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No Jurisdiction: Legal, Political, and Aesthetic Disorder in Post-9/11 Genre Cinema PDF

252 Pages·2022·1.749 MB·English
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No Jurisdiction RECENT TITLES Tony Tracy, White Cottage, White House Tom Conley, Action, Action, Action Lindsay Coleman and Roberto Schaefer, editors, The Cinematographer’s Voice Nolwenn Mingant, Hollywood Films in North Africa and the Middle East †Charles Warren, edited by William Rothman and Joshua Schulze, Writ on Water Jason Sperb, The Hard Sell of Paradise William Rothman, The Holiday in His Eye Brendan Hennessey, Luchino Visconti and the Alchemy of Adaptation Alexander Sergeant, Encountering the Impossible Erica Stein, Seeing Symphonically George Toles, Curtains of Light Neil Badmington, Perpetual Movement Merrill Schleier, editor, Race and the Suburbs in American Film Matthew Leggatt, editor, Was It Yesterday? Homer B. Pettey, editor, Mind Reeling Alexia Kannas, Giallo! Bill Krohn, Letters from Hollywood Alex Clayton, Funny How? Niels Niessen, Miraculous Realism Burke Hilsabeck, The Slapstick Camera A complete listing of books in this series can be found online at www.sunypress.edu No Jurisdiction Legal, Political, and Aesthetic Disorder in Post-9/11 Genre Cinema • Fareed Ben-Youssef Cover Image: The post-9/11 superhero mourns: Batman (Christian Bale) stands on the edge of ruins in The Dark Knight (Christopher Nolan, Warner Bros., 2008). Courtesy PhotoFest New York. Published by State University of New York Press, Albany © 2022 State University of New York All rights reserved Printed in the United States of America No part of this book may be used or reproduced in any manner whatsoever without written permission. No part of this book may be stored in a retrieval system or transmitted in any form or by any means including electronic, electrostatic, magnetic tape, mechanical, photocopying, recording, or otherwise without the prior permission in writing of the publisher. For information, contact State University of New York Press, Albany, NY www.sunypress.edu Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data Name: Ben-Youssef, Fareed, 1987– author. Title: No jurisdiction : legal, political, and aesthetic disorder in post-9/11 genre cinema / Fareed Ben-Youssef. Description: Albany : State University of New York Press, [2022] | Series: SUNY series, horizons of cinema | Includes bibliographical references and index. Identifiers: LCCN 2021051933 | ISBN 9781438489278 (hardcover : alk. paper) | ISBN 9781438489285 (ebook) Subjects: LCSH: September 11 Terrorist Attacks, 2001, in motion pictures. | Motion pictures and the September 11 Terrorist Attacks. | Motion pictures and the War on Terrorism, 2001–2009. | Film genres—United States. | Motion pictures—Political aspects—United States—History—21st century. Classification: LCC PN1995.9.T46 B46 2022 | DDC 791.43/6552—dc23/eng/20220203 LC record available at https://lccn.loc.gov/2021051933 10 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 Contents List of Illustrations vii Acknowledgments xi Introduction. Hollywood at Ground Zero: Confessions of a Conflicted Fan 1 1 “It was like a movie!”: Theorizing the Eerie Symmetries of a War on Terror 23 2 On the Frontier between Hate and Empathy: The Post-9/11 Border Western 49 3 Femmes Fatales as Torturers and Lost Detectives in a Fragile City: Post-9/11 Noir 83 4 Soaring Above the Law: The Post-9/11 Superhero 127 5 “9/11 Transformed the Whole Planet, Not Just America!”: The War on Terror’s Shadow across Global Law and Cinema 167 Notes 191 Works Cited 207 Index 221 Illustrations I.1 The shadow of a plane about to crash into the World Trade Center passes over a Zoolander (2001) billboard, a metaphoric gesture to how 9/11’s shadow may fall over all of Hollywood. World Trade Center. 11 1.1 The superhero stands between the neon of a noir motel sign and the cowboy of the West depicted in a painting. Logan. 34 1.2 Connecting two genre heroes: a superhero reading of his exploits in glamorizing comics stands next to a TV, projecting an image of a young fan of the western gunslinger Shane. Logan. 36 2.1 The disillusioned FBI agent seen through infrared—drained and hollowed out. Sicario. 63 2.2 The corpse of an undocumented Mexican echoes the colors of the American flag: a bloody red, white, and blue. The Three Burials of Melquiades Estrada. 65 2.3 Melquiades confronts his reflection in TV screens, less a human than a phantom that lingers within the media. The Three Burials of Melquiades Estrada. 66 2.4 A border patrol agent experiences the Other’s plight when lassoed like cattle. The Three Burials of Melquiades Estrada. 68 2.5 A femme fatale rides the frontier, personifying a world where noir and the western are fused. The Counselor. 70 vii viii Illustrations 2.6 An assassin prepares his decapitating death trap under a billboard reading: “Aye have faith.” The words act as a promise to the viewer that soon heads will roll. The Counselor. 73 3.1 The word war breaks out of a speech bubble. In Sin City, the women’s war cannot be contained. Frank Miller’s Sin City: The Big Fat Kill #3, 2. 99 3.2 Before growing up to be a femme fatale, Callahan is portrayed as a victim in a subordinated position to seemingly gigantesque male captors. Sin City. 101 3.3 A femme fatale twirls her lasso on stage, ensnaring men as easily as a cowgirl ensnares cattle. Sin City. 102 3.4 Wielding the law as a weapon. A femme fatale finds an “opportunity to fake ignor[ance]” in a legal loophole, uncovering a means to conceal the true depths of her knowledge. Sin City. 103 3.5 The Wonder Women of Old Town. The leather bracelets on the Wonder Woman analogue (not metal as typical) metaphorically signify the femmes fatales’ power to disrupt and destroy the patriarchy. Sin City. 107 3.6 Slamming the doors shut when Old Town becomes a prison where, like Abu Ghraib, women are the jailers. A perpetrating femininity emerges that can at once dismantle and obscure patriarchal violence of the military. Sin City. 108 3.7 A real-world detective walks under the gun of his cinematic analogue, Dirty Harry. The legally unbounded cinematic hero may obliterate the public’s acceptance of bounded law enforcement. Zodiac. 117 3.8 A hint toward the detective’s destructive obsession with catching a mass-mediated killer. He comes into the Zodiac Killer’s crosshairs. Zodiac. 119 3.9 (Above) Figure 3.10 (Below). The Zodiac Killer’s aim falls upon a cartoonist, foreshadowing the civilian’s own obsession with the case. Zodiac. 120 Illustrations ix 4.1 Black bodies hanging in an abandoned American city, moments before Batman shatters the screen in distress. This is one social reality even a superhero cannot face. The Dark Knight Rises. 161 4.2 The Joker’s smiley face emerges when the state embraces a vigilante. The supervillain’s ultimate victory comes when the rule of law is indeed shown to be a joke. The Dark Knight Rises. 163 5.1 A veteran watches the footage of his first kill. His confrontation with his past perpetration means aiming his own rifle at himself. Game Over. 175 5.2 The 9/11 attacks draw the film camera’s attention, panning past the Belgian family playing together in the scene. Unbeknownst to them, America’s trauma encroaches upon and directs their lives. The Broken Circle Breakdown. 181 5.3 A terrorist hostage video overtakes the frame, signaling China’s own entrance into the War on Terror. Wolf Warrior 2. 188 5.4 In outtakes over the end credits, the “Chinese superhero” runs away from the foreign enemy. The nationalistic action film exposes the position of China as the commanding force in the War on Terror as nothing but theatrical bluster. Wolf Warrior 2. 188

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