Steven Spielberg's Children
Auteur : Linda Ruth Williams
Date de publication : 2025-08-12
Ăditeur : Rutgers University Press
Nombre de pages : 317
Résumé du livre
Why has Steven Spielbergâs work been so often identified with childhood and children? How does the director elicit such complex performances from his young actors? Steven Spielbergâs Children is the first book to investigate children, childhood, and Spielbergâs employment of child actors together and in depth. Through a series of lively readings of both the celebrated performances he elicits from his young stars in films such as E.T.: The Extra Terrestrial, A.I.: Artificial Intelligence, and Empire of the Sun, as well as less discussed roles in films such as War of the Worlds, The BFG, and Jurassic Park, this book shows children to be key players in the directorâs articulation of childhood since the 1970s.
Steven Spielbergâs Children presents children and childhood in some surprising ways, not only analyzing boyhood and girlhood according to Spielberg, but considering children as alien, adult-children who refuse to grow up, and children who arenât even human. It discusses the way in which children have served to cast Spielberg as a sentimentalist, but also how they are more frequently framed as complex, cruel, and canny. The child might be dangled as bait in an exploitation horror scenario (Jaws), might become the image of universal higher beings (Close Encounters of the Third Kind), or might be a young cultural creator like the director was himself (The Fabelmans), "born with a camera glued to [his] eye." The child, on both sides of the camera, is a resonant image, signifying all that adult culture wants it to be, yet resisting this through authorship of their own stories. The book also looks at Spielberg's young actors in the long history of child stars in theater and cinema, and how Spielbergâs children have fared as performers and celebrities.