Queering Contemporary French Popular Cinema combines close film analysis with a small-scale qualitative investigation of audience responses to examine images of queerness in contemporary French popular cinema and their reception. Through its blending of the textual and the empirical, this book provides a unique insight into the ways in which sexuality and gender are represented on the cinema screen, as well as the spectator reactions they elicit. Since the mid-1990s, depictions of lesbians, gay men, and queer forms of sexual desire and identity have shifted to the mainstream of French cinematographic representation - as evidenced by the box-office success of a series of highly commercial comic films, including Gazon maudit (Josiane Balasko, 1995), Pédale douce (Gabriel Aghion, 1996), Le Placard (Francis Véber, 2000), and Chouchou (Merzak Allouache, 2003). Alongside this commercial strand, a series of small-budget alternative comedies and other genre films have also challenged heteronormative conceptualizations of sexuality and gender. Films such as Sitcom (François Ozon, 1998), L'Homme est une femme comme les autres (Jean-Jacques Zilbermann, 1997), Pourquoi pas moi? (Stéphane Giusti, 1999), Drôle de Félix (Olivier Ducastel and Jacques Martineau, 2000), and Les Chansons d'amour (Christophe Honoré, 2007) portray desire as fluid and/or gender as unfixed. With their use of parody and their blending of comedy with the musical, melodrama, romance or road movie, these and other similar films have resonated with a burgeoning viewing public, tired of having to seek queerness in connotation, of appropriating marginal characters in ostensibly straight narratives, and of tragedy and trauma as the principal modes of representation and spectator address.
«'Queering Contemporary French Popular Cinema' is a very welcome and important contribution to French film studies, which combines qualitative audience research with textual analysis in a readable and dynamic study.» (Guy Austin, Newcastle University; Author of 'Contemporary French Cinema')
«Analyzing a corpus of films that engage questions of gay and queer identity, including works by François Ozon, Cédric Klapisch, the team of Olivier Ducastel and Jacques Martineau, Alain Berliner, and others, 'Queering Contemporary French Popular Cinema' engages questions of 'queer theory' from both sides of the Atlantic as it relates to the cinema. Additionally, the work develops an in-depth empirical approach to audience reception of these films. The study will be of interest to students and researchers in French studies, film studies, and GLBTQ issues.» (Lawrence R. Schehr, University of Illinois)
«'Queering Contemporary French Popular Cinema' is a thorough investigation of cinema and sexualities in France which deftly combines audience research with theoretical debates in queer studies.» (Bill Marshall, University of Stirling)
«Analyzing a corpus of films that engage questions of gay and queer identity, including works by François Ozon, Cédric Klapisch, the team of Olivier Ducastel and Jacques Martineau, Alain Berliner, and others, 'Queering Contemporary French Popular Cinema' engages questions of 'queer theory' from both sides of the Atlantic as it relates to the cinema. Additionally, the work develops an in-depth empirical approach to audience reception of these films. The study will be of interest to students and researchers in French studies, film studies, and GLBTQ issues.» (Lawrence R. Schehr, University of Illinois)
«'Queering Contemporary French Popular Cinema' is a thorough investigation of cinema and sexualities in France which deftly combines audience research with theoretical debates in queer studies.» (Bill Marshall, University of Stirling)