Unity and Disunity: "Singin' in Term Paper

Total Length: 858 words ( 3 double-spaced pages)

Total Sources: 1+

Page 1 of 3

She has killed the modern wordsmith Joe, the representation of young Hollywood, and resurrected her reputation, but in an ugly, negative way.

Psycho," like "Sunset Boulevard," ends with an image of the character that has thoroughly unraveled. While the image of the young Joe Gillis opens "Sunset Boulevard," the image of the insane, older Norma closes the tale, and in "Psycho," the image of the sane Marion Crane opens the film, while the image of her murderer, Norman Bates, closes the film. Even more so than the domineering Norma, Norman Bates takes over the narrative of "Psycho," transforming it into what should have been Marion's tale of liberation and escape into a story of her murder. Likewise, what should have been a story of Joe's success in Hollywood instead becomes a story about Norma, even though Joe is a professional screenwriter.

The idea of 'rewriting' and 'retelling' reoccurs in all three films. "Singin' in the Rain" shows how the processes of writing and making films changed, and rewrites the conventional Hollywood formula of success -- now effete leading men show their true roots as song and dance men, Hollywood beauties must speak with their real voices, and careers are made and reborn.
In contrast, "Sunset Boulevard" shows the fallout from the shift to sound, and the conventional Hollywood narrative of a young man making it becomes a tale of a talented person's destruction by an insane woman who desires to possess him for her own pursuit of lost fame. Finally, possession is most literally depicted in "Psycho" as Norman Bates is possessed by his mother, after he has possessed the narrative arc of the film, once controlled by Marion Crane as she fled in the futile hopes of a better life from her job as a bank clerk in a small town.

All three films have a kind of unified structure, beginning and ending with the same images. These repeated images reinforce the focus upon filmmaking, death, and possession in "Singin' in the Rain," "Sunset Boulevard," and "Psycho," respectively. But these images are repeated with a difference to show the displacement of the old Hollywood, the eradication of new dreams of filmmaking success, and a displacement of freedom and flight with incarceration. Repetition is not simply visually arresting, it also reflects the journey of the characters and the plot of the film.

Works.....

Show More ⇣


     Open the full completed essay and source list


OR

     Order a one-of-a-kind custom essay on this topic


sample essay writing service

Cite This Resource:

Latest APA Format (6th edition)

Copy Reference
"Unity And Disunity Singin' In" (2008, October 03) Retrieved May 21, 2025, from
https://www.aceyourpaper.com/essays/unity-disunity-singin-27846

Latest MLA Format (8th edition)

Copy Reference
"Unity And Disunity Singin' In" 03 October 2008. Web.21 May. 2025. <
https://www.aceyourpaper.com/essays/unity-disunity-singin-27846>

Latest Chicago Format (16th edition)

Copy Reference
"Unity And Disunity Singin' In", 03 October 2008, Accessed.21 May. 2025,
https://www.aceyourpaper.com/essays/unity-disunity-singin-27846