Mount Rushmore in popular culture
Because of its fame as a
Reasons for popularity
The popularity of Mount Rushmore is tied to the monumental sculpture's attraction as a tourist destination.
Common themes
Gunderson notes that "films have portrayed the monument as a secret hideout, a chase scene location, or the entrance to a city of gold".[3] Mount Rushmore "usually serves to connect the national security to individual romance", although other media exist in which the monument is used to symbolize other aspects of the human experience, such as being unfinished, as the monument is.[5]
Destruction
Erika Doss notes that Mount Rushmore is a common target in movies showing an attack on a landmark to signify the scope of a threat, "destroyed by lasers in Richie Rich (1994), ruined by an earthquake in 10.5: Apocalypse (2006), blown up by terrorist missiles in The Peacekeeper (1997), annihilated by Michael Moore (playing a suicide bomber) in Team America: World Police (2004) and defaced (or rather, refaced) in movies like Superman II (1980) Mars Attacks! (1996) and Head of State (2003)".[6]
Alterations and additions to the faces
As one source notes, "Cartoonists have added more famous faces, real and imaginary, to Mount Rushmore, or show the four presidents talking.
During his term in office, President Barack Obama was added as a fifth head to Mount Rushmore on internet depictions of the mountain. On July 8, 2009, climate change activists unfurled a banner over the monument portraying a fifth face on Mount Rushmore of Obama, depicting him as a President who could make Presidential changes in leading effective climate legislation as opposed to being a politician.[12][13][14] Former President Donald Trump kept a sculpture in his Mar-a-Lago office, gifted to him by South Dakota Governor Kristi Noem, depicting Mount Rushmore with Trump's face added to the mountain, to the right of Abraham Lincoln.[15]
Imitations of the style
Similar monuments with other faces have been depicted by different artists. Examples include alien faces in a drawing by Gary Larson and a wall print of a version with celebrity faces: Marilyn Monroe, Humphrey Bogart, James Dean, and John Lennon.[16] The album cover of Deep Purple's 1970 album Deep Purple in Rock has "iconic sleeve art that depicted the five Purple members' faces carved into the surface of Mount Rushmore in place of the faces of US presidents".[17] In the Japanese manga Naruto, the main leaders of Konohagakure have had their faces carved into a mountain overlooking the village in the style of Mount Rushmore.[18] In the 1994 film Richie Rich, the Rich family owns an imitation of Mount Rushmore, but carved with the faces of the Rich family.[19]
Major portrayals
In North by Northwest
The 2005 Family Guy episode "North by North Quahog", is "a parody of the film, North by Northwest, winding up in a face-off with Gibson atop Mount Rushmore".[24][25] In the 1994 film Richie Rich, the Rich family's imitation of Mount Rushmore becomes the setting for the film's finale, also echoing the finale of North by Northwest.[19]
In music
The 1986 album The Ballad of Sally Rose by Emmylou Harris satirizes the monument, singing of "Roosevelt's nose".[16]
The song "Little Snakes", from the 2020
See also
- Cultural depictions of George Washington
- Cultural depictions of Thomas Jefferson
- Cultural depictions of Theodore Roosevelt
- Cultural depictions of Abraham Lincoln
References
- ^ a b Thomas J. Liu, John B. Loomis, and Linda J. Bilmes, "Exploring the contribution of National Parks to the entertainment industry's intellectual property", in Linda J. Bilmes and John B. Loomis, Valuing U.S. National Parks and Programs: America's Best Investment (Routledge, 2020), p. 95–98.
- ISBN 978-0-313-39883-4.
- ^ ISBN 978-1-4914-0208-5.
- Time Magazine.
- ^ Walter Metz, "Review: Nebraska. Dir. Alexander Payne. Paramount Vantage, 2013". Middle West Review Volume 1, Number 1, (University of Nebraska Press, Fall 2014), p. 154-55.
- ISBN 978-0-226-15939-3.
- ISBN 978-0-8239-5017-1.
- ^ Powell, Laura. "Mount Rushmore on the Big Screen". Visit The USA. Retrieved 2022-05-14.
- New York Magazine. p. 50. Retrieved 2022-05-19.
Without thinking anything of it, Zod walks on water (a red-neck sitting in a rowboat gapes), and all three, flying past Mt. Rushmore, instantaneously carve their own images on the rock face (Lincoln's nose falls to the canyon floor with a dismal crash).
- ^ Dominick, Nora (September 22, 2021). "25 "What If...?" Details That Are Small, Incredible, And Make This Thor Episode So Great". BuzzFeed.
- ^ Macdonald, Moira (July 18, 2023). "'Barbie' review: A delightful (and very pink) trip to Barbie Land". The Seattle Times.
- ^ "Greenpeace Gets Badass, Drapes Pic Of Obama Over Mt. Rushmore Calling For Climate Action".
- ^ Obama Makes Early, Unflattering Appearance on Mount Rushmore.
- ^ Greenpeace members charged in Mount Rushmore G-8 protest - CNN.com.
- ^ Porter, Tom (November 26, 2021). "Photos show Trump has a Mount Rushmore sculpture with his face added to it in his Mar-a-Lago office". Business Insider.
- ^ ISBN 978-0-674-04435-7.
- ^ McIver, Joel (3 June 2020). "How Deep Purple's classic In Rock was made". Classic Rock. Archived from the original on 20 January 2021. Retrieved 27 July 2020.
- ^ Iwamasa, Karli (March 26, 2020). "Naruto: 10 Things You Never Knew About Konoha". CBR.
- ^ a b Yoram Allon, Del Cullen, Hannah Patterson, The Wallflower Critical Guide to Contemporary North American Directors (2000), p. 357: "Richie Rich (1995)... refers to Hitchcock in its finale, set against Richie's own Mount Rushmore-style rock faces .
- ^ Freund, Charles Paul (2003). "Big schlock candy Mountain: the many meanings of Mount Rushmore". Reason. Vol. 34, no. 9.
- ^ Barbara Straumann, "Rewriting American Foundational Myths in Alfred Hitchcock's North by Northwest", in Martin Heusser and Gudrun Grabher, American Foundational Myths (2002), p. 201.
- ^ James Chapman, Hitchcock and the Spy Film (2017), p. 222.
- ^ Christopher D. Morris, The Direction of "North by Northwest", Cinema Journal, Vol. 36, No. 4 (Summer, 1997), pp. 43-56.
- ^ "Family Guy: "North by North Quahog"". IGN. April 27, 2005.
- ^ "Episode Detail: North by North Quahog". TV Guide. Archived from the original on 23 May 2008. Retrieved July 3, 2009.
Peter and Lois battle Mel Gibson (not voiced by Gibson himself) over their idea for an action-thriller sequel to "The Passion of the Christ." They end up in a parody of "North by Northwest" that takes them to Cape Cod, a Manhattan luxury hotel and, of course, Mount Rushmore.
- ^ Rolli, Bryan (June 16, 2020). "Protest the Hero's Rody Walker: Trump's Vision of Greatness Is America's 'Tragic Flaw'". Loudwire. Retrieved 2020-10-27.
- ^ Slingerland, Calum (June 18, 2020). "Protest the Hero Give American History a Scathing Rewrite on 'Palimpsest'". exclaim.ca. Retrieved 2020-10-27.