Clowns, Guns and a Writer’s Block: Romanian-American Encounters in Her Alibi (1989)

When Bruce Beresford’s film Her Alibi was released in early 1989, it was unenthusiastically received by the American critics and audiences as just another mixture of romantic comedy, crime and mystery, better suited perhaps to television than to the big screen. What seems to be paid little attent...

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Main Author: Gabriela-Iuliana COLIPCĂ-CIOBANU
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Casa Cărții de Știință 2019-12-01
Series:Cultural Intertexts
Subjects:
Online Access:http://files.cultural-intertexts.webnode.com/200000339-d4054d4056/17-37%20Colipca-Ciobanu%20-%20Clowns,%20Guns%20and%20a%20Writer%E2%80%99s%20Block%20%E2%80%93%20Romanian-American%20Encounters%20in%20Her%20Alibi%20(1989).pdf
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spelling doaj-66ce952b457045b3bf13c626cfb985ed2020-11-25T02:32:49ZengCasa Cărții de ȘtiințăCultural Intertexts2393-06242393-10782019-12-01991737Clowns, Guns and a Writer’s Block: Romanian-American Encounters in Her Alibi (1989) Gabriela-Iuliana COLIPCĂ-CIOBANU0“Dunărea de Jos” University of Galaţi, RomaniaWhen Bruce Beresford’s film Her Alibi was released in early 1989, it was unenthusiastically received by the American critics and audiences as just another mixture of romantic comedy, crime and mystery, better suited perhaps to television than to the big screen. What seems to be paid little attention to in numerous professional or amateur reviews of the film is that it actually foregrounds the encounter of the American culture with the Romanian other. Not only does it reflect cultural differences that shape the sense of identity of the American hosts and of the Romanian migrants, but it sets them against the background of the tensions between the West, represented by the USA, and the East, represented by communist Romania, over the last years of the Cold War. The paper proposes an imagological exploration of the interplay of images of American identity in the late 1980s and of the Romanian migrant, trapped between ‘Home’ and the ‘West’, in an American production that, more or less explicitly, draws on propaganda-ridden Cold War themes.http://files.cultural-intertexts.webnode.com/200000339-d4054d4056/17-37%20Colipca-Ciobanu%20-%20Clowns,%20Guns%20and%20a%20Writer%E2%80%99s%20Block%20%E2%80%93%20Romanian-American%20Encounters%20in%20Her%20Alibi%20(1989).pdffilmself/othermigrationeast/westpropaganda
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Gabriela-Iuliana COLIPCĂ-CIOBANU
spellingShingle Gabriela-Iuliana COLIPCĂ-CIOBANU
Clowns, Guns and a Writer’s Block: Romanian-American Encounters in Her Alibi (1989)
Cultural Intertexts
film
self/other
migration
east/west
propaganda
author_facet Gabriela-Iuliana COLIPCĂ-CIOBANU
author_sort Gabriela-Iuliana COLIPCĂ-CIOBANU
title Clowns, Guns and a Writer’s Block: Romanian-American Encounters in Her Alibi (1989)
title_short Clowns, Guns and a Writer’s Block: Romanian-American Encounters in Her Alibi (1989)
title_full Clowns, Guns and a Writer’s Block: Romanian-American Encounters in Her Alibi (1989)
title_fullStr Clowns, Guns and a Writer’s Block: Romanian-American Encounters in Her Alibi (1989)
title_full_unstemmed Clowns, Guns and a Writer’s Block: Romanian-American Encounters in Her Alibi (1989)
title_sort clowns, guns and a writer’s block: romanian-american encounters in her alibi (1989)
publisher Casa Cărții de Știință
series Cultural Intertexts
issn 2393-0624
2393-1078
publishDate 2019-12-01
description When Bruce Beresford’s film Her Alibi was released in early 1989, it was unenthusiastically received by the American critics and audiences as just another mixture of romantic comedy, crime and mystery, better suited perhaps to television than to the big screen. What seems to be paid little attention to in numerous professional or amateur reviews of the film is that it actually foregrounds the encounter of the American culture with the Romanian other. Not only does it reflect cultural differences that shape the sense of identity of the American hosts and of the Romanian migrants, but it sets them against the background of the tensions between the West, represented by the USA, and the East, represented by communist Romania, over the last years of the Cold War. The paper proposes an imagological exploration of the interplay of images of American identity in the late 1980s and of the Romanian migrant, trapped between ‘Home’ and the ‘West’, in an American production that, more or less explicitly, draws on propaganda-ridden Cold War themes.
topic film
self/other
migration
east/west
propaganda
url http://files.cultural-intertexts.webnode.com/200000339-d4054d4056/17-37%20Colipca-Ciobanu%20-%20Clowns,%20Guns%20and%20a%20Writer%E2%80%99s%20Block%20%E2%80%93%20Romanian-American%20Encounters%20in%20Her%20Alibi%20(1989).pdf
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