Preview

Velvet Goldmine: Glam or Sham

Powerful Essays
Open Document
Open Document
1812 Words
Grammar
Grammar
Plagiarism
Plagiarism
Writing
Writing
Score
Score
Velvet Goldmine: Glam or Sham
Velvet Goldmine: Glam or Sham
“Although what you are about to see is a work of fiction, it should never the less be played at maximum volume,” (Velvet Goldmine, 1998), white letters on a black background fade in and then out to a shooting star. Writer and director Todd Haynes borrows from David Bowie/Ziggy Stardust, Mick Jagger, and Citizen Kane to piece together this montage film in rock-opera style; but does it work or is it just another movie about our own sexual revolution set to music?
What does Oscar Wilde, born in Dublin in 1851, and Glam Rock, which thrived from 1969 through 1975, have in common? If you believe Todd Haynes ' drama/music movie Velvet Goldmine, then gay author Oscar Wilde was brought to earth in a spaceship, left at the Wilde 's front door, and in his childhood yearns to be a pop star. “The characters in this movie consider Wilde to be the godmother of all that is glam,” (Feaster, 1999); and all are connected to Wilde by a broach with a green “space” gem embedded in it, the gem itself changes hands through out the movie, and is a force of power and greed throughout.
Haynes uses flashbacks to tell the story in a Citizen Kane style; Glam icon Brian Slade (aka Maxwell Demon) is at the height of his career and in 1974 he stages his own death during a performance. The movie flashes forward to 1984 in drab Reagan era New York City and British born reporter, Arthur Stuart, is on the trail of his childhood glam idol Brian Slade. Stuart 's editor 's want him to write the piece because of his connection to the glam scene and his UK roots 10 years earlier. The audience is treated to flashbacks of Stuart 's early life, and the progression of his sexual awareness through the glam scene. Like Citizen Kane (1941), Haynes uses interviews with those close to Slade and Arthur’s own personal experiences, to tell the story of who Brian Slade was, and who he is now.
Arthur Stuart, our reporter, experiences much internal conflict during this film, the time



References: Bennett, C. (2010). Flaming the Fans: Shame and the Aesthetics of Queer Fandom in Todd Haynes 's Velvet Goldmine Feaster, F. (1999). Velvet Goldmine. Film Quarterly. 53. 1. (Autumn, 1999). pp 42-44. Retrieved from http://www.jstor.org/stable/3697213 Goodykoontz, B. & Jacobs, C.P. (2011). Film: From Watching to Seeing. Bridgepoint Education, Inc Harvey, M. (13 October 2002). The Ziggy Stardust Companion. Retrieved from: http://www.5years.com/velvetfilm.htm Vachon, C. (Producer), & Haynes, T. (Director). (22 November 1998). Velvet Goldmine Wyatt, J. & Haynes, T. (1993). Cinematic/Sexual Transgression: An Interview with Todd Haynes

You May Also Find These Documents Helpful

  • Better Essays

    Ingenue and the Gold Dress

    • 1918 Words
    • 8 Pages

    The focus of this paper will be “Ingenue” by Richard Judson Zolan and “The Gold Dress” by Bill Brauer. The focal point of both paintings is a beautiful woman and this is where the similarities stop. Zolan’s focus is completely within the boundaries of the painting while Brauer’s leads your eye off the plane insinuating there is more going on than is captured within the boundaries of the painting. The word ingenue refers to a naive, innocent young woman while the woman in “The Gold Dress” is definitely more provocatively situated. Both artists are Americans, Zolan from Chicago and Brauer from New York. Zolan studied under Louis Rittman, a personal friend and student of Claude Monet, the French impressionist, and Brauer under Frederico Castellon, a Spanish-American painter and illustrator of children’s books. Zolan’s style reflects the influence of Monet with the effects of light while Brauer is more sensual and moody, using deep intense colors and beautifully rendered curves. Both works of art are beautifully painted and express the great talent of both men.…

    • 1918 Words
    • 8 Pages
    Better Essays
  • Better Essays

    Citizen Kane is a film open to many interpretations and analyses. It tells the story of its main character through the complex points of view of those who knew him. Or thought they knew him. The character of Charles Foster Kane is played by, and done so in an enigmatic performance, by Orson Welles. The intrinsic bias and prejudice of the “narrators” in this film creates conflicting accounts of who Charles Foster Kane really was. Kane was a private man; closely guarding his true identity, making it difficult to differentiate the private Kane from his public identity. Throughout the film’s development of Kane, several inconsistencies and contradictions arise in the depiction of the character’s personality. All of these issues make it difficult to form a solid portrayal of whom Kane actually was. However, there is enough evidence to conclude that Charles Foster Kane was a noble figure sabotaged by his own anti-social behavior and his search for love, his inability to find and provide it, and the way this haunted him to his dying day.…

    • 1327 Words
    • 6 Pages
    Better Essays
  • Satisfactory Essays

    Charles Kane story was told by cutting to flashback and different viewpoints, which as it goes to the present time all of his associates, seem to give an unreliable story of his life and relationships with him. A very radical technique to have done as a Hollywood movie for a cinematographer is that the breakdown of Kane’s first marriage broke down and used the cutting technique to show different periods of his first marriage, it showed his marriage breakdown into two minutes with different time periods of his first marriage.…

    • 386 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Satisfactory Essays
  • Powerful Essays

    Even though his last years were horrible for him, being sent to prison and criticized by lots of people because of one of his own novels, one can’t deny that Oscar Wilde lived a really interesting life. His wittiness -shown in his numerous epigrams, like «The only thing worse than being talked about is not being talked about»-, sense of humor, vividness and way of thinking made him one of the most interesting people of his time, and also in the history of the literature. His only novel, The Picture of Dorian Gray, received terrible reviews from critics and from the society in the moment it was first published, mostly due to its homosexual content (during the trials where he was judged, the book was used as an evidence to prove his homosexuality). It is considered a Gothic novel and one where religion is a prominent theme, with some characters wondering about it and comparing Anglicanism with Catholicism.…

    • 2014 Words
    • 9 Pages
    Powerful Essays
  • Good Essays

    This is a divisive strategy that aims to produce a consumable queer, fit for a mainstream audience. Subsequently, this strategy risks straight culture subsuming both lesbians and the queer community (Moody 2011). To subsume lesbian and queer culture would erode the common political identity that allows for community organization against heterosexism. Like bell hooks (1992) contends, “Communities of resistance are replaced by communities of consumption” (33). Effectively, the apolitical representation of lesbianism obliterates the movement’s historical allegiance to working class culture, butches, interracial socializing and feminism (Moody 2011). Both productions exemplify this shift from queer sexuality to homonomative-domestic lesbian, although The Kids Are All Right epitomizes this because it fails to acknowledge the oppressive culture and diverse identities. Homonormative representations normalized the broader lesbian community and foster…

    • 720 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Within Oscar Wilde’s novel ‘The Picture of Dorian Gray’, the author opposes the East End of London to the West End, creating a gulf between social classes in the Victorian Society. By incorporating Dorian Gray to these settings, Wilde is able to emphasise the difference of the lifestyles between these two ends of London.…

    • 485 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Satisfactory Essays

    Roman Catholic

    • 976 Words
    • 4 Pages

    5. How does the author say she felt in later years about the stereotyped picture of gay song-singing…

    • 976 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Satisfactory Essays
  • Good Essays

    This film is a perfect representation of the genre. Its leading role is played by Jane Greer, a femme fatale whose sadistic ways have made her irresistible to the hero Jeff played by Robert Mitchum and the villain Whit played by Kirk Douglas. The film used many components to distinguish itself from other noirs. The use of both linear narrative and flashback narrative was a unique and influential technique. The dark and corrupt love triangle between the three main characters ultimately caused their deaths at the end (Out of the Past, 1947).…

    • 1271 Words
    • 6 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Better Essays

    Oscar Wilde (1854-1900) was a writer whose homoerotic texts pushed the social boundaries of the Victorian era. Born to a family of unabashed Irish agnostics, the self-proclaimed "dandy" valued art, fashion, and all things physically beautiful. After receiving a comprehensive education from Oxford, Wilde made a name for himself in London first as a novelist, penning the now famous The Picture of Dorian Gray.…

    • 23284 Words
    • 94 Pages
    Better Essays
  • Powerful Essays

    Wilde's novel The Picture of Dorian Gray is just the sort of book that made Victorian England shiver. This decadent masterpiece is anything but a vehicle for the propagation of middle-class morality. We have in Wilde the ultimate aesthete, a disciple of Walter Pater, a dandy who in his personal life seems to have lived out Pater's quiet injunction to "burn with that hard, gemlike flame" in experiencing art and, no doubt, other things. How could Wilde's book, given its affinities with the age's decadent manifestoes--Stèphane Mallarmé's symbolist poetry, Huysmans' À Rebours (Against Nature), Aubrey Beardsley's drawings, The Yellow Book, and so on--serve as a cultural critique every bit as scathing, and perhaps more acute, than those of Carlyle, Ruskin, and Arnold? I suggest that Wilde accomplishes this task by making his characters enact the philosophy with which he himself was nearly synonymous and, in the same gesture, connecting this very philosophy with the logic of capitalistic exploitation that underlay the aristocratic façade of Dorian's England. By Wilde's time, the aristocracy could do little more than serve the capital-owning class as a kind of enhanced mirror image of its own behavior. The worst tendencies of Wilde's wealthy characters are none other than the selfishness, isolation, exploitation, and brutality that made the most perspicuous Victorians condemn capital. In Wilde's aristocracy, we see rich, idle, and decadent characters reveal from their lounge chair and clubroom perspective the worst flaws in the system upon which they are parasitic. They are the dressed-up doubles, the insignificant others, of Britain's industrial class. Grown refined and idle, Wilde's aristocrats are free to expose, both in their words and deeds, the "sins" of those indulged with mammonism.…

    • 2233 Words
    • 9 Pages
    Powerful Essays
  • Good Essays

    Sex, drugs, and rock n’ roll. This phrase has long been used to summarize the rock lifestyle, but given the great diversity of rock music many would agree that this concept is most prevalent in the subgenre known as punk. Punk was gritty, foul, arrogant and snotty, nothing it said had meaning outside of what could be said with a mere finger gesture…or was it? In truth punk was as diverse in its nature as rock was as a whole. It is because of this that so many argue about when exactly the punk scene started, but many agree that it was born right here in the states, out of small town garages from boys and girls sick of the mundane spiff the radio played. This, is their story.…

    • 695 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    As the film opens, the viewer is transported back to 1920 's Chicago. Billy Wilder utilized black and white film to create a mood of nostalgia and an improved use of shadows, and this helps to also play down the garishness of Tony Curtis’s and Jack Lemmon’s makeup. These contrast tones also helped the viewer to remember the gangster movies of the 20 's and 30 's. Prohibition was in full swing and a cabaret run by Spats, the mobster lord, is under surveillance by the Federal Bureau of Investigation (www.filmsite.org).…

    • 741 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Better Essays

    Oscar Wilde’s uncommon life began with an equally unusual family. Oscar Fingal O’Flahertie Wills Wilde…

    • 2139 Words
    • 9 Pages
    Better Essays
  • Powerful Essays

    Aestheticism and Dorian Gray

    • 2472 Words
    • 10 Pages

    Oscar Wilde lived in 1800s Victorian England, during the Aesthetic Movement. He had been known for his involvement in the movement, however more infamously for his crime against homosexuality. In 1895, Oscar Wilde had been imprisoned for homosexual offenses, and used against him in court was his own novel, A Picture Of Dorian Gray. Oscar Wilde’s novel has been argued to function as a queer text, a term coined during the 1990s that “…challenges either/or, essentialists notions of homosexuality and heterosexuality within the mainstream discourse…and instead posits an understanding of sexuality that emphasizes shifting boundaries, ambivalences, and cultural constructions that change depending on historical and cultural context” (Goldberg). Although the novel is a fictional text, it had been used against Wilde for proof of his homosexuality. It can be argued the novel functions as a queer text, however it also delves into aestheticism. Oscar Wilde’s novel delves into both topics of aestheticism and queer theory through a fictional story line.…

    • 2472 Words
    • 10 Pages
    Powerful Essays
  • Powerful Essays

    As being developed by poststructuralism, feminism, lesbian & gay studies and even American pragmatist theory (Parker,2001; Seidman,1997), queer theory has become one of the most important theories, which contributes to the research of sociology, arts and organizations. On the one hand, queer theory has been used to study the relations between the sexuality, gender and workplace. On the other hand, by utilizing denaturalized, deconstructive and performative methods to queer the presumptions of the taken-for-granted norms, queer theorists question and disprove the traditions which people cherish (Seidman,1995).…

    • 3034 Words
    • 13 Pages
    Powerful Essays

Related Topics