Action film
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Action films are a film genre where action sequences, such as fighting, stunts, car chases or explosions, take precedence over elements like characterization or complex plotting. The action typically involves individual efforts on the part of the hero, in contrast with most war films. The genre is closely linked with the thriller and adventure film genres.
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[edit] Rise of the action film
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In the West, during the 1920s and 1930s, adventure films were popularised by actors such as Douglas Fairbanks and Errol Flynn, but the settings were often period ones. The phenomenal success of the James Bond series in the 1960s and 1970s, helped to popularise the concept of the modern day action film in more recent years. The early Bond films were characterised by quick cutting, car chases, fist fights and ever more elaborate action sequences. The series also established the concept of the resourceful hero, who is able to dispatch the villains with a ready one-liner.
Early American action films usually focused on maverick police officers, as in Bullitt (1968), The French Connection (1971) and Dirty Harry (1971). These were among the earliest films to present a car chase as an action set-piece. However, the action film did not become a dominant form in Hollywood until the 1980s and 1990s, when it was popularized by actors such as Arnold Schwarzenegger, Bruce Willis and Sylvester Stallone, who's film First Blood in 1982 is considered to be the beginning of the modern day action film. The 1988 film Die Hard was particularly influential on the development of the genre in the following decade. In the film, Bruce Willis plays a New York police detective who inadvertently becomes embroiled in a terrorist take-over of a Los Angeles office block. The film set a pattern for a host of imitators, like Under Siege (1992) or Air Force One (1997), which used the same formula in a different setting.
Action films tend to be expensive, requiring big budget special effects and stunt work. As such, they are regarded as mostly a Hollywood genre, although there have been a significant number of action films from Hong Kong which are primarily modern variations of the martial arts film. Because of these roots, Hong Kong action films typically center on acrobatics by the protagonist while American action films typically feature big explosions and modern technology.
[edit] Current trends
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Current trends in action film include a development toward more elaborate fight scenes in Western film. This trend is influenced by the massive success of Hong Kong action cinema, both in Asia and in the west. Asian martial arts elements, such as kung-fu can now be found in numerous non-Asian action films. Now, a distinction can be made between films that lean toward physical, agile fighting, such as The Matrix, and those that lean toward other common action film conventions, like explosions and plenty of gunfire, such as Mission Impossible 3, although most action movies employ elements of both.
[edit] Feminist theory
Feminist film theory has been used to analyze action movies, owing to their rare variance from a core archetype. The separation between the physical male, who controls the scene and the gaze, and the female, who is almost always the object of the gaze, is very clear in most such films.
[edit] Sub-genres
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- Action drama - Combines action set-pieces with serious themes, character insight and/or emotional power. This sub-genre can be traced back to the origins of the action film. Carol Reed's The Third Man (written by Grahame Greene) was an award-winning predecessor of this sub-genre. The French Connection series are considered an apotheosis of the sub-genre. Another example is Michael Mann's Miami Vice and Heat
- Buddy cop - Two mismatched cops (or some variation such as a cop and a criminal) team-up as the main protagonists. Major examples are Rush Hour, Bad Boys, 48 Hrs., Lethal Weapon and Tango & Cash.
- Action comedy - Mixture of action and comedy usually based on mismatched partners (the standard "buddy film" formula) or unlikely setting. The action comedy sub-genre was re-vitalized with the popularity of the Lethal Weapon series of movies in the 1980s and 1990s. Bad Boys and Rush Hour serve as other examples.
- Action thriller - Elements of action/adventure (car chases, shootouts, explosions) and thriller (plot twists, suspense, hero in jeopardy). Many of the James Bond series of films are icons of this popular sub-genre as too are Lethal Weapon, Lethal Weapon 2, Lethal Weapon 3, and finally Lethal Weapon 4. Nighthawks (film) starring Sylvester Stallone also applies. Also of note are the Matt Damon fueled The Bourne Identity (2002 film), The Bourne Supremacy (film), and The Bourne Ultimatum (film). All of which are based off of Robert Ludlum books of the same names.
- Caper / heist - Protagonists are carrying out robbery, either for altruistic purposes or as anti-heroes. The film You Only Live Once, based on the exploits of Bonnie and Clyde, was one of the first examples of this sub-genre. Other examples include The Italian Job, Heat, and Ocean's 11.
- Die Hard Scenario - Story takes place in limited location - single building or vehicle - seized or under threat by enemy agents. This sub-genre began with the film, Die Hard, but has become popular in Hollywood movie making both because of its crowd appeal and the relative simplicity of building sets for such a constrained piece. Among the many films that have copied the Die Hard formula are Under Siege, John Q, Executive Decision, Speed, and arguably even Titanic.
- Science fiction action - Any of the other sub-genres of action film can be set in a science fiction setting. The Star Wars films began the modern exploration of this combination of high action content with futuristic settings in the 1970s, based in part on the serials of the 1930s and 1940s such as Flash Gordon. An explosion of science fiction action films followed in the 1980s and 1990s, including The Fifth Element, The Matrix, Demolition Man, Alien and Serenity.
- Action horror - As with science fiction action films, any sub-genre of action film can be combined with the elements of horror films to produce what has increasingly become a popular action sub-genre in its own right. Monsters, robots and many other staples of horror have been used in action films. In the 1980s, Aliens introduced movie goers to the potential of a hybrid of science fiction, action and horror which would continue to be popular to the present day.
[edit] Luminaries of the Action genre
[edit] Actors
- Charles Bronson
- Jackie Chan
- Sean Connery
- Tom Cruise
- Johnny Depp
- Vin Diesel
- Clint Eastwood
- Harrison Ford
- Mel Gibson
- Tony Jaa
- Bruce Lee
- Jet Li
- Dolph Lundgren
- Chuck Norris
- Brad Pitt
- Steve McQueen
- Keanu Reeves
- The Rock
- Lee Marvin
- Kurt Russell
- Arnold Schwarzenegger
- Steven Seagal
- Jean-Claude Van Damme
- Wesley Snipes
- Slyvester Stallone
- Will Smith
- Chow Yun-Fat
- Jason Statham
- John Wayne
- Bruce Willis
- Amitabh Bachchan
[edit] Directors
- James Cameron
- John Woo
- John Ford
- Luc Besson
- John McTiernan
- Antoine Fuqua
- Renny Harlin
- F. Gary Gray
- Louis Leterrier
- Robert Rodriguez
- Andrew Davis
- Rob Cohen
- John Sturges
- Doug Liman
- Corey Yuen
- Martin Campbell
- Michael Bay
- Tsui Hark
- Paul Greengrass
- Sam Peckinpah
- Akira Kurosawa
- Tony Scott
- Ridley Scott
- The Wachowski Brothers
- Sergio Leone
- Sam Raimi
- Ringo Lam
[edit] Producers
- Jerry Bruckheimer
- Don Simpson
- Joel Silver
- Jerry Weintraub
- Bob Weinstein
- Harvey Weinstein
- Menahem Golan
- Yoram Globus
- Boaz Davidson
- Avi Lerner
- Moshe Diamant
[edit] Crewmembers
[edit] See also
- List of movie genres
- Hong Kong action cinema
- List of action heroes
- List of women warriors in folklore, literature, and popular culture
[edit] Further reading
- Inness, Sherrie A. (ed.) Action Chicks: New Images of Tough Women in Popular Culture, Palgrave Macmillan, 2004.
- Kim, L. S. "Making women warriors: a transnational reading of Asian female action heroes in Crouching Tiger, Hidden Dragon." Jump Cut: A Review of Contemporary Media. No. 48, Winter, 2006.
- Osgerby, Bill, Anna Gough-Yates, and Marianne Wells. Action TV : Tough-Guys, Smooth Operators and Foxy Chicks. London: Routledge, 2001.
- Tasker, Yvonne. Action and Adventure Cinema. New York: Routledge, 2004.
- ———.Spectacular Bodies : Gender, Genre, and the Action Cinema. London and New York: Routledge, 1993.ar:حركة (نوع)
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