John Sayles
John Sayles is the very paradigm of the contemporary independent filmmaker. By raising much of the funding for his films himself, Sayles functions more independently than most directors, and he has used his freedom to write and produce films with a distinctive personal style and often clearly expressed political positions. From The Return of the Secaucus Seven to Sunshine State, his films have consistently expressed progressive political positions on issues including race, gender, sexuality, class, and disability.
 
In this study, David R. Shumway examines the defining characteristic of Sayles's cinema: its realism. Positing the filmmaker as a critical realist, Shumway explores Sayles's attention to narrative in critically acclaimed and popular films such as Matewan, Eight Men Out, Passion Fish, and Lone Star. The study also details the conditions under which Sayles's films have been produced, distributed, and exhibited, affecting the way in which these films have been understood and appreciated. In the process, Shumway presents Sayles as a teacher who tells historically accurate stories that invite audiences to consider the human world they all inhabit.
"1106911128"
John Sayles
John Sayles is the very paradigm of the contemporary independent filmmaker. By raising much of the funding for his films himself, Sayles functions more independently than most directors, and he has used his freedom to write and produce films with a distinctive personal style and often clearly expressed political positions. From The Return of the Secaucus Seven to Sunshine State, his films have consistently expressed progressive political positions on issues including race, gender, sexuality, class, and disability.
 
In this study, David R. Shumway examines the defining characteristic of Sayles's cinema: its realism. Positing the filmmaker as a critical realist, Shumway explores Sayles's attention to narrative in critically acclaimed and popular films such as Matewan, Eight Men Out, Passion Fish, and Lone Star. The study also details the conditions under which Sayles's films have been produced, distributed, and exhibited, affecting the way in which these films have been understood and appreciated. In the process, Shumway presents Sayles as a teacher who tells historically accurate stories that invite audiences to consider the human world they all inhabit.
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John Sayles

John Sayles

by David R. Shumway
John Sayles

John Sayles

by David R. Shumway

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Overview

John Sayles is the very paradigm of the contemporary independent filmmaker. By raising much of the funding for his films himself, Sayles functions more independently than most directors, and he has used his freedom to write and produce films with a distinctive personal style and often clearly expressed political positions. From The Return of the Secaucus Seven to Sunshine State, his films have consistently expressed progressive political positions on issues including race, gender, sexuality, class, and disability.
 
In this study, David R. Shumway examines the defining characteristic of Sayles's cinema: its realism. Positing the filmmaker as a critical realist, Shumway explores Sayles's attention to narrative in critically acclaimed and popular films such as Matewan, Eight Men Out, Passion Fish, and Lone Star. The study also details the conditions under which Sayles's films have been produced, distributed, and exhibited, affecting the way in which these films have been understood and appreciated. In the process, Shumway presents Sayles as a teacher who tells historically accurate stories that invite audiences to consider the human world they all inhabit.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780252036989
Publisher: University of Illinois Press
Publication date: 02/24/2012
Series: Contemporary Film Directors
Edition description: 1st Edition
Pages: 200
Product dimensions: 5.60(w) x 8.30(h) x 0.80(d)

About the Author

David R. Shumway is the director of the Humanities Center and a professor of English and literary and cultural studies at Carnegie Mellon University. His many books include Modern Love: Romance, Intimacy, and the Marriage Crisis.

Read an Excerpt

John Sayles


By David R. Shumway

UNIVERSITY OF ILLINOIS PRESS

Copyright © 2012 David R. Shumway
All right reserved.

ISBN: 978-0-252-03698-9


Chapter One

John Sayles | Critical Realist

John Sayles: Independent

The one word most often associated with John Sayles is independent. He has been throughout most of his career referred to as America's leading independent filmmaker. More recently, he has been called both the grandfather and the godfather of American independent cinema. He may be the only filmmaker in the world whose face appears on a seal or medallion. This medallion graces the first page of johnsayles. com, and has appeared after the credits of some of his films. It shows a drawing of Sayles's face, with a legend imprinted around the outside: at the top, "John Sayles," and at the bottom, "Independent" (see figure 1). This designation describes Sayles's relationship to the film industry accurately. He has made only one film within the traditional Hollywood system, where the studio, rather than the director, retains control over casting and cutting.

Sayles's own definition of independence is not, however, focused on the relationship of a film to the industry:

No matter how it's financed, no matter how high or low the budget, for me an independent film emerges when filmmakers started out with a story they wanted to tell and found a way to make that story. If they ended up doing it in the studio system and it's the story they wanted to tell, that's fine. If they ended up getting their money from independent sources, if they ended up using their mother's credit cards, that doesn't matter. (Carson, "Independent" 129).

Sayles therefore considers Martin Scorcese, Spike Lee, Oliver Stone, and Tim Burton independents despite the fact that they have all made movies within the studio system (Smith 250–51). Like them, Sayles has consistently found ways to make the stories he wants to make, though one might add that because of those stories, he has a greater struggle to make them.

Yet, there is something also misleading about the way in which "independent" seems to have become almost a part of Sayles's name. Sayles no more makes films by himself than did Howard Hawks or John Ford. Indeed, there is no director more conscious of the fact that film is a collaborative medium. In discussing his work in interviews, he always speaks of "our film," not "my film." Those who have worked with him describe the relations on a shoot, not as a hierarchy, but as a community, where the various participants are treated in an egalitarian manner. The image of rugged individualism, which the "independent" label seems to carry, is antithetical to Sayles's practice and to his vision.

Sayles's association with independent cinema also accurately reflects his pioneering role in a movement that developed beginning around 1980 and that might be said to have recently come to an end. As Yannis Tzioumakis has shown, there has always been an independent film sector, in which he includes, for example, producer David O. Selznick in the late 1930s and early 1940s, the production company Walt Disney Pictures in the 1930s, and United Artists as a distributor of independent films from its inception in 1920 until it was sold to a conglomerate in 1967. In the 1960s, major hits like The Graduate (Mike Nichols, 1967) and Easy Rider (Dennis Hopper, 1969) were produced by entities other than the major studios. But the meaning of the term "independent" had shifted by the end of the 1970s, in part because the industry had consolidated, with film production now controlled by a handful of conglomerates —and in part because of production trends within these companies that focused on making megaprofits on blockbusters like Jaws (Steven Spielberg, 1975) and Star Wars (George Lucas, 1977). Film had long been an industrial commodity, and during the 1970s, it seemed to become all the more so. But even as the average cost of a Hollywood film was increasing exponentially, the amount of money required to make a movie was actually declining as equipment became less expensive and more readily available.

While avant-garde filmmakers such as Stan Brackage and Jonas Mekas had long made films without the benefit of a production company, very few narrative films were made that way. Sayles's most significant predecessor was John Cassavetes, who beginning with Shadows in 1959, wrote, directed, and sometimes edited low-budget and aesthetically innovative films funded by the money he made acting in studio productions. In 1974, he set up his own distribution company, Faces International, to distribute A Woman under the Influence when he could not find another company willing to take on the film. Cassavetes's commitment to his own vision was a model for many of the auteurs of 1970s, such as Martin Scorcese, and Sayles has called him a major influence.

When Sayles made his first film, Return of the Secaucus Seven, he has said that there were four companies that were in the business of distributing films made outside of mainstream Hollywood (quoted in Anderson). Getting an independent film distributed to theaters was so unusual that Sayles thought his film's best chance to be seen was probably on Public Television, and he consciously shot the film with the small screen in mind. The film's surprising success at the box office and enthusiastic critical reception demonstrated the viability of this new mode of filmmaking. New distributors emerged to handle an increasing number of films made outside of the industry. These films often produced a good return on their small investments, and were thus attractive from a business perspective. The trend culminated in the transformative success of sex, lies, and videotape (Steven Soderbergh, 1989), which a small independent company called Miramax acquired after its screening at the Sundance Film Festival. The film's $24 million gross on a $1.2 million cost made independent film something the studios wanted, and they created or acquired divisions to distribute and eventually produce them—rendering, of course, the economic meaning of "independent" moot.

Because Sayles has been defined by his position outside of the industry, in what follows I am attentive to issues of finance and distribution. Although a study of a director who has not been so defined might reasonably ignore his or her position in the market, one cannot deal with Sayles accurately without considering his struggles with financing and distributing his work. I therefore discuss the financing, distribution, and reception of Sayles's films, using the best information available. The point of this is certainly not to buy into the current obsession with box-office performance as a measure of a film's worth, but to make clear the conditions under which Sayles's films have been produced and exhibited, conditions which have affected the way in which these films have been understood and appreciated.

During the 1980s, however, another meaning of the term "independent" emerged that was rooted in "the kinds of formal/aesthetic strategies they adopt" rather than economics and their relationship to the broader social, cultural, political or ideological landscape (King 2). For some scholars, formal considerations seem to be most important. So, when Juan Surez observes, "[Jim] Jarmusch has often been regarded as the main exponent of independent cinema in the 1980s and 1990s," it is clearly because of the innovative form his films display (6). Suárez points out that the influence of Jarmusch's films can be seen in the work of Hal Hartley, Sofia Coppola, and Richard Linklater, among others, while Sayles, though often cited as an inspiration by other aspiring filmmakers, does not seem to have been much copied. Others identified as leading independents, including Todd Haynes, Kevin Smith, Gus Van Sant, and Soderbergh, exemplify the sense of "independent" as a filmmaker who experiments with narrative, visual form, or genre, regardless of how the film is financed.

Sayles's critical stance toward American society and its politics is the defining characteristic of his cinema, but that stance has not been expressed through the stylistic experimentation often thought to be required for it. Radical politics are attributed to Jarmusch and Haynes in part because of their style. Sayles has said, "I'm totally uninterested in form for its own sake. But I am interested in story-telling technique" (Smith 100). That distinction is reinforced by his way of discussing his own films in interviews and DVD commentaries, where his concern is mainly how the story got told. He thinks of himself as an artisan or craftsperson, but not as an artist or the maker of "art films." In this sense, Sayles has much in common with studio era directors such as Howard Hawks, who also conceived of themselves as craftsmen and storytellers.

In answering a question about style posed by interviewer Gavin Smith, Sayles offered a longish discussion of Tom Wolfe, Gay Talese, and the new journalism, where he asserted, "I was never interested in it, because I felt that the article wasn't about this actor or this singer or this politician. The article was about Tom Wolfe, about Gay Talese" (101). This suggests that Sayles wants his audience not to be thinking about him, but about the events and characters he is presenting. The answer also implies that Sayles feels a kinship with traditional journalists who give you the story, not their own personalities. Sayles's visual style, then, is always at the service of his story, and he is on occasion visually inventive when the story demands it. He is much more innovative in his narrative structures, which often deviate from standard Hollywood formulas. Yet because "independent" cinema since Cassavetes has been associated with style rather than story, Sayles may be subject to expectations he has no desire to fulfill.

John Sayles: Realist

When Sayles is called a realist in the press, it is usually expressed as the Los Angeles Times did in 1995, calling him a "master of gritty realism and champion of the American working class" (Black in Carson, Interviews 171). Realism here means a particular kind of content, and that content is connected to a traditionally leftist position of support for workers. These are both aspects of Sayles's realism, but many of his films are neither gritty nor are focused on a particular class. Sayles's realism is much broader, including his focus on story and character and his commitment to the idea that film can tell us something about the world out of cinema. Sayles has said, "I always want people to leave the theater thinking about their own lives, not about other movies" (Vecsey in Carson, Interviews 96). The desire to make films that make people think about their own lives gets at the essence of the director's realism. What Sayles says he learned from Cassavetes's films was "that you could have recognizable human behavior on the screen" (Smith 51). Whereas film theory and at least some film practice have since the 1970s called into question is the whole idea of realism in cinema, Sayles has never wavered from his ambition to tell us the truth about the world beyond the screen using various means available to the makers of fictions. In arguing that Sayles is best understood as a "critical realist," I'm disagreeing with Mark Bould, who in his study of Sayles holds that "he has been long engaged in developing American naturalist filmmaking" (6). Bould compares Sayles to Zola, in that the filmmaker's narrative method tends to present social problems "as social facts, as results, as caput mortuum of a social process," as Georg Lukcs complained about the French naturalist ("Narrate or Describe?" 11314). Sayles has been influenced by the American naturalist tradition, especially through the work of Nelson Algren, which he cites as an early influence on his fiction. But his films do not reveal a commitment to naturalism as an artistic form or as an ideology, lacking entirely any sense of the predetermined decline of individuals not possessed of the strongest traits. Sayles may often seem pessimistic, but this is better explained by Antonio Gramsci's maxim, "pessimism of intellect, optimism of the will," than it is by attributing to him a secret belief in biological determinism. Sayles's characters are never merely spectators, as Lukcs believes Zola's are, but are always engaged in a struggle with the reality they confront. Still, political projects are meaningless without hope, since only a possibility of success, however limited or remote, makes such projects rational endeavors. Sayles's films never express complete hopelessness, but there are instances, which I discuss later, where their pessimism of the intellect comes close to negating any optimism of the will.

Lukács asserts, "The central aesthetic problem of realism is the adequate presentation of the complete human personality" (Studies 7). This is a view that Sayles might well share, because his films are peopled by an enormous range of characters and he strives to make them full-rounded. He takes his film characters so seriously that he writes biographies of them for his actors to read. And like the great Hungarian critic, Sayles understands that the human personality exists only within a definite social order. His films always give us characters who live in a particular time and place, belong to a recognizable class, and have a specific social role—almost always including work. But there are limits to how much a more or less orthodox Marxist like Lukács can enlighten us about the realism of a filmmaker who, whatever his personal relationship to the Marxist tradition, clearly does not regard it as the final truth about history and society. Lukács, the Hegelian Marxist, believed that it was possible to know society as a totality, and he believed that realists like Honoré de Balzac presented both human beings and society as "complete entities" (Studies 6). Sayles is skeptical of all claims to completeness, and would surely not claim it for any of his films. He may indeed accept the notion that society is a whole, but as a filmmaker all he can do is give us different perspectives or experiences of it. Unlike Lukács, Sayles brings no overarching preconception about the nature of reality to his films, assuming neither that history is a dialectical march toward utopia, nor that the current social arrangements are natural and inevitable.

Much of the formal experimentation featured in the independent films of the 1980s and 1990s is antirealist. It is hard to imagine that antirealist film theory, and the antirealism of poststructuralism more generally, did not have some influence on this trend. The 1970s critique of realism derived from poststructuralism, especially from Roland Barthes's dismissal of the referentiality of the text. For Barthes, what is of interest is not what a text can tell us about a world it claims to represent, but rather what it tells us about writing and reading—that is about itself and other texts. Thus in S/Z, Barthes asserts, "It is necessary to disengage the text from its exterior and its totality" (Quoted in MacCabe, "Realism" 140). If Barthes's position is extreme, it is not atypical of modernist and postmodernist criticism, which has consistently been skeptical of representation and which has read works of art primarily in terms of their relations to other works of art.

The critique that film theory made of Classical Hollywood cinema held that the process of making films seemed to be a transparent window on reality, the films offering the illusion of realism, i.e., an objective representation of reality, instead of the ideologically inflected representation it actually presented. Perhaps the most influential theorist of realism in film was Colin MacCabe. Like modernist critics of realism, he associated it with empiricism, but for him the chief problem was not realism's naïveté or lack of complexity, but its silent transmission of ideology. Hollywood films were seen as covertly ideological, and their realism was understood as an aspect of the false consciousness they were accused of purveying. This critique was applied to most fiction films, which were deemed realist despite the rather obvious unreality of many of them. The notion of Hollywood as a "dream factory" that triumphed by selling patent escapism largely disappeared from film studies at this time. "Realism" in 70s film theory was often called bourgeois, an assertion of a deep ideological connection between the form of Hollywood film and the ruling class that produced it.

(Continues...)



Excerpted from John Sayles by David R. Shumway Copyright © 2012 by David R. Shumway. Excerpted by permission of UNIVERSITY OF ILLINOIS PRESS. All rights reserved. No part of this excerpt may be reproduced or reprinted without permission in writing from the publisher.
Excerpts are provided by Dial-A-Book Inc. solely for the personal use of visitors to this web site.

Table of Contents

Contents

Acknowledgments....................xi
JOHN SAYLES: CRITICAL REALIST....................1
John Sayles: Independent....................1
John Sayles: Realist....................6
Beginnings: Return of the Secaucus Seven....................14
Establishing a Career: Lianna and Baby It's You....................24
The Brother from Another Planet and Springsteen Videos....................34
Matewan....................44
Eight Men Out....................59
Place and Melodrama: City of Hope and Passion Fish....................69
Stories....................83
Lone Star....................90
Men with Guns....................105
Limbo....................113
Millennial Sayles....................121
Casa de los babys....................127
Silver City....................134
Honeydripper....................143
INTERVIEWS WITH JOHN SAYLES....................153
Filmography....................157
Bibliography....................167
Index....................175
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