Reframing British Cinema, 1918-1928: Between Restraint and Passion
Autor Christine Gledhillen Limba Engleză Paperback – 2 dec 2003
Preț: 252.37 lei
Nou
Puncte Express: 379
Preț estimativ în valută:
48.30€ • 50.17$ • 40.12£
48.30€ • 50.17$ • 40.12£
Carte tipărită la comandă
Livrare economică 03-17 februarie 25
Preluare comenzi: 021 569.72.76
Specificații
ISBN-13: 9780851708898
ISBN-10: 0851708897
Pagini: 214
Ilustrații: illustrations, filmography, bibliography, index
Dimensiuni: 169 x 233 x 14 mm
Greutate: 0.45 kg
Ediția:2003
Editura: British Film Institute
Colecția British Film Institute
Locul publicării:London, United Kingdom
ISBN-10: 0851708897
Pagini: 214
Ilustrații: illustrations, filmography, bibliography, index
Dimensiuni: 169 x 233 x 14 mm
Greutate: 0.45 kg
Ediția:2003
Editura: British Film Institute
Colecția British Film Institute
Locul publicării:London, United Kingdom
Cuprins
Part
I
Co-ordinates:
theatricality
and
British
Cinema.-
pictorialism
going
to
the
British
pictures.-
performing
British
cinema.
Part
II
Conjunctions:
directors'
picture
stories
pictures,
documents
and
visions.-
class
acts
performers
and
genres.-
the
stories
British
cinema
tells.
Textul de pe ultima copertă
Between
1918
and
1928
British
film
was
poised
between
a
Victorian
past
and
a
future
marked
out
as
American.
Examining
a
cinema
inextricably
intertwined
with
notions
of
theatricality,
pictorialism
and
literariness,
in
which
the
high
cultural,
middlebrow
and
popular
intersect,
this
study
re-evaluates
the
little-known
by
interesting
and
often
startling
films
of
the
1920s.
Films
such
as
the
Blackpool
melodrama
"Hindle
Wakes",
Guy
Newell's
Hardeyesque
meditation
"Fox
Farm",
Graham
Cutt's
exuberant
adaptation
"The
Rat"
(starring
Ivor
Novello
as
a
Parisian
apache!),
Maurice
Elvey's
"Comradeship",
a
haunting
evocation
of
lives
changed
utterly
after
World
War
I,
and
Alfred
Hitchcock's
early
works
are
all
considered
afresh
within
British
cultural
traditions
and
are
related
to
a
specifically
British
mode
of
perception
distinct
from
the
norms
of
European
art
or
popular
American
cinema.
By
challenging
limited
conceptions
of
British
cinema
the
book
shows
how
the
oppositions
of
underplayed
performances
and
theatricalized
spaces,
of
private
passion
and
public
restraint
of
pictorial
composition
and
social
document,
made
for
a
cinema
both
distinctive
an
conventional.
Through
its
recourse
to
adaptation
and
quotation
and
the
exchange
across
media
and
social
classes
of
different
forms
and
representations,
this
cinema
is
revealed
to
be
one
that
also
had
much
to
say
about
class,
about
the
changing
role
of
women
and
about
a
society
in
transition,
and
had
its
own
aesthetic
practices
with
which
to
present
its
varied
set
of
stories.