Will Rogers’ 1920s (1976), An American Family (1973) and The War Room (1993): A Cowboy’s Guide to the Pristine Sunshine and Wars in the Name of Peace
Abstract
The study compares the responses of an artist, a common man and an American president to the times by analyzing the content of three documentary films: Will Rogers’ 1920s: A Cowboy’s Guide to the Times, An American Family (1973) and The War Room (1993) from the twentieth century. Will Rogers’1920s gives an insight into the simple life of a jongleur and a troubadour, cowboy cum actor, Will Rogers who was famous for topical humor in 1920s and whose life size sculpture occupies space in the American White House to keep an eye on the deeds of the greatest world leaders. An American Family, the world’s first ever reality show, documents real life events of seven members of a common American family and provide a contrast to the perfect Hollywood family portrait in 12 episodes. The War Room focuses on the president Clinton’s political agenda during his 1992 election campaign. The authors reviewed literature on the said documentaries and history of documentary film, American institutions and movements by Jack C. Ellis and Betsy A. McLane, Jeffrey Ruoff, Peter C. Rollins, Peter Ian Crawford, Klin Richard, Chris Hegedus, Shawn J. Parry-Giles and Trevor Parry-Giles. The study finds that Will Rogers learned to share his inherent happiness with the American audience by mollifying and disciplining many of their anxieties in the context of industrialization and the world war in 1920s. An American family is disturbing yet hilarious and presents a real portrait of the American family against 70s “culturally polyglot confluence backdrops” (Ellis and McLane 254). Pat Loud divorces her husband on air and their son Lance Loud becomes the first gay icon of the ‘gay decade,’ as several feminist, gay/lesbian, and civil rights, antiwar, ecology, and environmental protection movements takeover America. An American Family shows the mundane truth of everyday life in its social context. Its controlled realism reflects the filmmaker’s social conscience for audience’s identification and political action. The War Room celebrates the ideology of war during the president Clinton’s election campaign.
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Carmichael, D. (2007, March 15). An American family (Class discussion). Oklahoma SU Eng.
Crawford, P. I. (1994). The reception of an American family. The construction of the viewer: Media ethnography and the anthropology of audiences. Sigurjón Baldur Hafsteinsson. Ed. NJ: Smyrna Press. Retrieved from . Accessed 22 March 2007.
Cutler, R. J. (Producer), Hegedus, C. (Director), & Pennebaker, D.A. (Director). (1993). The War Room (Motion Picture). McEttinger Films.
Ellis, J. C., & McLane, B. A. (2005). English-language documentary in the 1970s—Power of the people. A new history of documentary film, pp. 227-257. New York: Continuum.
Ellis, J. C., & McLane, B. A. (2005). English-language documentary in the 1980s—Video arrives. A new history of documentary film, pp. 258-292. New York: Continuum.
Gilbert, C. (Producer), Raymond, A. (Director), & Raymond, S. (Director). (1973). An American family (Motion Picture). USA: ITVS/WETA/WNET/PBS.
Jeffrey K. Ruoff, "'Nothing in our films is ever not in sync': The MIT Film Section," Paper presented at the Society for Cinema Studies and University Film and Video Association in Bozeman, MT, 1988.
Klin, R. (n.d.). Bang the drum loudly. An American family: The story of the Louds. Subterranean cinema. Retrieved from . Accessed 22 March 2007.
McCombs, M. E., & Shaw, D. L. (1972). The agenda-setting function of the mass media. Public opinion quarterly, 36, pp. 176-187.
McCombs, M. E. & Shaw, D. (1994). “Agenda-setting function”. In Griffin, E. M. (Ed.), A First Look at Communication Theory, 2nd ed. New York, NY: McGraw-Hill.
P.B.S. (2002). An American family: A death in an American family. WA: WETA. Retrieved from . Accessed 19 March 2007.
Parry-Giles, S. J., & Parry-Giles, T. (1999, Winter). Meta-Imaging, The War Room, and the Hyperreality of U.S. Politics. Journal of communication Winter 49(1), pp. 28-45.
Rollins, P. C. (1973). Will Rogers: Symbolic Man and Film Image. Journal of Popular Culture 2, pp. 323-352.
Rollins, P. C., Raack, R. C., Griffin, P. H., Malloch, W. F. (Producers Directors). (1976). Will Rogers 1920s: A Cowboy’s Guide to the Times (Motion Picture). USA: Cadre Films.
Rollins, P. C. (2003). Institutions and movements: The family. The Columbia companion to American history on film, pp. 352-362. New York: Columbia University Press.
Rollins, P. C. (2007, March 15). An American family (Lecture). Oklahoma SU Eng.
Ruoff, J. (1993). Conventions of sound in documentary.” Cinema journal, 32(3), pp. 24-40.
Jeffrey K. Ruoff, "'Nothing in our films is ever not in sync': The MIT Film Section," Paper presented at the Society for Cinema Studies and University Film and Video Association in Bozeman, MT, 1988.
McCombs, M. E., & Shaw, D. L. (1972). The agenda-setting function of the mass media. Public opinion quarterly, 36, pp. 176-187.
McCombs, M. E. & Shaw, D. (1994). “Agenda-setting function”. In Griffin, E. M. (Ed.), A First Look at Communication Theory, 2nd ed. New York, NY: McGraw-Hill.
Rollins, P. C., Raack, R. C., Griffin, P. H., Malloch, W. F. (Producers Directors). (1976). Will Rogers 1920s: A Cowboy’s Guide to the Times (Motion Picture). USA: Cadre Films.
Rollins, P. C. (1973). Will Rogers: Symbolic Man and Film Image. Journal of Popular Culture 2, pp. 323-352.
Works Cited
Carmichael, D. (2007, March 15). An American family (Class discussion). Oklahoma SU Eng.
Crawford, P. I. (1994). The reception of an American family. The construction of the viewer: Media ethnography and the anthropology of audiences. Sigurjón Baldur Hafsteinsson. Ed. NJ: Smyrna Press. Retrieved from . Accessed 22 March 2007.
Ellis, J. C., & McLane, B. A. (2005). English-language documentary in the 1970s—Power of the people. A new history of documentary film, pp. 227-257. New York: Continuum.
Ellis, J. C., & McLane, B. A. (2005). English-language documentary in the 1980s—Video arrives. A new history of documentary film, pp. 258-292. New York: Continuum.
Gilbert, C. (Producer), Raymond, A. (Director), & Raymond, S. (Director). (1973). An American family (Motion Picture). USA: ITVS/WETA/WNET/PBS.
Klin, R. (n.d.). Bang the drum loudly. An American family: The story of the Louds. Subterranean cinema. Retrieved from . Accessed 22 March 2007.
P.B.S. (2002). An American family: A death in an American family. WA: WETA. Retrieved from . Accessed 19 March 2007.
Rollins, P. C. (2007, March 15). An American family (Lecture). Oklahoma SU Eng.
Rollins, P. C. (2003). Institutions and movements: The family. The Columbia companion to American history on film, pp. 352-362. New York: Columbia University Press.
Ruoff, J. (1993). Conventions of sound in documentary.” Cinema journal, 32(3), pp. 24-40.
Cutler, R. J. (Producer), Hegedus, C. (Director), & Pennebaker, D.A. (Director). (1993). The War Room (Motion Picture). McEttinger Films.
Parry-Giles, S. J., & Parry-Giles, T. (1999, Winter). Meta-Imaging, The War Room, and the Hyperreality of U.S. Politics. Journal of communication Winter 49(1), pp. 28-45.
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