De Palma Style

Written by Sadi Ranson-Polizzotti
Published December 18, 2004
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Times change, standards change, and we have come a long way from the seventies and even eighties and I'd like to believe that women have come further too and have a lot more respect in the workplace, voting power, financial power and more. So why with all of this is there now more than ever such an overwhelming boom in the desire to alter ourselves to such a great extent. In short, when did a full C cup become "not good enough"? When did something like The Swan or Extreme Makeover become desirable? When did a size 6 or god help me, even 8, become "large"?

All these dorm-room dancing De Palma girls are at least a six or eight, have b or c boobs (hired for them, in fact, as our character says), have oh no, maybe even some cellulite (ahhhh!!) and they looked like I imagine real women look. I don't think De Palma was trying to make a statement, but nonetheless, his films offer us an ideal of beauty that is far healthier than today's standard and though too many of his women are murdered off, or "punished" and always after sex (you see the connection here... it's the logic of horror movies though and we all know that once you have sex, you're dead. they even said it in Scream.) I may not go for the over-permed hair thing that was so popular then, but a perm seems far less dangerous in many ways than absurd amounts of liposuction and overstuffed breasts that could rupture if you fell over roller-skating. In short, the ideal was not only closer to the actual, to what most women had or what existed at the time and even now, but it was also more attainable if you weren't that. If you so chose, you could become that by working out a little bit, though not excessively, no liposuction needed, and since the average American bra size (naturally) is a 34 B or so I've read, then most women would find this attainable. Imagine the joy you'd have of being a C cup today were it not for the bloody Swan and the like. Today, there are literally thousands of young girls who will die, or risk dying, to be beautiful. They will starve themselves to a size 0 and then go under the knife for a double D. Even the one strip club I went to years ago featured mostly girls in their early twenties who already had breast implants that one dancer told me where financed by the manager. Sure, there were some "natural" girls, but they looked by contrast (and by contrast to unreality only) totally flat and unfeminine. How odd.

Even De Palma's men are more natural. They're not super buff with flat abs etc. Travolta, naturally thin, isn't required to be muscle and six pack abs; he may even have a wee bit of fat on his tummy, like most normal people. I rather find that far sexier than the alternative washboard of steel. Not my thing.

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De Palma Style
Published: December 18, 2004
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Section: Video
Writer: Sadi Ranson-Polizzotti
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#1 — December 20, 2004 @ 07:11AM — D.B. Cooper

Interesting take on the phenom known as De Palma - the one-time bad boy of film directors. I think a lot of his gratuitous scenes are spoof, or a way in which he thumbs his nose at the formula systems in place which require a bit of T&A and a bit of blood. De Palma cut his teeth in a few crappy B-Movies before becoming A list, and I think his violence and sex is his way of saying, "If you are going to make me do this, then I will do it over the top." The great argument with De Palma, and one which will haunt him to his grave, is that his films tend to resemble a lot of previous films, Hitchcock, Blow Out an Americanized version of Antonioni's Blowup, etc.....What is perhaps his most famous film, Scarface, is also a remake of Howard Hawks' film noir classic. It is so incredibly violent that I have only seen it once and have never really had an interest in seeing it again. His greatest film, Carlito's Way, is a mature, composed De Palma at the height of his powers. Even in his worst films, there are moments of brilliance exposing a truly inspired talent. He has never refined his destructive bad boy tendencies, and his uneven career has suffered because of it. You've made a good point however, as the ideal of a female's body has changed throughout the years in films. I have always been insulted by films with average looking male stars - Duvall, Hoffman, Hackman, hell, even De Niro, having wives or girlfriends who look as if they stepped off the covor of Glamour magazine. A man can be butt ugly, but he's always going to have that perfect Victoria Secret model on his arm........There's an old western called The Cowboys, starring John Wayne in the twilight of his career. The film is only fair, but there are some extraordinary scenes between him and the actress playing his wife. She is old, weary, large in the hips. But she is real. Such honesty is rare in many films today. People chime about being the maker of dreams in Hollywood, but since when did dreams become emotionally untruthful?

#2 — December 20, 2004 @ 10:22AM — sadi [URL]

d.b. - thanks for such a long and thoughtful comment. you're right about the male leads always having these gorgeous types on their arms. it's interesting. and yes, to me, i was more interested in how the ideal of female beauty has changed to something that i believe at one time was attainable, and now, is attainable only through plastic surgery etc. That sets a standard that is impossibly high to most women and beyond the reachof our wallets even if we DID want to be that.

De Palma is spoofing, you are right, and he does it well. But there's still something there that works for him and that i always find interesting in his films, despite the often obnoxious stereotypes and women often being used as mere sex objects. perhaps a lot of that is tongue in cheek - i wouldn't doubt that.

if only directors today made more characters like our Bridget Jones who is perhaps closer to reality and lovable in her way. I think my next piece will likely be on her in the first film, because there is so much there and lets face it, it's all a spoof of PRide and Prejudice, even including Mr. Darcy who even repeats some of the same lines, though slightly altered, as in the PBS mini-series of PRide and Prejudice.

It's interesting... could go on forever. must restrain myself. much reading and catching up to do.

be well, and take good care of yourself.

sadi

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