Abstract
ABSTRACT Despite the recent upsurge of interest in automobility as a vital area of research, there are no accounts on how it links to the road movie and its derivatives in avant-garde and experimental filmmaking. To fill this gap, the article extends Archer’s use of film and genre studies in automobilities research to discuss how Highway (Hilary Harris, 1958), Dozer (Anna Geyer, 1999) and Driving Dinosaurs (Emma Piper-Burket, 2019), which span over sixty years of experimental filmmaking, revision the road movie’s automotive mobility through articulating a phenomenological and affective experience of highway driving. Echoing the new mobilities paradigm and recent phenomenological turn in film studies, the works illustrate how the cinematic representation of automobiles and the Interstate Highway System varies in tone from elegiac and celebratory to ironic and ambivalent, signaling the shift from the post-war frenzy of automobility to the modern system of mobilities after the car. While all films reproduce the ideology of American exceptionalism and reflect on the nation’s mid-20th century love affair with the car, each of them offers a different take on the practices of automobility, ranging from their high-modernist moment in the 1950s to the postmodern disillusionment in the regime and impossibility of automobility.
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