Monday, April 26, 2010

Freeway




The film we look at in next Tuesday's class, Matthew Bright's Freeway, is a film which both plays with and against multiple genre conventions.  Freeway is part horror film, part folktale satire, part "exploitation" flick. But, as several critics have pointed out, it also has "one foot in the grind house and one in the art house." Director Bright himself labeled the film an "artsploitation" movie: marrying the over-the-top action, sex and violence of exploitation films with an astutely feminist re-telling of the fairy tale "Little Red Riding Hood."

For our purposes, we should look for the ways the film uses/subverts genre convention. Some things to think about while watching are the conventional relationship between the horror film monster and "his" victim, the usual "'punishment" of sexuality in horror/slasher films, the violence for violence's sake code of exploitation films, the handling of female characters in exploitation/splatter films, realistic vs. cartoon violence, and the many ways this film changes and even defies these "rules."

As even this cursory list implies, horror and exploitation films have a specific way of treating gender and sexuality---maybe one could go so far as to say that's what they're always really about at their red, bloody core. And more than just the iconic use of the colour red links these genres to the venerable fairytale/children's story, "Little Red Riding Hood." To examine Freeway's rewriting of that narrative, we first need to review the story as it develops from folk tale to children's story.

3 comments:

  1. so from what ive read so far i cant wait to see this movie, because the movies weve seen in class so far have opened my eyes and my mind to different forms of narratives that i would never have thought of seeing and meanings behind every scene and purposes for them. im interested to see how the story of little red riding hood is redone and the surprise ending that is suppose to happen.

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  2. well you can probably guess the surprise if the point is to restore Red's ability to survive!

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  3. So what I understand Freeway is a unusal folktale and told with a bit of a twist. And from what i remember "Little Red Riding Hood" is a cartoon and kid friendly old tale but i am interested to see what Matthew Bright did to which the dynmaics.

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