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American Beauty, reconsidered

American Beauty, reconsidered

Season 2 Episode 77 Published 6 years, 6 months ago
Description

“In American Beauty, Lester Burnham’s rebellions seem adolescent and immature because that’s all he’s got. His world is so stultifying that you can either be a walking-dead adult or a footloose and fancy-free teenager. In retrospect that seems sad rather than triumphant.” –Kevin Smokler

In this episode of Deviate, Rolf and Kevin talk about how American Beauty, a movie that seemed dazzling when it was released, eventually came to feel less original and interesting (2:50); which elements in the movie are still effective after 20 years (8:00); how the movie’s sour take on suburbia was not all that original by 1999 (16:30); how Lester Burnham’s epiphany at the end of the movie feels adolescent and regressive (30:00); the ways that many of the movie’s themes don’t fully jibe with the human motivations of the characters (38:30); and the movie’s take on the isolations of American masculinity (50:00).

Kevin Smokler (@weegee) is a writer, public speaker, critic, and author of Brat Pack America and Practical Classics. He speaks on the future of media and culture and his written work has appeared in such publications as the Los Angeles Times, Buzzfeed, and Vulture. He previously appeared as a guest on Episode 33 of DeviateWhy 1980s coming-of-age movies matter., and Episode 60, Celebrating the best travel movies ever.

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