Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Editor’s Introduction
- Part I Cinema’s Vision of Art: Aspirational, Satiric, Philosophical
- Part II The Aura of Art in (the Age of) Film
- Part III Affective Historiography: Negotiating the Past through Screening Art
- Part IV The Figure of the Artist: Between Mad Genius and Entrepreneur of the Self
- Bibliography
- Index
14 - This Is the End of High Entertainment : Tiny Furniture and This Is the End
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 04 May 2022
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Editor’s Introduction
- Part I Cinema’s Vision of Art: Aspirational, Satiric, Philosophical
- Part II The Aura of Art in (the Age of) Film
- Part III Affective Historiography: Negotiating the Past through Screening Art
- Part IV The Figure of the Artist: Between Mad Genius and Entrepreneur of the Self
- Bibliography
- Index
Summary
Abstract
This chapter details the plot and production of Tiny Furniture and This is the End as two films that represent both artists and entertainers, and whose creators wrote, directed, produced, and starred in the films. A discussion of the similarities between the two films, including being produced in the early days of YouTube, taking place within modern homes, and featuring a plot of ego death, illuminate humor and self-awareness as mechanisms artists and entertainers use to demonstrate knowledge of their environment. The chapter also comments on how these two films do not meet David Robbins's criteria for High Entertainment, a middle ground between the Art World and Mainstream Entertainment Culture.
Keywords: Artist Figures, High Entertainment, Art World, Lena Dunham, James Franco
Lena Dunham wrote, directed, produced, and starred in the 2010 independent film Tiny Furniture, which features her own short video The Fountain, and the artwork of her photographer mother, Laurie Simmons. Seth Rogen co-wrote, co-directed, co-produced, and starred in the 2013 studio film This Is the End, featuring the artwork of actor and artist James Franco. Although each of these films features an ensemble cast and a host of collaborators, I have chosen to focus on Dunham, Simmons, Franco, and Rogen as characters whose work structures the films, facilitates a discussion about artists and entertainers in film, and the art world versus mainstream entertainment culture. Tiny Furniture and This Is the End have a number of things in common including a similar time period (the early YouTube era), a similar set (the interior of modern open-plan homes collapsed with the identities of the artists who own them), a similar plot of ego-death, and a similar use of self-aware humor. Piecing apart the films’ similarities will facilitate a better understanding of how artists and entertainers play themselves in film, and what these two films suggest about the potential for a middle ground between the art world and mainstream entertainment culture.
Tiny Furniture
In Tiny Furniture, Lena Dunham plays Aura, a “video maker”1 who moves home to New York City after graduating from a liberal arts college in Ohio. Struggling to find her next steps in her career and personal life, Aura reconnects with her mother Siri, sibling Nadine, and childhood friend Charlotte.
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- Information
- Screening the Art World , pp. 253 - 268Publisher: Amsterdam University PressPrint publication year: 2022