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Roth, Lane – 1980
While analyzing humor is difficult, Henri Bergson's concept of comedy (a person acting like a machine) outlined in the classic essay, "Le Rire," in 1900, is probably too narrow a definition. Science fiction film, a genre which has evolved since the publication of Bergson's essay, has also speculated about man and society, often to…
Descriptors: Film Criticism, Film Study, Humor, Popular Culture
Roth, Lane – 1986
The focal image of the film "The Black Hole" functions as a visual metaphor for the sacred, order, unity, and eternal time. The black hole is a symbol that unites the antinomic pairs of conscious/unconscious, water/fire, immersion/emersion, death/rebirth, and hell/heaven. The black hole is further associated with the quest for…
Descriptors: Content Analysis, Film Criticism, Films, Imagery
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
Rushing, Janice Hocker; Frentz, Thomas S. – Critical Studies in Mass Communication, 1989
Critiques three contemporary films, "Rocky IV,""Blade Runner," and "The Terminator." Constructs an evolving dystopian shadow myth that expresses the culture's repressed fears about its relationship to technology. Offers implications for the reinterpretation of the dystopian myth and for the conduct of other cultural…
Descriptors: Film Criticism, Films, Mass Media Effects, Mythology
Roth, Lane – 1985
Analyzing the setting of six recent "blockbuster" films, this study outlines numerous instances of the Western's influence on several contemporary science fiction films, "Star Wars,""Battlestar Galactica,""Star Trek: The Motion Picture,""The Black Hole,""The Empire Strikes Back," and…
Descriptors: Content Analysis, Cultural Context, Film Criticism, Film Study
Roth, Lane – 1987
"Star Trek II" is a treatment of the penultimate stages of the monomyth in which the hero descends into the underworld and is reborn. This psychological sense of rebirth is evoked in modern audiences by the film. In particular, the doppelganger (psychic double) motif, so often associated in film, literature, and myth with the…
Descriptors: Content Analysis, Death, Film Criticism, Films
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
Jurkiewicz, Kenneth – English Journal, 1990
Argues that Fritz Lang's film "Metropolis" deserves exploration and analysis because of its outlandish plot, dazzling visual and technical elements, and its reflection of the closing days of Weimar Germany. Presents a brief study guide designed to stimulate student curiosity and facilitate further interest in the film. (RS)
Descriptors: Class Activities, Film Criticism, Films, Popular Culture
Roth, Lane – 1978
Fritz Lang's "Metropolis" (1927) is a seminal film because of its concern, now generic, with the profound impact technological progress has on mankind's social and spiritual progress. As in many later science fiction films, the ascendancy of artifact over nature is depicted not as liberating human beings, but as subjecting and corrupting…
Descriptors: Film Criticism, Film Study, Films, Lighting Design
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
Telotte, J. P. – Journal of Film and Video, 1993
Looks at "The World of Tomorrow" (a 1984 documentary film of the 1939 New York World's Fair) as a gloss on the cultural tendency to sell the pleasures of technology while deferring questions about its nature. Notes that the film views the link between pleasure and technology that science fiction films variously exploit. (RS)
Descriptors: Film Criticism, Films, Higher Education, Popular Culture
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
Neustadter, Roger – Youth and Society, 1989
Traces the changes in the depiction of childhood in science fiction films from the 1950s to the present decade. Argues that the contemporary science fiction representation of the sentimental child is a cultural idealization that opposes the social reality of the vanishing child. (FMW)
Descriptors: Characterization, Child Role, Children, Cultural Images