Road movie

There are two main narratives: the quest and the outlaw chase. In the quest-style film, the story meanders as the characters make discoveries (e.g., ''Two-Lane Blacktop'' from 1971). In outlaw road movies, in which the characters are fleeing from law enforcement, there is usually more sex and violence (e.g., ''Natural Born Killers'' from 1994). Road films tend to focus more on characters' internal conflicts and transformations, based on their feelings as they experience new realities on their trip, rather than on the dramatic movement-based sequences that predominate in action films. Road movies do not typically use the standard three-act structure used in mainstream films; instead, an "open-ended, rambling plot structure" is used.
The road movie keeps its characters "on the move", and as such the "car, the tracking shot, [and] wide and wild open space" are important iconography elements, similar to a Western movie. As well, the road movie is similar to a Western in that road films are also about a "frontiersmanship" and about the codes of discovery (often self-discovery). Road movies often use the music from the car stereo, which the characters are listening to, as the soundtrack and in 1960s and 1970s road movies, rock music is often used (e.g., ''Easy Rider'' from 1969 used a rock soundtrack of songs from Jimi Hendrix, The Byrds and Steppenwolf).
While early road movies from the 1930s focused on couples, in post-World War II films, usually the travellers are male buddies, although in some cases, women are depicted on the road, either as temporary companions, or more rarely, as the protagonist couple (e.g., ''Thelma & Louise'' from 1991). The genre can also be parodied, or have protagonists that depart from the typical heterosexual couple or buddy paradigm, as with ''The Adventures of Priscilla, Queen of the Desert'' (1994), which depicts a group of drag queens who tour the Australian desert. Other examples of the increasing diversity of the drivers shown in 1990s and subsequent decades' road films are ''The Living End'' (1992), about two gay, HIV-positive men on a road trip; ''To Wong Foo, Thanks for Everything! Julie Newmar'' (1995), which is about drag queens, and ''Smoke Signals'' (1998), which is about two Indigenous men. While rare, there are some road movies about large groups on the road (''Get on the Bus'' from 1996) and lone drivers (''Vanishing Point'' from 1971). Provided by Wikipedia
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Published 2004
“...Road Movies Dritte Produktionen...”