Hollywood's Embassies: How Movie Theaters Projected American Power Around the Globe by Ross Melnick (review)

IF 0.8 3区 哲学 Q2 HISTORY & PHILOSOPHY OF SCIENCE
Giles Scott-Smith
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In doing so, Melnick brings to light the all-encompassing, full-spectrum package that Hollywood delivered for nine decades to audiences around the world. The author refers early on to his work as “the first political, cultural, and industrial history of Hollywood’s foreign ownership and operation of hundreds of cinemas” (p. 2). The cinemas, with their architectural and ornamental splendor and their cornucopial abundance of consumable goods for the viewing publics, were definitely the embassies of soft power the book makes them out to be. While previous work has often focused on film production (for instance: Acland, <em>Screen Traffic</em>, 2003; Trumbour, <em>Selling Hollywood to the World</em>, 2002; Segrave, <em>American Films Abroad</em>, 1997), this title brings an empirical analysis of the structural power of film exhibition networks and the many commercial and cultural struggles that this involved.</p> <p>Twentieth Century Fox owned hundreds of cinemas across Africa and Australasia. MGM, in partnership with Loew, owned prime urban sites across Latin America. Paramount presented the heights of luxury at film palaces in <strong>[End Page 1013]</strong> Brazil and France. Warner Bros. ran an international network that spanned Eurasia. RKO, Universal, and United Artists were also involved, but to a lesser extent. The book, separated into twenty chapters spread across six continentally focused sections, aims unequivocally for full global coverage: Europe, Australasia, Latin America, the Middle East, Africa, Asia. As the ideal outlets for presenting the appealing and seemingly unlimited facets of Americana to susceptible foreign publics, the physical presence of these cinemas also elicited widespread indignation and resistance from those who objected to the overpowering omnipotence of Americanization. Hollywood—with its unmatchable stars and glamour and relentless advertising campaigns—went a long way to ensure that film was marketed and experienced in the ways that Hollywood thought it should be. Maximum experience and maximum profit were the twin goals. Not surprisingly, rival local cinema chains could not abide their obvious second-class status in their own backyards. On the other hand, armed with all the gusto and glamour Hollywood could muster, studio executives in countries such as Egypt would reach levels of influence beyond what their State Department diplomatic counterparts could achieve. However, this prevented popular mobilization against the detrimental effects of the lure of Hollywood from those who wanted to ensure a future free of all forms of imperial power.</p> <p>Technological sophistication was an essential aspect of this American dominance. Air-conditioning was a revelation for many unaccustomed to such comfort in tropical conditions, as a result extending the profitable months during which the cinemas could operate. Sound systems were consistently upgraded to improve the all-around experience, and widescreen techniques enveloped audiences even more in a total viewing experience. Drive-ins, combining Hollywood appeal with the typical American approach to the private car, were especially popular in Africa. Cinemascope, a technique used in the United States to attract home audiences away from the growing threat of television, was rolled out abroad in the early 1950s, several years before television had reached any kind of saturation in these markets. In these processes, the U.S. studios were as much competing among themselves as they were with any rival forms of entertainment.</p> <p>However, technology has only a walk-on part in this epic history of global Hollywood. The topics mentioned above are nearly all only introduced in passing, with few if any details on the linkages between infrastructure, film projecting, cinema management, and audience response. Technology is simply presented as another facet of U.S. cultural superiority. 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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Reviewed by:

  • Hollywood’s Embassies: How Movie Theaters Projected American Power Around the Globe by Ross Melnick
  • Giles Scott-Smith (bio)
Hollywood’s Embassies: How Movie Theaters Projected American Power Around the Globe
By Ross Melnick. New York: Columbia University Press, 2022. Pp. 503.

This is a bold work of substantial proportions, setting out as it does to reframe our understanding of Hollywood as an overseas actor and purveyor of U.S. soft power. It does so by focusing like never before on the global network of cinemas owned and run by the major U.S. studios, instead of on the films themselves. In doing so, Melnick brings to light the all-encompassing, full-spectrum package that Hollywood delivered for nine decades to audiences around the world. The author refers early on to his work as “the first political, cultural, and industrial history of Hollywood’s foreign ownership and operation of hundreds of cinemas” (p. 2). The cinemas, with their architectural and ornamental splendor and their cornucopial abundance of consumable goods for the viewing publics, were definitely the embassies of soft power the book makes them out to be. While previous work has often focused on film production (for instance: Acland, Screen Traffic, 2003; Trumbour, Selling Hollywood to the World, 2002; Segrave, American Films Abroad, 1997), this title brings an empirical analysis of the structural power of film exhibition networks and the many commercial and cultural struggles that this involved.

Twentieth Century Fox owned hundreds of cinemas across Africa and Australasia. MGM, in partnership with Loew, owned prime urban sites across Latin America. Paramount presented the heights of luxury at film palaces in [End Page 1013] Brazil and France. Warner Bros. ran an international network that spanned Eurasia. RKO, Universal, and United Artists were also involved, but to a lesser extent. The book, separated into twenty chapters spread across six continentally focused sections, aims unequivocally for full global coverage: Europe, Australasia, Latin America, the Middle East, Africa, Asia. As the ideal outlets for presenting the appealing and seemingly unlimited facets of Americana to susceptible foreign publics, the physical presence of these cinemas also elicited widespread indignation and resistance from those who objected to the overpowering omnipotence of Americanization. Hollywood—with its unmatchable stars and glamour and relentless advertising campaigns—went a long way to ensure that film was marketed and experienced in the ways that Hollywood thought it should be. Maximum experience and maximum profit were the twin goals. Not surprisingly, rival local cinema chains could not abide their obvious second-class status in their own backyards. On the other hand, armed with all the gusto and glamour Hollywood could muster, studio executives in countries such as Egypt would reach levels of influence beyond what their State Department diplomatic counterparts could achieve. However, this prevented popular mobilization against the detrimental effects of the lure of Hollywood from those who wanted to ensure a future free of all forms of imperial power.

Technological sophistication was an essential aspect of this American dominance. Air-conditioning was a revelation for many unaccustomed to such comfort in tropical conditions, as a result extending the profitable months during which the cinemas could operate. Sound systems were consistently upgraded to improve the all-around experience, and widescreen techniques enveloped audiences even more in a total viewing experience. Drive-ins, combining Hollywood appeal with the typical American approach to the private car, were especially popular in Africa. Cinemascope, a technique used in the United States to attract home audiences away from the growing threat of television, was rolled out abroad in the early 1950s, several years before television had reached any kind of saturation in these markets. In these processes, the U.S. studios were as much competing among themselves as they were with any rival forms of entertainment.

However, technology has only a walk-on part in this epic history of global Hollywood. The topics mentioned above are nearly all only introduced in passing, with few if any details on the linkages between infrastructure, film projecting, cinema management, and audience response. Technology is simply presented as another facet of U.S. cultural superiority. In contrast, the wealth of coverage on all aspects of the cultural-social...

好莱坞的大使馆:罗斯-梅尔尼克(Ross Melnick)所著的《电影院如何将美国力量投射到全球各地》(影评
评论者: 好莱坞的大使馆:好莱坞的使馆:影院如何将美国力量投射到全球》,罗斯-梅尔尼克著,吉尔斯-斯科特-史密斯(简历)好莱坞的使馆:影院如何将美国力量投射到全球》,罗斯-梅尔尼克著,吉尔斯-斯科特-史密斯(简历):好莱坞的使馆:电影院如何在全球投射美国力量 作者:罗斯-梅尔尼克。纽约:哥伦比亚大学出版社,2022 年。页码503.这是一部规模宏大的大胆著作,旨在重新构建我们对好莱坞作为海外演员和美国软实力传播者的理解。它前所未有地关注美国主要电影公司拥有和经营的全球影院网络,而不是电影本身。在此过程中,梅尔尼克揭示了好莱坞九十年来向全世界观众提供的包罗万象的全方位服务。作者一开始就称自己的作品是 "好莱坞在外国拥有和经营数百家电影院的第一部政治、文化和工业史"(第 2 页)。这些影院建筑宏伟,装饰华丽,为观众提供了丰富的消费品,绝对是书中所说的软实力使馆。虽然以往的研究通常侧重于电影制作(例如:阿克兰,《银幕交通》,2009 年),但本书的研究重点是电影制作:Acland,《银幕交通》,2003 年;Trumbour,《向世界推销好莱坞》,2002 年;Segrave,《美国海外电影》,1997 年),而本书则对电影放映网络的结构性力量以及由此引发的众多商业和文化斗争进行了实证分析。二十世纪福克斯公司在非洲和澳大拉西亚拥有数百家影院。米高梅与 Loew 合作,在拉丁美洲拥有城市黄金地段。派拉蒙(Paramount)在巴西和法国的[第 1013 页完]电影宫呈现出奢华的景象。华纳兄弟经营着一个横跨欧亚大陆的国际网络。RKO、Universal 和 United Artists 也参与其中,但规模较小。本书共分 20 章,以六大洲为重点,目标明确,全面覆盖全球:欧洲、大洋洲、拉丁美洲、中东、非洲和亚洲。作为向易受影响的外国公众展示美国的魅力和看似无限的一面的理想渠道,这些电影院的实际存在也引起了反对美国化无所不能的人们的广泛愤慨和抵制。好莱坞--凭借其无与伦比的明星和魅力,以及不遗余力的广告宣传--在很大程度上确保了电影按照好莱坞所认为的方式进行营销和体验。最大化体验和最大化利润是好莱坞的双重目标。毫不奇怪,竞争对手地方连锁影院无法忍受自己在后院明显的二流地位。另一方面,在埃及等国的制片厂高管在好莱坞所能调动的所有激情和魅力的武装下,他们的影响力超出了美国国务院外交官所能达到的水平。然而,这阻止了那些希望确保未来不受任何形式帝国势力影响的人们动员起来,抵制好莱坞诱惑的有害影响。技术的先进性是美国主导地位的一个重要方面。对于许多不习惯在热带条件下享受这种舒适的人来说,空调是一个福音,它延长了电影院的盈利期。音响系统不断升级,以改善全方位的观影体验,而宽银幕技术则让观众获得了更全面的观影体验。汽车影院将好莱坞的魅力与典型的美国私家车方式相结合,在非洲尤其受欢迎。20 世纪 50 年代初,在电视尚未在这些市场达到饱和状态的数年前,美国就在国外推出了宽银幕技术,以吸引家庭观众,摆脱电视日益增长的威胁。在这些过程中,美国制片厂之间的竞争就像它们与其他娱乐形式的竞争一样激烈。然而,在这部全球好莱坞史诗般的历史中,技术只是一个走马观花的角色。上述主题几乎都是一带而过,几乎没有详细介绍基础设施、电影放映、影院管理和观众反应之间的联系。技术只是作为美国文化优势的另一个方面来介绍。与此形成鲜明对比的是,该书对文化与社会的各个方面都有丰富的介绍。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
Technology and Culture
Technology and Culture 社会科学-科学史与科学哲学
CiteScore
0.60
自引率
14.30%
发文量
225
审稿时长
>12 weeks
期刊介绍: Technology and Culture, the preeminent journal of the history of technology, draws on scholarship in diverse disciplines to publish insightful pieces intended for general readers as well as specialists. Subscribers include scientists, engineers, anthropologists, sociologists, economists, museum curators, archivists, scholars, librarians, educators, historians, and many others. In addition to scholarly essays, each issue features 30-40 book reviews and reviews of new museum exhibitions. To illuminate important debates and draw attention to specific topics, the journal occasionally publishes thematic issues. Technology and Culture is the official journal of the Society for the History of Technology (SHOT).
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