I.B.Tauris, 2009. — 252 p.
Romantic comedy has long been a mainstay of the movies, from the classic screwballs of the 1930s, through Woody Allen's 'nervous comedies' of the 1970s, to the current great Hollywood revival, featuring such movies as
Maid in Manhattan and
Lost in Translation; yet rom-coms have often struggled to be taken seriously.This original anthology from an international collection of contributors updates, revisits and reflects on today's romantic comedies. It considers the films and issues that illustrate the breathtaking diversity of the genre, from the queer pleasures of
Miss Congeniality and the rom-com persona of J-Lo and Bill Murray, to high school prom-coms and indie romantic comedies. It also explores the new male-centred romances like
Wedding Crashers and looks further afield into the healing power of romantic love in the Bollywood hit
Raji Hindustani.These themes and more are covered in a book that takes the romantic comedy seriously, while also examining the many pleasures of this continually regenerating film form.
Introduction - A Lot Like Love: The Romantic Comedy in Contemporary Cinema (by Stacey Abbott and Deborah Jermyn).
I Love NY: Rom-Com's Love Affair with New York City (by Deborah Jermyn).
Music, Ritual, and Genre in Edward Burns' Indie Romantic Comedies (by Robynn J. Stilwell).
Apres le coup de foudre: Narrative, Love and Spectatorship in
Groundhog Day (by Paul Sutton).
Prom-Coms: Reliving the Dreams and Nightmares of High School Romance (by Stacey Abbott).
The Healing Power of Romantic Love in Popular Indian Romantic Comedies:
Raja Hindustani: Home Elsewhere and Elsewhere Home (by Sean Redmond).
A 'Special Relationship'?: The Coupling of Britain and America in Working Title's Romantic Comedies (by Annabelle Honess Roe).
Transatlantic Exchanges and Influences:
Decalage horaire (Jet Lag) Gender and the Romantic Comedy a la francaise (by Brigitte Rollet).
Romantic Comedies and the Raced Body (by Karen Bowdre).
Armed and Fabulous:
Miss Congeniality's Queer Rom-Com (by Claire Hines).
What a Difference a Gay Makes: Marriage in the 1990s Romantic Comedy (by Kyle Stevens).
Hommecom: Engendering Change in Contemporary Romantic Comedy (by Tamar Jeffers McDonald).
Lost in Transition: Problems of Modern (Heterosexual) Romance and the Catatonic Male Hero in the Post-Feminist Age (by Janet McCabe).
A New Direction in Comedian Comedy?:
Eternal Sunshine of the Spotless Mind,
Punch Drunk Love & the Post-Comedian Rom-Com (by Lesley Harbidge).
'I believe that if I haven't found my Prince Charming already, that I will; or he will find me, if he hasn't already': Jennifer Lopez, Romantic Comedy and Contemporary Stardom (by Alan Dodd and Martin Fradley).
Le Divorce: Romance, Separation and Reconciliation (by Hilary Radner).