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Encyclopedia > Pleasantville (1998 movie)

Pleasantville is a film first released in Canada on September 17, 1998 starring Tobey Maguire, Reese Witherspoon, William H. Macy, Joan Allen, and Jeff Daniels. Don Knotts and J.T. Walsh are also featured. The film was written, produced, and directed by Gary Ross, who also performed those duties for the more recent film Seabiscuit, which also starred Maguire and Macy.


The film received Oscar nominations for its music (by Randy Newman), costume design, and set decoration.


Plot Synopsis

The story is about David Wagner (Maguire) and his sister Jennifer Wagner (Witherspoon), a brother and sister who are magically transported into the world of a black-and-white television program, also titled Pleasantville, where it is the year 1958.


Pleasantville is much like the Springfield of Father Knows Best or the Mayfield of Leave It to Beaver. Maguire and Witherspoon play 1990s teenagers thrust into this world involuntarily. The changes they cause in Pleasantville, and the unexpected consequences to themselves, are highlighted through the use of color: the literally monochrome world of Pleasantville blossoms, in steps small and large, into a rainbow of colors from the palettes of Titian, Monet, Gauguin, Renoir, and van Gogh. Color is introduced slowly, subtly, deliberately; at first it may only touch a single flower, or the tongue of a girl. It is always motivated by the events of the film, particularly epiphanies experienced by the characters.


The change in color is the primary visual effect used to accent the changes to the people and the world they inhabit, changes which challenge the values and emphasis on continuity and conformity that many consider to be the hallmark of 1950s America. Much of the film's satirical tone is captured in the "Code of Public Conduct" which the Pleasantville citizens establish, trying to protect themselves from upsetting changes. One rule forbids music other than "Johnny Mathis, Perry Como, the marches of John Philip Sousa, [and] the 'Star Spangled Banner' ". Another rule echoes the Scopes Trial by requiring all schools to teach the "non-changist" view of history. On the DVD's director commentary, Ross noted that the film had been called "both amoral and moralistic", a contradiction in which he reveled.


The tagline for the film nicely summarizes what the movie is about: nothing is as simple as black and white.


  Results from FactBites:
 
Pleasantville - Movie Commentary by Scott Ventura (FeedMyEgo.com) (495 words)
Television was a big theme in the movies in 1998 and 1999.
Pleasantville, in which teenagers are magically sent to play parts in a sitcom set forty years in the past.
When I saw Pleasantville in the theater, I was dazzled by the color once it reappeared.
Pleasantville (1998 movie) - definition of Pleasantville (1998 movie) in Encyclopedia (417 words)
Pleasantville is a film first released in Canada on September 17, 1998 starring Tobey Maguire, Reese Witherspoon, William H. Macy, Joan Allen, and Jeff Daniels.
The changes they cause in Pleasantville, and the unexpected consequences to themselves, are highlighted through the use of color: the literally monochrome world of Pleasantville blossoms, in steps small and large, into a rainbow of colors from the palettes of Titian, Monet, Gauguin, Renoir, and van Gogh.
The change in color is the primary visual effect used to accent the changes to the people and the world they inhabit, changes which challenge the values and emphasis on continuity and conformity that many consider to be the hallmark of 1950s America.
  More results at FactBites »


 

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