Myra Breckinridge et le passager clandestin. Kitsch, camp et inconscient hollywoodien

Strongly criticised for its bad taste upon release, Myra Breckinridge (Michael Sarne, Fox, 1970) was a commercial disaster. It was later rehabilitated as a cult movie thanks to a cultural reevaluation which has considered this narrative experimentation as a pioneering...

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Main Author: Grégoire Halbout
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Presses universitaires de Rennes
Series:Revue LISA
Subjects:
Online Access:https://journals.openedition.org/lisa/9064
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author Grégoire Halbout
author_facet Grégoire Halbout
author_sort Grégoire Halbout
collection DOAJ
description Strongly criticised for its bad taste upon release, Myra Breckinridge (Michael Sarne, Fox, 1970) was a commercial disaster. It was later rehabilitated as a cult movie thanks to a cultural reevaluation which has considered this narrative experimentation as a pioneering camp film of mainstream culture. This loose adaptation from Gore Vidal’s semi-pornographic novel (1968) attacks the Hollywood myths and questions film genre categories, the star system and gender identity. This article aims to analyze the complex entangling and overlapping of kitsch and camp used by New Hollywood to level criticism at classical Hollywood. The film’s aesthetic flamboyance accounts for its rejection by 1970 critical reception and audiences. It also explains its later camp and queer reevaluations. However, other than status acknowledgement, the extreme hybridisation and the lack of logic of Myra Breckinridge make for an unexpected statement. Born from the director’s imagination and that of the overall production process, the film stands as a metaphor of a dreamlike and phantasmatic intention that Gore Vidal’s novel had only just suggested.
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spelling doaj.art-d07c6fb3739f497484bc3b19f377a9a12024-02-13T14:36:57ZengPresses universitaires de RennesRevue LISA1762-61531510.4000/lisa.9064Myra Breckinridge et le passager clandestin. Kitsch, camp et inconscient hollywoodienGrégoire HalboutStrongly criticised for its bad taste upon release, Myra Breckinridge (Michael Sarne, Fox, 1970) was a commercial disaster. It was later rehabilitated as a cult movie thanks to a cultural reevaluation which has considered this narrative experimentation as a pioneering camp film of mainstream culture. This loose adaptation from Gore Vidal’s semi-pornographic novel (1968) attacks the Hollywood myths and questions film genre categories, the star system and gender identity. This article aims to analyze the complex entangling and overlapping of kitsch and camp used by New Hollywood to level criticism at classical Hollywood. The film’s aesthetic flamboyance accounts for its rejection by 1970 critical reception and audiences. It also explains its later camp and queer reevaluations. However, other than status acknowledgement, the extreme hybridisation and the lack of logic of Myra Breckinridge make for an unexpected statement. Born from the director’s imagination and that of the overall production process, the film stands as a metaphor of a dreamlike and phantasmatic intention that Gore Vidal’s novel had only just suggested.https://journals.openedition.org/lisa/9064satirekitschcampNew Hollywoodtransformismunconscious (the)
spellingShingle Grégoire Halbout
Myra Breckinridge et le passager clandestin. Kitsch, camp et inconscient hollywoodien
Revue LISA
satire
kitsch
camp
New Hollywood
transformism
unconscious (the)
title Myra Breckinridge et le passager clandestin. Kitsch, camp et inconscient hollywoodien
title_full Myra Breckinridge et le passager clandestin. Kitsch, camp et inconscient hollywoodien
title_fullStr Myra Breckinridge et le passager clandestin. Kitsch, camp et inconscient hollywoodien
title_full_unstemmed Myra Breckinridge et le passager clandestin. Kitsch, camp et inconscient hollywoodien
title_short Myra Breckinridge et le passager clandestin. Kitsch, camp et inconscient hollywoodien
title_sort myra breckinridge et le passager clandestin kitsch camp et inconscient hollywoodien
topic satire
kitsch
camp
New Hollywood
transformism
unconscious (the)
url https://journals.openedition.org/lisa/9064
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