Fried Green Tomatoes Film Analysis

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Fried Green Tomatoes at the Whistle Stop Cafe, a 1987 novel by Fannie Flagg was the basis for the movie by the same [slightly shorther] name. When Evelyn Couch visits a nursing home, she befriends Ninny Threadgoode who tells of a story from her childhood of Ruth and Idgie, two very good “friends”. Looked at through the lens of the encoding/decoding model, we can track the presence of the heterosexual will to not know in Fried Green Tomatoes (1991) through the films’ particular uses of the butch/femme trope and through its use of specific camera shots that capture the tension between Ruth and Idgie. The importance of the novel that was the basis for the movie can’t be understated when referring to Stuart Hall’s encoding/decoding model. This model refers to the specific ways one can study film and pays particular attention to the way the specific industry produces a product with a particular coded message which the viewers then have to decode based on their past life experiences. Flagg’s novel portrayed the relationship between the two women with similar innocence but made it much clearer that the residents of the town knew of their true relationship. Here we see the first appearances of the …show more content…

Heterosexual audiences would not likely read the story as lesbian romance, but rather the story of two really good friends who start a business together and help raise a child. Queer viewers would very likely not share this gal pal decoding but see the romance and tension that flows between Ruth and Idgie, as films now and in the past have preferred to “[use] connotation rather than denotation” to signify queer characters (Queer Cinema, 7). Queer audiences are specialized to decode the film in such way. This inherent queerness is encoded in two different ways; within Idgie’s feminine masculinity and through different camera shots to create sexual

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