None_Provided
For over forty years, from 1926 to 1967, Hollywood produced more Westerns than it didany other kind of film (American Cinema / American Culture). During these years,roughly one-quarter of all Hollywood films were Westerns. Throughout its history, theWestern has played a crucial role in dramatizing and recreating for successive generationsof Americans the original experience of the Frontier, which shaped American character. "High Noon (1952)", a Western directed by Fred Zinnemann, is just one example of thecharacteristics, conventions, and innovations of the Western genre.
Zinnemann alsowent beyond typical directing and in the final scene had Will Kane take off his tin star (hewas a town Marshall) and drop it into the dust. From it classiccowboy hero, Will Kane, to it's break through performance when Will drops his badge,the film captivates its audience. At times, studiosused actual American landmarks for the background of pictures, instead of man-made. Director Fred Zinnemann shot thefilm in "real time," so that its eighty-five minutes length corresponds to the story's actualtime frame. WillKane struggles for survival, even losing his wife as she sides with the town. " Will Kane, played byGary Cooper, is at a personal war with Frank Miller, whom he sent to prison years earlier. Even if Western films were to disappear entirely, the power of the myth of theWest, which gives Westerns much of their vitality, would in all likelihood, content toflourish in the everyday world of modern America. he has no help from others since every citizen in the town of Hadleyburg finds reason toturn their backs on him. The Western hero is forged amidst the conflicting forces thatcharacterize the formation of the Frontier (American Cinema / American Culture). terns portray one man up against another, usually ending in violence withoutany help from others. This characteristic is evident in "High Noon. Meanwhile, the clocks ticks off the minutes to high noon. ------------------------------------------------------------------------**Bibliography**. Other examples of typicalwesterns include saloon brawls, war paint, and beautiful landscapes. The cowboyhero, villain, and innocent wife are all evident in "High Noon" and in the Western genre.
Common topics in this essay:
Fred Zinnemann,
Noon Western,
America Noon,
Westerns Throughout,
Frank Miller,
Culture Kane,
West Westerns,
,
American Culture,
American Cinema,
western genre,
cowboy hero,
characteristics conventions innovations,
innovations western genre,
conventions innovations,
innovations western,
american culture,
/ american,
fred zinnemann,
characteristics conventions,
cinema / american,
/ american culture,
genre westerns,
cinema /,
conventions innovations western,
|