13 Quotes & Sayings By Jeanine Basinger

Jeanine Basinger is a film scholar, film director, and author. She has been a faculty member at UCLA since 1983, and was chair of the UCLA Department of Film from 1990 to 1993. In addition to her work in film, Basinger is the author of numerous articles and essays on film and also directed two films: "The Unseen Enemy," a film about women's wartime experiences in Nazi Germany; and "The Film in the Age of Tyranny," a documentary about the use of films in totalitarian regimes. She has directed and produced numerous television documentaries and documentaries for the American Film Institute.

1
Movies with interfering in-laws and kids are often presented as comic, the ridicule bringing welcome relief to beleaguered married folks suffering offscreen at the hands of relatives. Jeanine Basinger
2
Joanne Woodward’s Mrs. Bridge is one of the best performances ever given on film of a middle-aged woman. Jeanine Basinger
3
Another superb movie about a mature marriage grounded in a fundamental lack of communication is Dodsworth, based on the Sinclair Lewis novel. Jeanine Basinger
4
Excellent films do exist on the subject, however, and one is a pure marriage movie in which Newman and Woodward make it work. Mr. and Mrs. Bridge exists to tell moviegoers that the marriage of their parents–especially if they were those tragic dogsbodies, Midwesterners–were fogbound. The film depicts a steady relationship that has no real communication between its couple Jeanine Basinger
5
When it came to portraying couples who never directly connected, the Newmans were the Olympic gold champions Jeanine Basinger
6
... this film taps perfectly into the viewers’ sense of the world. It was a big, big hit, and one of Hollywood’s best-remembered marriage movies, although by grounding itself in trendy political issues, it avoids ordinary day-to-day marital problems. Its bottom line is, however, marry your own kind. Jeanine Basinger
7
The story of a marriage was an excellent way to fulfill the goal of discussing class without discussing class, and to tell an audience that they were upwardly mobile. Jeanine Basinger
8
The ghastly mother-in-law is well represented by a little comedy film of 1952: No Room for the Groom, directed by Douglas Sirk, the fine German director more famous for his melodramas that humanely criticize American morals and values. Jeanine Basinger
9
The true marriage movie involving in-laws and children is a story about how marriage is directly affected by external characters who impact the central relationship in various ways. Jeanine Basinger
10
Movies endorsed unwanted ideas by putting them into story form and resolving them up there on the screen. The goal was, as always, identification, but also relief. Jeanine Basinger
11
In-laws were often used as plot devices to drive a happy couple apart, to destroy marital love and trust. Jeanine Basinger
12
Deanna Durbin's movies are about innocence and sweetness. They're from a different time and a different place. Outside the movie house, there was Depression, poverty, war, death, and loss. Audiences then were willing to pretend, to enter into a game of escape. No one really thought that the world was like a Deanna Durbin movie, they just wanted to pretend it was for about an hour and a half. Jeanine Basinger