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Cars and Girls (and Burgers and Weed): Branding, Mainstreaming, and Crown International Pictures' SoCal Drive-in Movies

The result's identifiers

  • Result code in IS VaVaI

    <a href="https://www.isvavai.cz/riv?ss=detail&h=RIV%2F00216208%3A11230%2F16%3A10328332" target="_blank" >RIV/00216208:11230/16:10328332 - isvavai.cz</a>

  • Result on the web

  • DOI - Digital Object Identifier

Alternative languages

  • Result language

    angličtina

  • Original language name

    Cars and Girls (and Burgers and Weed): Branding, Mainstreaming, and Crown International Pictures' SoCal Drive-in Movies

  • Original language description

    When not detailing its connections to art cinema or quality cinema, academic and popular film historiography has tended to spotlight the more salacious elements of the American exploitation cinema boom of the mid-to-late 1970s, cementing its image as violent, sexually explicit, profane, and reactionary. Yet, as this chapter argues, the most prominent company operating in the sector, Crown International Pictures, actually positioned itself squarely within the imagined mainstream of American youth culture. The chapter shows that central to this producer-distributor's branding strategy was a concept dubbed Crownsmanship; a multifaceted discourse activated in and around its flagship series of youth-oriented drive-in releases - The Pom Pom Girls (1976), Malibu Beach (1978), Van Nuys Blvd. (1979), and others. This strategy represented an attempt to maintain the supply chain linking Crown to regional distribution exchanges, open air theaters, and the "multi-tasking" youngsters imagined attending screenings of these films. As an analysis of movie content, marketing materials, and trade press statements demonstrates, Crownsmanship conjured a nostalgic vision of California youth which predated the upheavals of the previous decade and the controversial Hollywood Renaissance pictures they furnished; one built around the anodyne leisure pursuits from which Crown and its partners generated revenue and from which they hoped young moviegoers would derive pleasure - cars and girls and burgers and weed.

  • Czech name

  • Czech description

Classification

  • Type

    C - Chapter in a specialist book

  • CEP classification

    AB - History

  • OECD FORD branch

Result continuities

  • Project

  • Continuities

    I - Institucionalni podpora na dlouhodoby koncepcni rozvoj vyzkumne organizace

Others

  • Publication year

    2016

  • Confidentiality

    S - Úplné a pravdivé údaje o projektu nepodléhají ochraně podle zvláštních právních předpisů

Data specific for result type

  • Book/collection name

    Grindhouse : Cultural Exchange on 42nd Street, and Beyond

  • ISBN

    978-1-62892-749-8

  • Number of pages of the result

    22

  • Pages from-to

    107-128

  • Number of pages of the book

    266

  • Publisher name

    Bloomsbury Academic

  • Place of publication

    New York

  • UT code for WoS chapter