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Clooney's Bathroom Mirror Moment Captures Hollywood's Identity Crisis

Summary

  • Actor George Clooney stares at his reflection, swapping in other stars' names
  • Hollywood has been examining itself through films for over a century
  • Industry's dreams of fame and success have turned into a "wellness check"
Clooney's Bathroom Mirror Moment Captures Hollywood's Identity Crisis

Over the past century, Hollywood has been captivated by its own reflection, repeatedly examining the dream factory through a series of films that expose the industry's dark underbelly.

In the 1930s, movies like What Price Hollywood? and A Star Is Born introduced the toxic fairytale of a waitress becoming a star, only to see her mentor collapse. By the 1950s, the glamour had curdled, with Sunset Boulevard depicting the fall of a forgotten silent film star. The 1970s saw Hollywood's "nervous breakdown," with films like The Day of the Locust and Nashville confessing the industry's descent into a "group therapy session with cocaine catering."

Now, in the 2020s, Hollywood has traded therapy for self-diagnosis. The Offer retells the making of The Godfather with the enthusiasm of fan fiction, while The Studio skewers executives for making "garbage." And in a telling scene, actor George Clooney plays a man who can't find his reflection without a script, capturing the industry's identity crisis.

A century on, the dream factory still can't decide whether it's creating myth or processing trauma. What began as glamour has turned into a "wellness check with distribution rights," with Hollywood endlessly polishing the mirror it can't put down.

Disclaimer: This story has been auto-aggregated and auto-summarised by a computer program. This story has not been edited or created by the Feedzop team.
Clooney's bathroom mirror scene in the film Midway through Jay Kelly represents Hollywood's century-long obsession with self-reflection, as the industry has grappled with the dark side of fame and success.
Over the past century, Hollywood's portrayal of itself has evolved from glamorous fairytales in the 1930s to exposing the industry's "nervous breakdown" in the 1970s, and now a self-diagnosis of burnout in the 2020s.
Recent films like The Offer, which retells the making of The Godfather, and The Studio, which skewers executives for making "garbage," have examined Hollywood's ongoing identity crisis.

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