront (1954) with Marlon Brando
as a longshoreman who testified to the Waterfront Crimes Commission. The film
drew criticism with the accusation that it appeared to justify Kazan's
informant role before the HUAC.
Problems
of the poor and dispossessed have often been the themes of the great films,
including The Good Earth (1937) with Chinese peasants facing famine, storms,
and locusts, and John Ford's The Grapes
of Wrath (1940) about an indomitable, Depression-Era Okie family - the Joads -
who survived a tragic journey from Oklahoma to California. Martin Scorsese's
disturbing and violent Taxi Driver
(1976) told of the despairing life of a lone New York taxi cab driver amidst
nighttime urban sprawl. Issues and conflicts within a suburban family were showcased
in director Sam Mendes' Best Picture-winning American Beauty (1999), as were
problems with addiction in Steven Soderbergh's Traffic (2000).
Drama Films About Mental Illness:
The
Snake Pit – 1948 Frances – 1982 Two films from different eras that dealt with
the problems of the mentally ill and conditions in mental institutions were
Anatole Litvak's The Snake Pit (1948) with tormented Olivia de Havilland's
assistance from a psychiatrist, and Milos Forman's adaptation of Ken
Kesey's One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest
(1975) with Jack Nicholson as a rebellious institutional patient who feigned
insanity but ultimately was squashed by Nurse Ratched and the repressive
system.
Bette
Davis played a neurotic and domineering woman in John Huston's In This Our Life
(1942). Sam Wood's Kings Row (1942) examined the various fears and phobias in a
small-town. Repressed and prohibited from consummating her love with Warren
Beatty, Natalie Wood exhibited signs of insanity in Elia Kazan's Splendor in
the Grass (1961). Another teenager (Kathleen Quinlan) felt suicidal tendencies
due to schizophrenia in I Never Promised You a Rose Garden (1977). And
1930s-40s actress Frances Farmer (Jessica Lange) tragically declined due to a
mental breakdown and subsequent lobotomy in Frances (1982). The repressed
emotions and tragic crises in a seemingly perfect family were documented in
Robert Redford's directorial debut Best Picture and Best Director-winning
Ordinary People (1980).
Drama Films About Alcoholism:
A hard
look was taken at alcoholism with Ray Milland as a depressed writer in Billy
Wilder's The Lost Weekend (1945) and Jack Lemmon (and Lee Remick) in Blake
Edwards' Days of Wine and Roses (1962). An aging alcoholic singer (Bing Crosby)
desperate for a comeback was the theme of The Country Girl (1954) - the film
that provided Grace Kelly with a Best Actress Oscar. Susan Hayward acted the
decline into alcoholism of 1930s star Lillian Roth in Daniel Mann's biopic I'll
Cry Tomorrow (1955). More recently, Mickey Rourke and Faye Dunaway played the
parts of two fellow alcoholics in Barbet Schroeder's Barfly (1987).
Drama Films about Disaffected Youth
and Generational Conflict:
Juvenile
delinquency, young punks and gangs, and youth rebellion were the subject matter
of Dead End (1937), Laslo Benedek's The Wild One (1953) with biker Marlon
Brando disrupting a small town, Richard Brooks' The Blackboard Jungle (1955)
with Glenn Ford as an idealistic teacher in a slum area school, and Nicholas
Ray's Rebel Without a Cause (1955) with
James Dean as an iconic disaffected youth.
Race Relations and Civil Rights
Dramas:
Films that were concerned with race relations included
Hollywood's first major indictment of racism in producer Stanley Kramer's and
director Mark Robson's Home of the Brave (1949), the story of a black WWII
soldier facing bigoted insults from his squad. Then, there was John Sturges'
Bad Day At Black Rock (1955) about small-town Japanese-American prejudice
uncovered by a one-armed Spencer Tracy, Stanley Kramer's The Defiant Ones
(1958) with Tony Curtis and Sidney Poitier as bound-together escaping convicts
- and Guess Who's Coming to Dinner (1967) about an inter-racial couple (Sidney
Poitier as WHO doctor John Prentiss and Katharine Houghton as SF socialite
Joanna Drayton) planning on marrying who needed parental approval from
Katharine Hepburn and Spencer Tracy (in their ninth and last film together).
Also, In the Heat of the Night (1967) featured a bigoted sheriff and a black
homicide detective working together to solve a murder, and Spike Lee's Do the
Right Thing (1989) - about racial tensions and eventual violence during a hot
Brooklyn summer.
Strong
indictments toward anti-Semitism were made in Elia Kazan's Gentleman's
Agreement (1947) with writer Gregory Peck posing as a Jew, and Crossfire (1947)
about the mysterious murder of a Jew. The Japanese film classic from Akira
Kurosawa titled Rashomon (1951) examined a violent ambush, murder and rape in
12th century Japan from four different perspectives.
Courtroom Dramas:
Courtroom
legal dramas, which include dramatic tension in the courtroom setting,
maneuverings between trial opponents (lawyers, prosecutors, and clients),
surprise witnesses, and the psychological breakdown of key participants. Courtroom
legal dramas were exemplified in films such as William Dieterle's film noir The
Accused (1949), 12 Angry Men (1957). Robert Benton's Best Picture-winning
Kramer vs. Kramer (1979) focused on the subject of a nurturing father (Dustin
Hoffman) trying to win a child custody case with divorced Meryl Streep. An
Australian film, Breaker Morant (1980, Australia) was another tense courtroom
drama - the true story of soldiers in the Boer War who were used as scapegoats
by the British Army. The award-winning drama, Sidney Lumet's The Verdict (1982)
featured Paul Newman as an alcoholic, has-been Boston lawyer fighting a case of
medical malpractice against James Mason. Glenn Close defended lover/client Jeff
Bridges in Richard Marquand's who-dun-it Jagged Edge (1985). Assistant DA Kelly
McGillis defended the bar-room gang-raped Jodie Foster (an Oscar-winning role)
in The Accused (1988).
Political Dramas:
Political dramas include Frank Capra's two
political tales - State of the Union (1948) with Tracy/Hepburn, and his classic
story of a naive Senator's fight against political corruption in Mr. Smith Goes to Washington (1939).
Alexander Knox starred as President Woodrow Wilson in Henry King's epic, big budget
bio Wilson (1944). In Otto Preminger's Advise and Consent (1962), stars Charles
Laughton (in his last film), Franchot Tone, and Lew Ayres portrayed scheming
Senators during Henry Fonda's crisis-threatened Presidency. The controversial
The Manchurian Candidate (1962) questioned the Cold War brainwashing of a
Korean War hero.
The
award-winning, potent story of a corrupt politician was dramatized in Robert
Rossen's All the King's Men (1949) with Broderick Crawford as rising governor
Willie Stark - a cynical version of real-life 1930s ruthless Louisiana governor
Huey P. Long. Michael Ritchie's The Candidate (1972) examined the harsh reality
of marketing a candidate on the campaign trail. Robert Redford starred as
left-wing California lawyer Bill McKay, a political Senate hopeful cluelessly
running for office. In the final scene with campaign manager Marvin Lucas
(Peter Boyle), McKay asked: "What do we do now?"
There
were a number of excellent political dramas in the 1990s - in which,
ironically, art very often imitated life. The mockumentary Bob Roberts (1992) starred
director/producer/actor Tim Robbins on the campaign trail as the title
character running for the US Senate in Pennsylvania - he was a rising political
star who was originally a celebrity. Underneath the right-wing candidate's
folksy demeanor and positive veneer was a dirty and fraudulent campaign against
aging liberal incumbent competitor Brickley Paiste (Gore Vidal), in which
Roberts displayed dark shades of corruption, contempt and cynicism.
Journalism, the Press and
Media-Related Dramas:
Dramatic films often center around the theme of journalism,
the world of reporters and news. Often regarded as the best film ever made,
Orson Welles' Citizen Kane (1941) was an
insightful character study of a self-made newspaper magnate who ran for office.
Alan J. Pakula's All the President's Men (1976) was a docu-drama of real-life
journalists Bernstein and Woodward investigating the Watergate scandal in the
1970s. Sidney Lumet's Network (1976) with Peter Finch as a despairing newsman
was a critical look at TV news, while Sydney Pollack's Absence of Malice (1981)
told about an over-earnest journalist (Sally Field) and a wrongly-implicated
defendant (Paul Newman). James L. Brooks' Broadcast News (1987) focused on the
world of network news shows, editors, and reporters. Oliver Stone's
conspiracy-centered drama, JFK (1991), attempted to disprove the theory that
President Kennedy's killer acted alone.
Elia
Kazan's A Face in the Crowd (1957) showed how a down-home country boy (Andy
Griffith in his film debut as Larry "Lonesome" Rhodes) could be
transformed into a pop television show icon and political megalomaniac. Since
You Went Away - 1944Through the eyes of a cameraman, Haskell Wexler's
docu-drama Medium Cool (1969) covered the corruption and events surrounding
Chicago's 1968 Democratic Convention. In Peter Weir's The Year of Living
Dangerously (1982, Australia/US), Mel Gibson played the role of an Australian journalist
working during the time of President Sukarno's coup in mid-60s Indonesia. And
in Oliver Stone's Salvador (1982), James Woods played the role of a
photographer in war-torn El Salvador.
History-Related Dramas:
Films that have dramatized portions of the American past
include W.S. Van Dyke's San Francisco (1936) on the eve of the 1906 quake, John
Ford's Drums Along the Mohawk (1939) with Claudette Colbert and Henry Fonda
facing marauding Indian attacks at the time of American independence, Howard
Hawks' Sergeant York (1941) with Gary Cooper as the gentle hick-hero of the WWI
trenches, the gothic drama of a turn of the century family in Orson
Welles' The Magnificent Ambersons
(1942), and of course Gone With The Wind
(1939) during the Civil War and Reconstruction Eras. Exquisite, nostalgic
family dramas include John Ford's How Green Was My Valley (1941) - a flashback
of Roddy McDowall's childhood in a Welsh mining village, and George Stevens'
tribute to a Norwegian immigrant mother (Irene Dunne) raising her family in San
Francisco in I Remember Mama (1948).
Sports Dramas:
Dramatic
sports films or biographies have created memorable portraits of all-American
sports heroes, individual athletes, or teams who are faced with tough odds in a
championship match, race or large-scale sporting event, soul-searching or
physical/psychological injuries, or romantic sub-plot distractions. Fictional
sports films normally present a single sport (the most common being baseball,
football, basketball, and boxing), and include the training and rise (and/or
fall) of the underdog or champion in the world of sports.
Typical sports films (with biographical elements)
include the sentimental biography of the Notre Dame football coach, Lloyd
Bacon's Knute Rockne: All-American (1940). One of the best films ever made
about pro-football was Ted Kotcheff's North Dallas Forty (1979) which examined
the brutal fact of labor abuses and drug use in professional football - loosely
basing its story on the championship Dallas Cowboys team. In All the Right Moves
(1983), a young Tom Cruise took the role of HS footballer "Stef"
Djordjevic, who was struggling to escape his life in a poor western
Pennsylvania mill-town by winning a sports scholarship. Recently, Cameron
Crowe's sports romance-drama Jerry Maguire (1996), famous for the phrase
"Show me the money!", starred Tom Cruise as a hard-driven major
sports agent, and Academy Award-winning Cuba Gooding, Jr. as a football player.
One of the best sports biopics was Sam Wood's The
Pride of the Yankees (1942) with Gary Cooper in a fine performance as New York
Yankees great Lou Gehrig. In The Jackie Robinson Story (1950), the famed black
player who crossed the major-league 'color-line' and joined the Brooklyn
Dodgers portrayed himself. Director Barry Levinson's mythical and romanticized
film about baseball titled The Natural (1984) featured Robert Redford as Roy
Hobbs - a gifted baseball player who had a fairy-tale comeback and led his New
York team to the World Series.
Basketball-related
sports dramas are rare: three notable ones were Spike Lee's He Got Game (1998)
with Denzel Washington as the convict father of a promising basketball athlete,
David Anspaugh's Hoosiers (1986) about an underdog 50s basketball team (coached
by Gene Hackman) that won the state championship, and Ron Shelton's
play-filled, trash-talking court action film White Men Can't Jump (1992) with
its two basketball hustlers/con-artists (Woody Harrelson and Wesley Snipes) and
their scenes of two-on-two tournaments.
Kevin Costner portrayed a talented pro golfer in Ron Shelton's
romantic sports film Tin Cup (1996). And Paul Newman portrayed swaggering,
upstart poolshark gambler Fast Eddie Felson in The Hustler (1961) in the world
of professional pool, shooting against the great champ Minnesota Fats (Jackie
Gleason). (Director Martin Scorsese's sequel The Color of Money (1986) starred
Paul Newman reprising his role as "Fast Eddie", and Tom Cruise as
young hustler protégé Vincent Lauria.) Downhill Racer (1969) starred Robert
Redford as an American downhill skier training to become an Olympic superstar.
The Best Picture winner Chariots of Fire (1981) told the parallel stories of
two English runners (one a devout Protestant, the other Jewish) competing in
the 1924 Paris Olympics. Autoracing in the Daytona 500 was featured in the
action/drama Days of Thunder (1990). And one of the most memorable ice hockey
films was Slap Shot (1977), with Paul Newman as inspiring player-coach Reg
Dunlop of a minor-league team. Although a comedy, Caddyshack (1980) was about
an elitist country club for golf, a mischievous green-destroying gopher, and a
crazed groundskeeper (Bill Murray).
Films
about boxing are perhaps the most numerous sub-genre. One of the best boxing
films ever made, along with Robert Wise's classic film noirish The Set-Up
(1949) starring Robert Ryan as aging boxer Stoker Thompson, was the
realistically stark Body and Soul (1947). It starred John Garfield as boxer
Charlie Davis who 'sold his soul' to unethical promoters but then had a change
of heart in the last three rounds of a championship fight during which he was
supposed to take a dive.
Others included King Vidor's classic The Champ (1931), an
award-winning story of a prizefighter and his young son, Champion (1949) with
Kirk Douglas as the young fighter, the brutal boxing drama The Harder They Fall
(1956) (Humphrey Bogart's underrated last film in which he portrayed Eddie
Willis - an aging, crooked sportswriter), Ralph Nelson's Requiem for a
Heavyweight (1962) with Anthony Quinn as punch-drunk, washed-up professional
boxer Louis 'Mountain' Rivera, Martin Ritt's The Great White Hope (1970) with
James Earl Jones as black boxer Jack Jefferson, and Karyn Kusama's independent
feminist film Girlfight (2000) with a great performance by Michelle Rodriguez
as a struggling Brooklynite and teenage Latino boxer.
One of
the best films of the 80s decade, Raging
Bull (1980) was Martin Scorsese's tough, visceral and uncompromising biopic
film of the rise and fall of prizefighter Jake La Motta with a remarkable
performance by actor Robert DeNiro. The stylized scenes in the ring included
flying blood and sweat, exaggerated flashbulb camera flashes, slow-motion and
violent punching sounds. The all-American fictional, underdog Philadelphia
boxing hero Rocky Balboa in the populist, feel-good, Oscar-winning drama Rocky
(1976) series emerged as the peak boxing-film series.
Best
Director-winning Clint Eastwood's Best Picture-winning sports drama Million
Dollar Baby (2004) told about a grizzled boxing trainer (Eastwood as Frankie
Dunn) who reluctantly coached determined Ozark Missouri waitress
"Maggie" Fitzgerald (Best Actress-winning Hilary Swank) to a major
welterweight championship fight, but she tragically suffered a debilitating
injury - and requested that Frankie help assist in her suicide in the
tearjerking conclusion.
No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.