Duncan Petrie
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Where the land meets the sea
Liminality, identity and rural landscape in contemporary Scottish cinema
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This chapter explores the intersection of the representation of place and the exploration of subjectivity and personal identity in three feature films, all of which are set on the coastline of rural East or North Scotland: Another Time, Another Place (Michael Radford, 1983), Blue Black Permanent (Margaret Tait, 1993), and The Winter Guest (Alan Rickman, 1997). Collectively these films provide a very different set of images of Scotland to either the romantic or threatening landscapes of films set in the highlands and islands from Edge of the World to Rob Roy, or the more prevalent urban spaces of Glasgow or Edinburgh that have been familiarised by the New Scottish Cinema. They also foreground either women or children as central protagonists, creating fresh ways of examining the tensions between fantasy and reality, rootedness and escape, tradition and modernity that avoid the over-investment in male experience and anxieties that characterise recent Scottish film. The films also reinforce a connection between Scottish cinema and traditions of European art cinema.

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