Saturday, July 20, 2019
Mountains of the Moon: A Re-inscription of the Colonial Master Narrative :: Movie Film Essays
Mountains of the Moon: A Re-inscription of the Colonial Master Narrative à à If Richard Burton and John Hanning Speke were alive in 1989 to see the release of Bob Rafelsonââ¬â¢s Mountains of the Moon, what would their response to the film be?à Would they agree with the way Rafelsonââ¬â¢s film depicts their remarkable journey into Africa to find the source of the Nile River?à Would they agree with the way the film dramatizes their relationship with each other?à The answers to these questions would help a great deal in determining whether Rafelsonââ¬â¢s film about Burton and Spekeââ¬â¢s expedition was accurate, or whether his film was an attempt to sensationalize their story to increase its reception.à Unfortunately, Burton and Speke are not around to answer these questions, which makes an analysis of these issues difficult.à Therefore, rather than analyzing this film from a historical perspective, this critique is concerned with what story Rafelsonââ¬â¢s film tells.à How does Rafelsonââ¬â¢s movie shape audienceââ¬â¢s opinions about Burton and Speke as characters?à Does his story, through visual rhetoric, retell or reinterpret Burton and Spekeââ¬â¢s story?à What role does Africa play in Rafelsonââ¬â¢s film?à The answers to these questions should help determine whether Rafelsonââ¬â¢s film is a re-inscription of the colonial master narrative, or whether it is a post-colonial critique of European colonization. à Mountains of the Moon sets out to recreate the adventures of Richard Burton (Patrick Bergin) and John Hanning Speke (Iain Glen).à The plot of the film focuses on Burton and Spekeââ¬â¢s relationship, and their journey to discover the source of the Nile River.à One interesting characteristic that separates Rafelsonââ¬â¢s Mountains of the Moon from previous attempts to describe Burton and Spekeââ¬â¢s expedition is that Rafelsonââ¬â¢s film introduces a human element into Burton and Spekeââ¬â¢s relationship; an element that remains the focal point throughout the entire movie (Campbell, www.theparamount.org). As a result, Rafelson shifts the focus of the movie away from the business aspect of the story, and compels audiences to focus more on the friendship that develops between Burton and Speke.à Sidney Pollackââ¬â¢s Out of Africa shifts in the same way.à In Pollackââ¬â¢s 1985 film, audiences find themselves more concerned with the filmââ¬â¢s love s tory, than with the Baronessââ¬â¢s coffee plantation in Africa.à This shift occurs not by accident, but rather as a deliberate attempt by Pollack to tell a particular story.à Therefore, Rafelsonââ¬â¢s film deliberately shifts to allow him to tell his story: a story about ââ¬Å"Two strangers made friends by a savage land.
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.