Classical Hollywood Cinema

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Classical Hollywood Cinema is defined as the period from 1910 to roughly 1966. David Bordwell argues in The Way Hollywood Tells It that ‘the classical tradition has become a default framework for international cinematic expression, a point of departure for nearly every filmmaker’. His essential argument being that directors have never departed from classical parameters and that classicism isn’t strictly confined to production date. In this essay I will take two films from a period defined as New Hollywood, The Graduate (1967) and Jaws (1975); to test whether this theory is true. My analysis will scrutinise them according to central and defining aspects of classical parameters such as continuity editing, character-centred experience/causality/development, and overall narrative structural cohesion. Nichols directed The Graduate in 1967, a period …show more content…

However, it doesn’t appear plausible that this necessarily caused a complete deviation from classical parameters. In The Graduate, Nichols adopts a variety of stylistic devices that adhere to classical parameters. This is exemplified through an analysis of it’s beginning. The film opens with a shot of Benjamin, as seen in Figure 1. This is a close up shot, and the first point within the film that alludes to Benjamin’s character traits, whose expressionless and dazed stance indicates a detachment from society. This adheres to classical devices which defines ‘A character [being] made [up] of a consistent bundle of a few salient traits […] which gives the classical film its narrative function’ . This statement is true to The Graduate as Benjamin’s detachment from society is one of the most central themes of the film and therefore drives the narrative. Thus, in the opening scene, Nichols obeys to classical devices through his adoption of a zoom lens which redundantly establishes a wide shot of

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