Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of Figures
- The Contributors
- Introduction: The Art of In-Betweenness in Contemporary Eastern European Cinema
- Part 1 Entangled Sens ations, Cinema in-between the Arts
- 1 Intermedially Emotional: Musical Mood Cues, Disembodied Feelings in Contemporary Hungarian Melodramas
- 2 Black-and-White Sensations of History and Female Identity in Contemporary Polish and Czech Cinema
- 3 Sculpture and Affect in Cinema’s Expanded Field. From Aleksey Gherman’s Hard to Be a God to Aleksey Gherman Jr’s Under Electric Clouds
- 4 Intermedial Densities in the Work of Jan Švankmajer: A Media-Anthropological Case Study
- Part 2 Immersions into Memory , Culture and Intermediality
- 5 Trickster Narratives and Carnivalesque Intermediality in Contemporary Romanian Cinema
- 6 Photographic Passages to th e Past in Eastern European Non-Fiction Films
- 7 Trauma, Memorialisation and Intermediality in Jasmila Žbanić’s For Th ose Who Can Tell No Tales
- 8 An Immersive Theatrical Journey through Media and Time in Alexander Sokurov’s Russian Ark
- Part 3 Refl ections upon Reality, Representation and Power
- 9 The Real and the Intermedial in Alexander Sokurov’s Family Trilogy
- 10 Th is is Not Magritte: Corneliu Porumboiu’s Theory of Representation
- 11 Intermedial Détrompe l’Oeil and Contemporary Polish Narrative Cinema
- 12 Superhero Genre and Graphic Storytelling in Contemporary Hungarian and Russian Cinema
- Index
12 - Superhero Genre and Graphic Storytelling in Contemporary Hungarian and Russian Cinema
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 03 October 2020
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of Figures
- The Contributors
- Introduction: The Art of In-Betweenness in Contemporary Eastern European Cinema
- Part 1 Entangled Sens ations, Cinema in-between the Arts
- 1 Intermedially Emotional: Musical Mood Cues, Disembodied Feelings in Contemporary Hungarian Melodramas
- 2 Black-and-White Sensations of History and Female Identity in Contemporary Polish and Czech Cinema
- 3 Sculpture and Affect in Cinema’s Expanded Field. From Aleksey Gherman’s Hard to Be a God to Aleksey Gherman Jr’s Under Electric Clouds
- 4 Intermedial Densities in the Work of Jan Švankmajer: A Media-Anthropological Case Study
- Part 2 Immersions into Memory , Culture and Intermediality
- 5 Trickster Narratives and Carnivalesque Intermediality in Contemporary Romanian Cinema
- 6 Photographic Passages to th e Past in Eastern European Non-Fiction Films
- 7 Trauma, Memorialisation and Intermediality in Jasmila Žbanić’s For Th ose Who Can Tell No Tales
- 8 An Immersive Theatrical Journey through Media and Time in Alexander Sokurov’s Russian Ark
- Part 3 Refl ections upon Reality, Representation and Power
- 9 The Real and the Intermedial in Alexander Sokurov’s Family Trilogy
- 10 Th is is Not Magritte: Corneliu Porumboiu’s Theory of Representation
- 11 Intermedial Détrompe l’Oeil and Contemporary Polish Narrative Cinema
- 12 Superhero Genre and Graphic Storytelling in Contemporary Hungarian and Russian Cinema
- Index
Summary
We live in the age of superheroes. Films involving superheroes – mainly adaptations of stories from another medium, such as comic books – are highly successful on the global market, and can be considered an important trend of contemporary mainstream cinema. Before the 2000s only one comic-book adaptation reached the status of the top-grossing film of the year on the American domestic market. After 2000 this happened eight times, and all eight of those films were superhero movies. The tendency is also visible on the international market: since 2000 five comic-book adaptations (all of them superhero movies) have gained the position of the highest-grossing film of a given year.
Without exception, these films were produced by major Hollywood studios on a high budget, and they are distributed globally on as many markets as possible. This also means that they have the potential to influence popular cinema outside of the United States. This chapter focuses not on American superhero movies, but the ones produced outside of the US, by smaller national film industries which can be considered peripheral from the point of view of American audiences and distribution. By adapting American superhero stories, however, the national film industries open a ‘third space’ through hybridity, mixing elements of both cultures, thus attempting to destroy the oppositions between ‘centre’ and ‘periphery’ (Wang and Yueh-yu Yeh 2005).
I aim to examine how the superhero genre and characters are interpreted, adapted and changed in the context of the Hungarian and the Russian fi lm industry. How do the writers and directors create an American-type superhero in their own national environment and local culture? Are there any stylistic elements kept in the respective films from comic books, the original medium of the most famous superheroes? Do the resulting films function as superhero parodies or ‘serious’ superhero movies (meaning superhero stories played for a dramatic effect instead of comedy)? And last but not least, do these national superheroes function as tools for criticising and opposing the West?
WHO ARE THE SUPERHEROES AND WHAT DO THEY DO IN EASTERN EUROPE?
All nations, ethnicities and cultures create their own superheroes. In fact, certain mythic figures and characters of national folklore can be considered superheroes, from Gilgamesh and Hercules of the ancient Akkadian and Hellenic myths, to the hero of British folklore, Robin Hood, the latter being an early example of costumed vigilantes.
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- Information
- Caught In-BetweenIntermediality in Contemporary Eastern European and Russian Cinema, pp. 237 - 253Publisher: Edinburgh University PressPrint publication year: 2020