Lecture 9: Stars Professor Michael Green Ocean’s 13 (2007) Directed by Steven Soderberg.
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Transcript of Lecture 9: Stars Professor Michael Green Ocean’s 13 (2007) Directed by Steven Soderberg.
Lecture 9: StarsLecture 9: Stars
Professor Michael Green
Ocean’s 13 (2007)Directed by Steven Soderberg
Previous LecturePrevious Lecture• Stage and movie
Acting• Robert De Niro as
“Star Actor”• De Niro’s
performance in Raging Bull (1980)
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This LectureThis Lecture
• Movie Stars and their Images
• Film stars and Society
• George Clooney
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Stars and Their ImageStars and Their Image
Pirates of the Caribbean: The Curse of the Black Pearl (2003)Directed by Gore Verbinski
Lesson 9: Part I
What is a Star?What is a Star?• A star image consists of what we normally
refer to as his or her 'image', made up of screen roles and obviously stage-managed public appearances, and also of images of the manufacture of that 'image' and of the real person who is the site or occasion of it.
• A film star is a featured performer in a film but also an image that generates interest beyond individual films.
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Complex and ContradictoryComplex and Contradictory• Each element is complex
and contradictory, and the star is all of it taken together. – Watch the clip from A
Streetcar Named Desire.
• What elements of the performance made Marlon Brando a star?
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A Film Star’s ImageA Film Star’s Image• The star phenomenon consists of everything
that is publicly available about stars. A film star's image is made not just in films but in the promotion of the star and those films through: – Merchandise– Public appearances – Studio press material– Interviews– Biographies – Tabloids 7
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Star PromotionStar Promotion
Using the ImageUsing the Image
• “Further, a star's image is also what people say or write about him or her, as critics or commentators, the way the image is used in other contexts such as advertisements, novels, pop songs, and finally the way the star can become part of the coinage of everyday speech [Brangelina, The Gipper, ‘I’ll be back’].”– Richard Dyer
John BelushiJohn Belushi
Andy WarholAndy Warhol
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Stars Across PlatformsStars Across Platforms• Star images are always extensive, multi-
media, intertextual. Not all these manifestations are necessarily equal. – Barbara Streisand– Frank Sinatra– Hugh Jackman– Eddie Murphy– Queen Latifah– Madonna– Watch the clip from Watch the clip from 48 Hours48 Hours
Star HistoriesStar Histories• Not only do different elements predominate
in different star images, but they do so at different periods in the star's career. Star images have histories, and histories that outlive the star's own lifetime. – James Dean– Marilyn Monroe– John Travolta– Orson Welles
A Star’s HistoryA Star’s History
Films Stars and AudiencesFilms Stars and Audiences• “The audience is also part of the making of
the image. Audiences cannot make media images mean anything they want to, but they can select from the complexity of the image the meanings and feelings, variations and contradictions, that work for them.”– Richard Dyer
FanshipFanship• “Fanship – particularly as manifested on the
Web – as well as box office receipts and audience research, mean that the audience's ideas about a star can act back on the media producers of the star's image.”– Dyer
Made for ProfitMade for Profit• Stars are made for profit. In terms of the
market, stars are part of the way films are sold. The star's presence in a film is a promise of a certain thing that you will see in the film – Bruce Willis as wisecracking action hero with a heart, for example.
• Equally, stars sell newspapers and magazines, and are used to sell toiletries, fashions, cars and almost anything else. – Watch the clip from Watch the clip from Die HardDie Hard
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Star as SalesmanStar as Salesman
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Using the ImageUsing the Image• Paul Newman used his star
image for political and charitable work
• He gave away $250 million earned by Newman’s Own company.
• Many movie stars trade on their image and popularity to help others: Angelina Jolie, Leonardo Dicaprio, George Clooney, Matt Damon.
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Typecast Typecast
• “Sometimes a star image becomes so fixed that even when he or she tries to break it by doing roles directly opposed to that image, the public ignores such deviations and continues to support the original image.” – Peter Lehman and William Luhr
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E.g. Sylvester StalloneE.g. Sylvester Stallone• Stallone tried to move
beyond his action image with comedies like Oscar (1991).
• Their box office failures forced him back into action roles.
• Other stars, such as Bruce Willis, have been more successful.
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The ContenderThe Contender• In 2005, Stallone
returned indirectly to the role that defined his image more than any other, Rocky, by producing and starring in the TV show about boxing The Contender.
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Return of the Action HeroReturn of the Action Hero• Stallone’s return with
Rambo (2009) and The Expendables (2010) reaffirms his star image as an action hero.
• Both films were box office hits.
• Stallone directed both films, controlling his star image.
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StarsStars• “Star costs often account for
disproportionately large percentages of [film] budgets.”
• “The escalation of star salaries has been one of the major factors driving up the cost of production in recent decades.” – Geoff King
George Clooney’s Paydays:George Clooney’s Paydays:
Ocean’s Thirteen (2007) $15,000,000
Intolerable Cruelty (2003) $15,000,000
Ocean's Eleven (2001) $20,000,000
The Perfect Storm (2000) $8,000,000 O Brother, Where Art Thou? (2000 ) $1,000,000
Three Kings (1999)
$5,000,000
Out of Sight (1998)
$10,000,000
Batman & Robin (1997) $10,000,000
George Clooney’s Paydays:George Clooney’s Paydays:
Ocean’s Thirteen (2007) $15,000,000
Intolerable Cruelty (2003) $15,000,000
Ocean's Eleven (2001) $20,000,000
The Perfect Storm (2000) $8,000,000 O Brother, Where Art Thou? (2000 ) $1,000,000
Three Kings (1999)
$5,000,000
Out of Sight (1998)
$10,000,000
Batman & Robin (1997) $10,000,000
Why Pay Stars So Much?Why Pay Stars So Much?• The film industry assumes they draw
viewers.• A star’s Q Score measures star’s
familiarity and appeal with audiences. • Will Smith’s last eight films have made
over $100 million each.• The three Pirates of the Caribbean films
have earned $2.76 billion worldwide.
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Early CinemaEarly Cinema• For the first 15 years of commercial
cinema (1895-1910) there were no stars.• Early producers worried if actors were
publicized, they would ask for big salaries.• Other producers introduced the concept of
movie stars because they believed audiences would pay to see them.
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Classic Hollywood 1930-1950Classic Hollywood 1930-1950• Saw the creation
and control of stars by studios.
• Stars were under exclusive contract.
• Studios built their images by selecting film roles and publicity campaigns.
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Independent ProducersIndependent Producers
• As the studio system declined in the 1950s and 60s, major stars became independent producers.
• This is still the a common practice today.
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Stars and RaceStars and Race• Before the 1960s
very few Hollywood stars were African American – or non-white.
• Sidney Poitier broke this barrier in the late 1950s and 1960s.
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Film Stars and SocietyFilm Stars and Society
Lesson 9: Part II
Why are We interested?Why are We interested?
• Dyer:Stars intrigue us because they offer models of individual identity.
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Confirming the IndividualConfirming the Individual• “The fact that the star is not just a screen
image but a flesh and blood person is liable to work to express the notion of the individual. A series of shots of a star whose image has changed - say, Elizabeth Taylor - at various points in her career could work to fragment her; but in practice it works to confirm that beneath all these different looks there is an irreducible core that gives all those looks a unity, namely Elizabeth Taylor.”– Dyer
Elizabeth TaylorElizabeth Taylor
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How to Be a ManHow to Be a Man• John Wayne
represented a traditional notion of masculinity based on: – self sufficiency– toughness– physical
dominance.
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How to Be a WomanHow to Be a Woman• Audrey Hepburn
represented a traditional notion of femininity based on being: – Graceful and demure– The embodiment of
male romantic fantasy– Deferential to men
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Stars Endorse Social ValuesStars Endorse Social Values• Work• Gender Roles• Social Responsibility• Honor/Loyalty• Integrity• Sacrifice• Love
– Watch the clip from Watch the clip from Erin Brockovich Erin Brockovich (2000)(2000)
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George ClooneyGeorge Clooney
Lesson 9: Part III
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TV Star TV Star • Clooney got his
first big role in a TV series, ER 1994-99.
• His character, Dr. Doug Ross was attractive, charming, talented – but a rebel.
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Rebellious but CaringRebellious but Caring
• “As Dr. Ross in ER, Clooney was a “sometimes prickly, awkward, rebellious, womanizing, but essentially decent and caring pediatrician . . . prepared to break the rules in his treatment of children.”
• This is essentially Clooney’s star image.
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Charming OutsiderCharming Outsider• Clooney has maintained
this attractive rebel image in numerous roles.
• He has played thieves in six films.
• Clooney’s thief character was introduced in Out of Sight (1998).– Watch the clipWatch the clip
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Expanded RangeExpanded Range
• He has also modified his leading man image with self-deprecating comic roles in O Brother, Where Art Thou (2000), Welcome to Collinwood (2002), Intolerable Cruelty (2003), and Burn After Reading (2008).
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OffscreenOffscreen• Clooney’s image has been
that of a fun-loving bachelor.• Voted Sexist Man Alive by
People Magazine• Bet Michele Pfeiffer and Nicole
Kidman $10,000 he wouldn’t be a father before 40.
• Bought a villa on Italy’s Lake Como.
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Downplaying StardomDownplaying Stardom• Clooney downplays the idea of stardom as
mainly a commercial phenomenon:• “It’s not about the opening weekend, It’s
about career, building a set of films you’re proud of. Period.”
• Unlike some actors, Clooney has backed this up with ambitions projects such as Syriana (2005) and Good Night and Good Luck (2005), for both of which he received Oscar nominations.
Three Kings Three Kings (1999)(1999)• War Film• Directed by David O.
Russell• Stars: Clooney, Mark
Wahlberg, Ice Cube• Action film• But also a political film
and a social critique
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Adding to the Star ImageAdding to the Star Image
• As you watch the following scene from Three Kings, look for what this role added to Clooney’s attractive rebel star image.
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PoliticsPolitics• Produced the HBO
series on Washington lobbyists, K Street.
• In 2004 he supported his father Nick’s candidacy for a congressional seat in Kentucky.
• Addressed the U.S. Congress about war in Dafur.
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Social AgendaSocial Agenda
• Several of Clooney’s recent films have emphasized his liberal political views:– Syriana (2005)– The Good German
(2006)– Michael Clayton
(2007)– Up in the Air (2009)
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End of Lecture 9End of Lecture 9
Next Lecture: Writing About Film