Hollywood Values

by Steven C. Scheer


Formats

Softcover
£9.75
Hardcover
£19.04
£15.25
Softcover
£9.75

Book Details

Language : English
Publication Date : 01/05/2002

Format : Softcover
Dimensions : 6x9
Page Count : 152
ISBN : 9780759671140
Format : Hardcover
Dimensions : 6x9
Page Count : 152
ISBN : 9781403332912

About the Book

Have you ever felt that while you and your friends watched the same movie, you didn’t really see the same movie? Have you ever wondered why so many people see so many different things in movies? A few years ago I had an opportunity to hear Michael Medved, the author of Hollywood vs. America (1992), in person. In the question-and-answer period after his lecture he happened to call Titanic (1997) a corrupt movie because, as he said, it shows that all an old woman remembers late in her life is the fact that when she was young "she got laid in the back seat of a car." At that time I haven’t seen the movie yet, but some instinct told me that there must be more to the story than that. Sure enough, when I did see the movie, I saw something entirely different. I saw an old woman remember, among other things, making love to a young man who not long after that gave up his life that she might live as that fated voyage came to a tragic end. Since "greater love has no man," I didn’t think there was anything corrupt about this, but this is the sort of thoughtlessly negative reaction to Hollywood that has prompted me to write Hollywood Values.

My book presents heart-felt yet accurate interpretations of an adequate sampling of movies made in the last 20 years in four different thematic categories. I deal with movies that show Hollywood going to school, falling in love, fighting for justice, and making a difference. The movies I treat include such wonderful and insightful examples as Dead Poets Society and Patch Adams, or The Age of Innocence and American Beauty, or The Verdict and Erin Brockovich, or The Color Purple and Fargo, to name just a few. I treat each of the movies I cover in the book seriously, giving each a chance to show us what each is all about. The movies treated in my book are chock full of values, including some obviously traditional ones. But we can’t understand them if we can’t enjoy them, and we can’t enjoy them if we don’t watch them with open minds. Movies, like all works of literature (and they are related to both novels and plays), present us with lots of arguments (in the philosophical sense) that throw light, in one way or another, on the endless struggle between good and evil, the hope that springs eternal in the heart of love, the triumph of the spirit over the letter of the law, and the vicissitudes of so much that besets our human condition. Movies can teach us a great deal about the world and about ourselves, provided that we watch them with tender loving care rather than with what I call the "rejective imagination." If you like movies, you are going to love Hollywood Values. And if you don’t like movies (are there people who really don’t like movies?) you might just change your mind after reading this book.


About the Author

A semi-retired professor of literature, Steven C. Scheer earned a Ph.D. from The Johns Hopkins University in 1974. He taught for just about 30 years in a liberal arts college as well as in several universities. He wrote many essays and a couple of books (the last is Pious Impostures and Unproven Words, a study of the works of such classic American writers as Hawthorne, Melville, and Mark Twain). He was always popular with his students, partly because of his irrepressible enthusiasm and partly because he invented such "fun" assignments (about which he also published an essay) as "The Fictitious Term Paper."

When the liberal arts college for which he taught for decades went out of business, Steven C. Scheer decided on a new career. When he was young he really wanted to be a writer, so now at the age of 60 he is starting all over again. Hollywood Values is his first offering as a full-time writer. It is an act of love, as it were, based on a lifelong appreciation of good movies, along with plays and novels and poems, of course. He is already at work on his next book (Love & Death & Sex & Marriage), for which the groundwork has been laid years ago in his teaching of certain courses that touch upon the development of romantic love in Europe and America. Wish him luck.