Artigo Revisado por pares

Buffalo Bill. Dir. and prod. by Rob Rapley. HiddenHill Productions for American Experience, 2008. 60 mins. (PBS Home Video, http://www.shoppbs.org)

2008; Oxford University Press; Volume: 95; Issue: 3 Linguagem: Inglês

10.2307/27694539

ISSN

1945-2314

Autores

Joy S. Kasson,

Tópico(s)

Vietnamese History and Culture Studies

Resumo

Rob Rapley's film begins with an arresting vignette: a photograph shows U.S. troops riding menacingly toward an Indian encampment at Wounded Knee. An eyewitness description chronicles the grief and fear with which they are awaited. As the film camera pulls back, we can see that the photograph shows, not the notorious attack of 1890, but its reenactment for a film. To save his failing career, the showman William F. Cody tried his hand at filmmaking and persuaded both American Indian survivors of the original attack and old army contacts to participate in this tension-fraught return to the battlefield. In this opening sequence, Rapley shows twenty-first-century viewers how the most famous historical entertainment of the nineteenth century provided spectators with the sense that they were watching something both thrillingly authentic and comfortingly fictional. Buffalo Bill's Wild West put the experience of western settlement and conflict at the center of American identity...

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