Mainstream Maverick: John Hughes and New Hollywood Cinema

Mainstream Maverick: John Hughes and New Hollywood Cinema

by Holly Chard
Mainstream Maverick: John Hughes and New Hollywood Cinema

Mainstream Maverick: John Hughes and New Hollywood Cinema

by Holly Chard

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Overview

Winner, Best First Monograph, British Association of Film, Television and Screen Studies

The first scholarly book on John Hughes examines Hollywood's complex relationship with genre, the role of the auteur in commercial cinema, and the legacy of favorites such as Sixteen Candles and Ferris Bueller's Day Off.

In the 1980s and 1990s, John Hughes was one of Hollywood's most reliable hitmakers, churning out beloved teen comedies and family films such as The Breakfast Club and Home Alone, respectively. But was he an artist? Hughes, an adamantly commercial filmmaker who was dismissed by critics, might have laughed at the question. Since his death in 2009, though, he has been memorialized on Oscar night as a key voice of his time. Now the critics lionize him as a stylistic original.

Holly Chard traces Hughes's evolution from entertainer to auteur. Studios recognized Hughes's distinctiveness and responded by nurturing his brand. He is therefore a case study in Hollywood's production not only of movies but also of genre and of authorship itself. The films of John Hughes, Chard shows, also owed their success to the marketers who sold them and the audiences who watched. Careful readings of Hughes's cinema reveal both the sources of his iconic status and the imprint on his films of the social, political, economic, and media contexts in which he operated.

The first serious treatment of Hughes, Mainstream Maverick elucidates the priorities of the American movie industry in the New Hollywood era and explores how artists not only create but are themselves created.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781477321324
Publisher: University of Texas Press
Publication date: 09/01/2020
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
Pages: 283
File size: 19 MB
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About the Author

Holly Chard is an independent scholar.

Table of Contents

Acknowledgments
Introduction: The Making of “John Hughes”
1. Building a Brand: Universal (1984–1985)
2. Realities and Fantasies of Suburban Adolescence
3. The Creative Producer: Paramount (1985–1987)
4. Gender, Generation, and Coming-of-Age in 1980s America
5. Solid Family Fare: Universal (1988–1990) and Warner Bros. (1987–1993)
6. Pressures of Parenthood and Fantasies of Childhood
7. Family Film Franchises: 20th Century Fox (1989–1997)
8. Slapstick, Sentimentality, and the American Family
Conclusion: Mainstream Maverick?
Notes
Index

What People are Saying About This

Mark Gallagher

With Mainstream Maverick, Holly Chard gives us a model of careful industry research on US studios and production across the 1980s and 1990s. In addition to offering this illuminating industry analysis, Chard provides deft textual critiques, particularly around gender and family roles. Lucid, engaging, and never condescending to its subject, Mainstream Maverick offers bountiful insight into the formative years of the New New Hollywood.

Timothy Corrigan

More than just a conventional auteur study of a popular director, Mainstream Maverick offers an illuminating discussion of the historical and theoretical questions that surround these films, questions about changing 'creative production' structures, auteurist 'branding' strategies, modern generic shifts in the New Hollywood, and the reconfiguration of contemporary audiences. Above all, this book details the places where some of the larger and more resonant theoretical debates about popular cinema or contemporary film culture play out in Hughes’s films. Especially impressive is Chard’s careful examination of primary research as a way of complicating and evaluating the rich commercial foundations from which Hughes created many of the most popular and influential films of the last few decades.

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