This week on The Spectator Film Podcast... Tank Girl (1995) 6.13.19 Featuring: Austin, Maxx Commentary track starts at 35:50
“…Tank Girl is unique not only for having a female lead, but in its comedic, and self-parodic, approach to its subject matter and narrative. This difference is, moreover, very much connected to issues of style, a point foregrounded by the film’s use of drawn, comic-book images – both stills and animated sequences – at numerous points in its narrative. The inclusion of these comic book images, which in themselves contribute to the film’s sense of irreverent and exuberant playfulness, draws attention to the artifice of the filmmaking process and therefore serves to heighten the film’s parodic attitude towards genre conventions and its own narrative. Thus, these images not only tend to privilege style and image over narrative continuity and realism, they also link this emphasis on style to a playful irreverence that refuses to take the male-dominated conventions of science-fiction – and cinematic narratives more generally – seriously” (123-24)
“Tank Girl’s foregrounding of style and surface is, indeed, inseparable from its parody of authority and seriousness. At a narrative level, the film seems to borrow familiar plot devices from mainstream science-fiction films only in order to make fun of them…For Kesslee, this competition is about control. Just as he tries to control the world’s water, he also wants not to kill, but to control Rebecca, to force her to work for him…Yet, if the film thematizes the linkage of the female body to fluidity and of the man to the control of that fluidity (as we shall discuss further), it also formalizes these connections in its narrative, where the continuous, liner (male) narrative is constantly subverted, or diverted, by the currents of an irrepressible (female) style” (124-25)
"The aesthetic style of Tank Girl, in other words, is not radical chic, but 'radical pastiche'" (127).
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