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About this book
Prison Movies: Cinema Behind Bars traces the public fascination with incarceration from the silent era to the present. Often considered an offshoot of the gangster film, the prison film precedes the gangster film and is in many ways its opposite. Rather than focusing on tragic figures heading for a fall, the prison film focuses on fallen characters seeking redemption. The gangster's perverse pursuit of the American dream is irrelevant to the prisoner for whom that dream has already failed. At their core, prison films are about self-preservation at the hands of oppressive authority. Like history itself, prison films display long stretches of idleness punctuated by eruptions of violence, dangerous moments that signify liberation and the potential for change. The enclosed world of the prison is a highly effective microcosm, one that forces characters and audiences alike to confront vexing issues of race, class, gender, and sexuality. These portrayals of men and women behind bars have thrived because they deal with such fundamental human themes as freedom, individuality, power, justice, and mercy.
Films examined include The Big House (1930), I Want to Live! (1958), The Defiant Ones (1958), Cool Hand Luke (1967), Midnight Express (1978), Escape from Alcatraz (1979), The Shawshank Redemption (1994), and Starred Up (2013).
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Information
Table of contents
- CoverĀ
- Series Page
- Title Page
- Copyright
- ContentsĀ
- Acknowledgements
- Introduction: After the Crime is Over
- 1. Prison Films of Pre-Code Hollywood: Big Houses, Death Houses and Chain Gangs
- 2. Womenās Prison Films of the 1950s and Early 1960s
- 3. Identity and Violence in Popular Prison Films from the 1960s to the 1990s
- Afterword: Post-9/11 Prison Movies and the Era of Mass Incarceration
- Bibliography
- Index