FLM 112 — Funny Thing About Love: 100 Years of Romantic Comedies
Spring
Thursdays
Date(s)
Mar 31—Jun 2
10 weeks
Drop By
Apr 13
Units
2Fees
Format
On-campus course
Open
Social mores concerning sex and love change from
era to era. What’s acceptable or cool or desirable
or fashionable to one generation is clichéd, laughable, or
anathema to the next. Romantic comedies, which are
made to cater to these ephemeral certitudes, freeze in
time the practices and attitudes of their respective eras.
Collectively, they are important documents of how
people lived and what they thought about love and
romance, right and wrong.
This underappreciated and misunderstood genre, which aims for light entertainment, often captures the soul of its time. Through clips and features, this course will trace the evolution of the romantic comedy, from the early breakthroughs of Gloria Swanson in the 1920s (Why Change Your Wife?) through today, with notable stops along the way to include the Rock Hudson–Doris Day films (Pillow Talk), which are now mainly interesting for being weird and discordant. We will end with two contemporary films—28 Hotel Rooms (2012) and Drinking Buddies (2013)—that hold a mirror up to our times. Students will come away with a survey of important romantic comedies, as well as a sweep of social history over the past 100 years.
This underappreciated and misunderstood genre, which aims for light entertainment, often captures the soul of its time. Through clips and features, this course will trace the evolution of the romantic comedy, from the early breakthroughs of Gloria Swanson in the 1920s (Why Change Your Wife?) through today, with notable stops along the way to include the Rock Hudson–Doris Day films (Pillow Talk), which are now mainly interesting for being weird and discordant. We will end with two contemporary films—28 Hotel Rooms (2012) and Drinking Buddies (2013)—that hold a mirror up to our times. Students will come away with a survey of important romantic comedies, as well as a sweep of social history over the past 100 years.
Mick LaSalle, Film Critic, Hearst Newspapers
Mick LaSalle is the author of three books, Complicated Women: Sex and Power in Pre-Code Hollywood, Dangerous Men: Pre-Code Hollywood and the Birth of Modern Man, and The Beauty of the Real. He writes for the San Francisco Chronicle, the Houston Chronicle, and other Hearst newspapers.Textbooks for this course:
No required textbooks