3 Women
By (Author) Justin Wyatt
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
BFI Publishing
12th December 2024
United Kingdom
Tertiary Education
Non Fiction
Gender studies: women and girls
791.4372
Paperback
104
Width 135mm, Height 190mm
Released after the large-scale frescos of Nashville (1975) and Buffalo Bill and the Indians, or Sitting Bulls History Lesson (1976), 3 Women (1977) was seen as an intimate drama from director Robert Altman. Justin Wyatt's study of 3 Women explores the film's genre defying characteristics. He argues that the film goes beyond its initial interpretation as an example of art cinema owing to its surrealist, dreamlike quality. Wyatt considers four distinct aspects of the film; the function of space and Altmans ability to guide the action through the careful unfolding of the mise-en-scene; its critique of social and sexual manners; the construction of Shelley Duvalls impressive performance; and the ways through which the film can be interpreted generically as alternately a psychological drama, a puzzle film, a dark comedy, and a horror film. Using archival materials from the Robert Altman Archive at the University of Michigan Special Collections, Wyatt explains how this broader reading of 3 Women uncovers a most valuable film text with particular interest to those interested in performance, unique cinematic storytelling methods, and an exacting social satire of American life in the late 1970s. He situates the film within Altman's oeuvre, arguing that it is one of the most significant films in the filmmaker's illustrious filmography.
Justin Wyatt is Associate Professor of Communication Studies, Journalism, Film & Media at the University of Rhode Island, USA. He is author of High Concept: Movies and Marketing in Hollywood (1994), Poison (1998), The Virgin Suicides: Reverie, Sorrow and Young Love (2020). He is co-editor of Contemporary American Independent Film: From the Margins to the Mainstream (2005) and Refocus: The Later Films and Legacy of Robert Altman (2022).