Film history: an introduction
Gespeichert in:
Hauptverfasser: | , |
---|---|
Format: | Buch |
Sprache: | English |
Veröffentlicht: |
Boston, Mass. [u.a.]
McGraw-Hill
2003
|
Ausgabe: | 2. ed. |
Schlagworte: | |
Online-Zugang: | Inhaltsverzeichnis |
Beschreibung: | XX, 788 S. Ill. |
ISBN: | 9780071151412 0070384290 0071151419 |
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Datensatz im Suchindex
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adam_text | CONTENTS
Preface
xix
Introduction: Film History and How It Is Done
1
Why Do We Care About Old Movies
? 1
What Do Film Historians Do?
2
Questions and Answers
2
I Film History as Description
and Explanation
3
I Evidence
4
I Explaining the Past:
Basic Approaches
5
I Explaining the Past: Organizing
the Evidence
5
Our Approach to Film History
7
History as Story
9
References
10
Part One EARLY CINEMA
ÍÍ
1
THE INVENTION AND EARLY YEARS OF
THE CINEMA,
ШОѕ-1904
13
The Invention of the Cinema
14
Preconditions for Motion Pictures
14
I Major Precursors
of Motion Pictures IS I An International Process of
Invention
16
Early Filmmaking and Exhibition
21
Scenics, Topicals, and Fiction Films
21
I Creating an
Appealing Program
21
I The Growth of the French
Film Industry
22
BOX: THE SPREAD OF THE CINEMA AROUND THE
WORLD: SOME REPRESENTATIVE EXAMPLES
11
BOX: GEORGES
MÉLIÈS,
MAGICIAN OF THE
CINEMA
24
England and the Brighton School
24
I The United States:
Competition and the Resurgence of Edison
27
Notes and Queries
31
Identification and Preservation of Early Films
31
I Reviving
Interest in Early Cinema: The Brighton Conference
32
Reference
32
Further Reading
32
2
THE INTERNATIONAL EXPANSION
OF THE CINEMA,
1905-1912 33
Film Production in Europe
33
France:
Pathé
versus Gaumont
33
I Italy: Growth
through Spectacle
35
I Denmark:
Nordisk
and
Ole
Olsen 36
I Other Countries
37
The Struggle for the Expanding American
Film Industry
37
The Nickelodeon Boom
37
I The Motion Picture
Patents Company versus the Independents
39
I Social
Pressures and Self-Censorship
40
I The Rise of the
Feature Film
41
I The Star System
41
I The Movies
Move to Hollywood
42
The Problem of Narrative Clarity
42
Early Moves toward Classical Storytelling
43
An International Style
50
Notes
and Queries
Griffith s Importance in the Development
of Film Style
51
51
BOX: THE BEGINNINGS OF FILM ANIMATION
52
References
54
Further Reading
54
3
NATIONAL CINEMAS, HOLLYWOOD
CLASSICISM, AND WORLD WAR I,
1913-1919 55
The American Takeover of World Markets
The Rise of National Cinemas
Germany
57
I Italy
58
I Russia
60
BOX: THE BRIEF HEYDAY Of THE SERIAL
56
57
France
62
I Denmark
63
I Sweden
64
The Classical Hollywood Cinema
68
The Major Studios Begin to Form
68
I Controlling
Filmmaking
68
I Filmmaking in Hollywood during
the
1910s 70
BOX: PRECISION STAGING IN EUROPEAN
CINEMA
71
Films and Filmmakers
73
I Streamlining American
Animation
77
Smaller Producing Countries
77
Notes and Queries
79
The Ongoing Rediscovery of the
1910s 79
References
80
Further Reading
80
Part Two THE LATE SILENT ERA,
Í9Í9-1929
81
4
FRANCE IN THE
1920s 85
The French Film Industry after World War I
85
Competition from Imports
85
I Disunity within the
Film Industry
86
I Outdated Production Facilities
86
Major Postwar Genres
87
The French Impressionist Movement
88
The Impressionists Relation to the Industry
88
A CHRONOLOGY OF FRENCH IMPRESSIONIST
CINEMA
89
Impressionist Theory
90
I Formal Traits of
Impressionism
91
The End of French Impressionism
98
The Filmmakers Go Their Own Ways
98
I
Problems within the Film Industry
98
Notes and Queries
99
French Impressionist Theory and Criticism
99
I
Restoration Work on Napoleon
100
References
100
Further Reading
100
5
GERMANY IN THE
1920s 101
The German Situation after World War I
101
Genres and Styles of German Postwar Cinema
102
Spectacles
103
I The German Expressionist Movement
103
A CHRONOLOGY OF GERMAN EXPRESSIONIST
CINEMA
104
Kammerspiel 109
I German Films Abroad
110
Major Changes in the Mid- to Late
1920s
The Technological Updating of the German
Studios 111 I The End of Inflation
112
The End of the Expressionist Movement
New Objectivity
BOX: G.
W. PABST
AND NEW OBJECTIVITY
116
Export and Classical Style
110
113
114
115
118
Notes and Queries
German Cinema and German Society
118
I
Expressionism, New Objectivity, and the Other Arts
118
References
118
Further Reading
118
6
SOVIET CINEMA IN THE
1920s 119
The Hardships of War Communism,
1918-1920 119
Recovery under the New Economic Policy,
1921-1924
123
Increased State Control and the Montage
Movement,
1925-1930 124
Growth and Export in the Film Industry
124
I The
Influence of Constructivism
125
I A New Generation:
The Montage Filmmakers
127
A CHRONOLOGY OF THE SOVIET MONTAGE
MOVEMENT
128
The Theoretical Writings of Montage Filmmakers
129
I
Soviet Montage Form and Style
130
Other Soviet Films
The First Five-Year Plan and the End of the
Montage Movement
138
139
141
Notes and Queries
Film Industry and Governmental Policy: A Tangled
History
141
I The Kuleshov Effect
141
I The Russian
Formalists and the Cinema
141
References
141
Further Reading
142
7
THE LATE SILENT ERA IN HOLLYWOOD,
1920-1928 143
Theater Chains and the Structure of the Industry
144
Vertical Integration
144
I Picture Palaces
145
I The Big
Three and the Little Five
145
The Motion Picture Producers and Distributors
of America
146
Studio Filmmaking
147
Style and Technological Changes
147
I Big-Budget Films
of the
1920s 149
I Hew Investment and Blockbusters
152
I Genres and Directors
153
BOX: SILENT COMEDY IN THE
1920s 154
Foreign Filmmakers in Hollywood
158
Films for African American Audiences
162
The Animated Part of the Program
163
Notes and Queries
165
The Rediscovery of Buster Keaton
165
References
166
Further Reading
166
8
INTERNATIONAL TRENDS
OF THE
1920s 167
Film Europe
167
Postwar Animosities Fade
167
I Concrete Steps toward
Cooperation
168
I Success Cut Short
169
The International Style
170
The Blending of Stylistic Traits
170
I Carl Drey
er:
European Director
171
Film Experiments outside the Mainstream Industry
173
Abstract Animation
173
BOX: THE SPREAD OF ART CINEMA
INSTITUTIONS
174
Dada
Filmmaking
177
I Surrealism
178
I
Cinéma Pur
179
I Lyrical Documentaries: The City Symphony
181
I
Experimental Narrative
182
Documentary Features Gain Prominence
184
Commercial Filmmaking Internationally
186
Japan
186
I Great Britain
187
I Italy
187
I Some
Smaller Producing Countries
188
Notes and Queries
Different Versions of Silent Classics
189
References
190
Further Reading
190
189
Part Three THE DEVELOPMENT OF SOUND CINEMA,
Í926-Í945
191
9
THE INTRODUCTION OF SOUND
193
Sound in the United States
194
Warner Bros, and Vitaphone
194
I Sound-on Film Is
Adopted
194
I Sound and Filmmaking
195
BOX: EARLY SOUND TECHNOLOGY AND THE
CLASSICAL STYLE
196
Germany Challenges Hollywood
200
Dividing the International Pie
200
I The Early Sound
Era in Germany
201
The USSR Pursues Its Own Path to Sound
The International Adoption of Sound
France
206
I Great Britain
207
I Japan
208
I
Wiring the World s Theaters for Sound
209
I
Crossing the Language Barrier
210
Notes and Queries
Filmmakers on the Coming of Sound
211
I Sound
and the Revision of Film History
211
References
211
Further Reading
211
10
THE HOLLYWOOD STUDIO SYSTEM,
1930-1945 213
The New Structure of the Film Industry
The Big Five
214
I The Little Three
216
I
204
206
211
214
BOX: THE HAYS CODE:
HOLLYWOOD
216
-CENSORSHIP IN
The Independents
218
Exhibition Practice in the
1930s
Continued Innovation in Hollywood
Sound Recording
219
I Camera Movement
220
I
Technicolor
220
I Special Effects
221
I
Cinematography Styles
223
Major Directors
The Older Generation
224
I New Directors
226
218
219
224
BOX:
CITIZEN
KA
AMBERSONS
227
AND THE MAGNIFICENT
New
Émigré
Directors
228
Genre Innovations and Transformations
228
The Musical
228
I The Screwball Comedy
230
I The
Horror Film
231
I The Social Problem Film
232
I
The Gangster Film
233
I Film
Noir
233
I The War
Film
235
Animation and the Studio System
Notes and Queries
The Controversy over Orson Welles
237
References
238
Further Reading
238
235
237
11
OTHER STUDIO SYSTEMS
239
Quota Quickies and Wartime Pressures:
The British Studios
239
The British Film Industry Grows
239
I Export
Successes
241
I Alfred Hitchcock s Thrillers
242
I
Crisis and Recovery
242
I The Effects of the War
244
Innovation within an Industry: The Studio
System of Japan
246
Popular Cinema of the
1930s 246
I The Pacific War
248
BOX: YASUJIRO OZU AND KENJI JVIIZOGUCHI IN
THE
1930s 249
India: An Industry Built on Music
256
A Highly Fragmented Business
256
I Mythologicals,
Socials, and Devotionals
256
I Independents Weaken
the System
257
China: Filmmaking Caught between Left
and Right
257
Notes and Queries
259
Japanese Cinema Rediscovered
259
References
260
Further Reading
260
12
CINEMA AND THE STATE: THE USSR,
GERMANY, AND ITALY,
1930-1945 261
The Soviet Union: Socialist Realism
and World War II
261
Films of the Early
1930s 262
I The Doctrine of
Socialist Realism
262
SOCIALIST REALISM AND CHAPAYEV
The Main Genres of Socialist Realism
264
I
The Soviet Cinema in Wartime
268
The German Cinema under the Nazis
271
The Nazi Regime and the Film Industry
271
I
Films of the Nazi Era
272
I The Aftermath of
the Nazi Cinema
275
Italy: Propaganda versus Entertainment
276
Industry Tendencies
276
I A Cinema of
Distraction
277
I A New Realism?
279
Notes and Queries
281
The Case of
Leni
Riefenstahl 281
References
281
Further Reading
282
13
FRANCE:
POETIC REALISM,
THE
POPULAR FRONT, AND THE
OCCUPATION,
1930-1945 283
The Industry and Filmmaking during the
1930s 284
Production Problems and Artistic Freedom
284
I
Fantasy and Surrealism:
René Clair,
Pierre
Prévert,
and
]ean Vigo
284
I Quality Studio Filmmaking
286
I
Emigres in France
287
I Everyday Realism
288
Poetic Realism
289
Doomed Lovers and Atmospheric Settings
289
I
The Creative Burst of Jean Renoir
290
I Other
Contributors
292
Brief Interlude: The Popular Front
293
BOX: POPULAR FRONT FILMMAKING:
LA VIE EST
A NOUS AND LA MARSEILLAISE
294
Filmmaking in Occupied and Vichy France
296
The Situation in the Film Industry
296
I Films of
the Occupation Period
298
Notes and Queries
301
Renewed Interest in the Popular Front
301
Reference
302
Further Reading
302
14
LEFTIST, DOCUMENTARY, AND
EXPERIMENTAL CINEMAS,
1930-1945 303
The Spread of Political Cinema
303
The United States
304
I Germany
305
I Belgium
and the Netherlands
305
I Great Britain
306
I
International Leftist Filmmaking in the Late
1930s 307
Government- and Corporate-Sponsored
Documentaries
309
The United States
309
I Great Britain
310
BOX: ROBERT FLAHERTY: MAN OF
ARAN
AND
THE ROMANTIC DOCUMENTARY
311
Wartime Documentaries
313
Hollywood Directors and the War
313
I Great
Britain
314
I Germany and the USSR
316
The International Experimental Cinema
317
Experimental Narratives and Lyrical and Abstract
Films
317
I Surrealism
318
I Animation
319
References
322
Further Reading
322
Part Four THE POSTWAR ERA:
1945-1960« 323
S
Φ
«>
Cř
15
AMERICAN CINEMA
IN THE
POSTWAR ERA,
1945-1960 325
1946-1948 326
The HUAC Hearings: The Cold War Reaches
Hollywood
326
I The Paramount Decision
327
The Decline of the Hollywood Studio System
328
Changing Lifestyles and Competing Entertainment
328
I
Hollywood Adjusts to Television
329
BOX: SEE IT ON THE BIG SCREEN
330
Art Cinemas and Drive-ins
333
I Challenges to
Censorship
334
The New Power of the Individual Film and the
Revival of the Roadshow
335
The Rise of the Independents
336
Mainstream Independents: Agents, Star Power, and
the Package
336
I Exploitation
337
I Independents
on the Fringe
339
Classical Hollywood Filmmaking:
A Continuing Tradition
339
Complexity and Realism in Storytelling
339
I
Stylistic Changes
341
I New Twists on Old
Genres
341
Major Directors: Several Generations
344
Veterans of the Studio Era
344
I Emigres Stay On
346
BOX: ALFRED HITCHCOCK
347
Welles s Struggle with Hollywood
348
I The Impact of
the Theater
348
I New Directors
350
Notes and Queries
Widescreen Formats in Subsequent History
351
351
References
351
Further Reading
351
1 6
POSTWAR EUROPEAN CINEMA:
NEOREALISM
AND ITS CONTEXT,
1945-1959 353
The Postwar Context
353
Film Industries and Film Culture
354
West Germany: Papas
Kino 3S4
I Resistance
to U.S. Encroachment
355
I Art Cinema:
The Return of Modernism
357
Italy:
Neorealism
and After
359
Italian String
359
NEOREALISM
AND AFTER: A CHRONOLOGY OF
EVENTS AND SELECTED WORKS
360
Defining
Neorealism
362
BOX:
UMBERTO
D:
THE MAID WAKES UP
364
BOX: OPEN CITY: THE DEATH OF
PINA
365
Beyond
Neorealism
366
369
371
BOX:
LUCHINO VISCONTI
AND
ROBERTO
ROSSELLINI
367
A Spanish
Neorealism?
Notes and Queries
Controversies around
Neorealism
3 71
References
371
Further Reading ;
372
17
POSTWAR EUROPEAN CINEMA:
FRANCE, SCANDINAVIA, AND BRITAIN,
1945-1959 373
French Cinema of the Postwar Decade
373
The Industry Recovers
373
BOX: POSTWAR FRENCH FILM CULTURE
374
The Tradition of Quality
375
I The Return of Older
Directors
377
I New Independent Directors
381
Scandinavian Revival
383
BOX:
CARL THEODOR DREYER 384
England: Quality and Comedy
385
Problems in the Industry
385
I Literary Heritage and
Eccentricity
386
I Art-House Success Abroad
389
Notes and Queries
389
Postwar French Film Theory
389
I The Powell-
Pressburger Revival
390
References
390
Further Reading
390
18
POSTWAR CINEMA BEYOND
THE WEST,
1945-1959 391
General Tendencies
391
Japan
393
Industry Recovery under the Occupation
393
I
The Veteran Directors
394
I The War Generation
396
Postwar Cinema in the Soviet Sphere of Influence
397
The USSR: From High Stalinism to the Thaw
397
I
Postwar Cinema in Eastern Europe
399
People s Republic of China
404
Civil War and Revolution
404
I Mixing Maoism
and Tradition
406
India
407
A Disorganized but Prolific Industry
407
I
The Populist Tradition and Raj Kapoor
407
BOX: MUSIC AND POSTWAR INDIAN FILM
408
Swimming against the Stream: Guru Dutt and
Ritwik Ghatak
409
Latin America
411
Argentina and Brazil
411
I Mexican Popular
Cinema
412
Notes and Queries
413
De-Stalinization and the Disappearing Act
413
References
414
Further Reading
414
19
ART CINEMA AND THE IDEA
OF AUTHORSHIP
415
The Rise and Spread of the
Auteur
Theory
415
Authorship and the Growth of the Art Cinema
416
Luis Buñuel
(1900-1983) 417
Ingmar
Bergman
(1918- ) 419
Akira Kurosawa
(1910-1998) 422
Federico Fellini
(1920-1993) 425
Michelangelo Antonioni
(1912- ) 426
Robert
Bresson
(1907-1999) 428
Jacques
Tati
(1908-1982) 431
Satyajit
Ray (1921-1992) 433
Notes and Queries
436
The Impact of Auteurism
436
I Auteurism and the
American Cinema
436
I
1950s
and
1960s
Modernist
Cinema
437
References
438
Further Reading
438
20
NEW WAVES AND YOUNG CINEMAS,
1958-1967 439
The Industries New Needs
439
Formal and Stylistic Trends
440
France: New Wave and New Cinema
443
The New Wave
443
FRENCH NEW CINEMA AND THE
NOUVELLE
VAGUE: A CHRONOLOGY
OF MAJOR RELEASES
444
BOX:
FRANÇOIS
TRUFFAUT AND JEAN-LUC
GODARD
446
New Cinema: The Left Bank
449
Italy: Young Cinema and Spaghetti Westerns
451
Great Britain: Kitchen Sink Cinema
454
Young German Film
456
New Cinema in the USSR and Eastern Europe
458
Young Cinema in the Soviet Union
458
I New
Waves in Eastern Europe
460
BOX:
MIKLOS JANCSO
465
The Japanese New Wave
468
Brazil: Cinema
Nôvo
471
Notes and Queries
475
Censorship and the French New Wave
475
I New
Film Theory
475
References
475
Further Reading
476
21
DOCUMENTARY AND EXPERIMENTAL
CINEMA IN THE POSTWAR ERA,
1945-MID-1960S
477
Toward the Personal Documentary
478
Innovative Trends
478
I The National Film Board
and Free Cinema
480
I France: The
Auteurs
Documentaries
481
I Jean
Rouch
and Ethnographic
Documentary
482
Direct Cinema
483
The United States: Drew and Associates
483
BOX: NEW TECHNOLOGY FOR THE NEW
DOCUMENTARY
484
Direct Cinema in Bilingual Canada
486
I France:
Cinéma Vérité
487
Experimental and
Avant-Garde
Cinema
489
BOX: THE FIRST POSTWAR DECADE
MAYA
DEREN 490
Abstraction, Collage, and Personal Expression
493
THE SECOND POSTWAR DECADE
STAN
BRAKHAGE
499
Success and New Ambitions
500
I Underground
and Expanded Cinema
501
Notes and Queries
507
Writing the History of the Postwar
Avant-Garde 507
References
508
Further Reading
508
Part Five THE CONTEMPORARY CINEMA SINCE THE
I960« 509
22
HOLLYWOOD S FALL AND RISE:
1960-1980 511
The
1960s:
The Film Industry in Recession
The Studios in Crisis
512
I Styles and Genres
513
I
Modifying the Classical Studio Style
514
I Identifying
the Audience
515
512
BOX: NEW PRODUCTION AND EXHIBITION
TECHNOLOGIES
516
The New Hollywood: Late
1960s
to Late
1970s 516
Toward an American Art Cinema
51 7
BOX: PERSONAL CINEMA:
ALTMAN
AND
ALLEN
520
Hollywood Strikes Gold
522
I The Return of the
Blockbuster
522
BOX: THE
1970s
BIG THREE: COPPOLA,
SPIELBERG, AND LUCAS
523
Hollywood Updated
526
I Scorsese as Synthesis
528
Opportunities for Independents
530
Notes and Queries
532
The American Director as Superstar
532
I film
Consciousness and film Preservation
532
I
Exploitation Films and Connoisseurs of Weird
Movies
533
References
533
Further Reading
533
23
POLITICALLY CRITICAL CINEMA
OF THE
1960s
AND
1970s 535
Political Filmmaking in the Third World
536
Revolutionary Aspirations
537
I Political Genres
and Style
538
I Latin America
538
BOX: TWO REVOLUTIONARY FILMS: MEMORIES
OF UNDERDEVELOPMENT AND
LUCÍA 542
Black African Cinema
548
I China: Cinema and
the Great Proletarian Cultural Revolution
551
Political Filmmaking in the First and
Second Worlds
553
Eastern Europe and the USSR
553
I Political
Cinema in the West
556
BOX: FILM ACTIVITIES DURING THE MAY EVENTS
IN PARIS
558
Political Modernism
562
BOX:
BRECHT
AND POLITICAL MODERNISM
562
The Politicization of Mainstream Narrative and
the Art Film
568
I New Cinema in West Germany:
The Political Wing
572
Notes and Queries
576
Defining Third World Revolutionary Cinema
576
I
Film Studies and the New Film Theory
577
References
577
Further Reading
578
24
DOCUMENTARY AND EXPERIMENTAL
FILM SINCE THE LATE
1960s 579
Documentary Cinema
579
Direct Cinema and Its Legacy
579
BOX: FREDERICK WISEMAN AND THE
TRADITION OF DIRECT CINEMA
581
Synthesizing Documentary Techniques
583
I
The Questioning of Documentary Actuality
584
I
Documenting Upheavals and Injustice
586
I The
Theatrical Documentary in the Age of Television
587
From Structuralism to Pluralism in
Avant-Garde
Cinema
589
Structural Film
589
I Reactions and Alternatives
to Structural Film
594
BOX: INDEPENDENT ANIMATION OF THE
1970s
AND
1980s 595
New Mergers
601
Notes and Queries
602
Rethinking Documentary
602
I The Idea of Structure
603
I The
Avant-Garde
and Postmodernism
603
References
604
Further Reading
604
25
NEW CINEMAS AND NEW DEVELOP¬
MENTS: EUROPE AND THE USSR SINCE
THE
1970s 605
Western Europe
Crisis in the Industry
606
606
BOX: TELEVISION AND AARDMAN
ANIMATION
608
The Art Cinema Revived: Toward Accessibility
609
BOX:
DURAS,
VON
TROTTA,
AND THE
EUROPEAN ART CINEMA
614
The Arresting Image
618
Eastern Europe and the USSR
Eastern Europe: From Reform to Revolution
623
I
The USSR: The Final Thaw
627
Notes and Queries
The New German Cinema
631
References
632
Further Reading
632
623
631
26
BEYOND THE INDUSTRIALIZED WEST:
LATIN AMERICA, THE ASIA-PACIFIC
REGION, THE MIDDLE EAST, AND
AFRICA SINCE THE
1970s 633
From Third World to Developing Nations
634
Latin America: Accessibility and Decline
635
BOX: LATIN AMERICAN LITERATURE AND
CINEMA
635
Brazil
636
I Argentina and Elsewhere
637
I Mexico
638
I Cuba and Other Left-Wing Cinemas
639
India: Mass Output and Art Cinema
640
A Parallel Cinema
641
I Beyond a Parallel
Cinema
642
I Coproductions, International
Directors,
and a New Political Cinema
643
Japan
644
Independent Filmmaking: An Irreverent
Generation
645
I The
1990s:
The Punctured
Bubble and a New Surge of Talent
646
Mainland China: The Fifth Generation and
Beyond
648
The Fifth Generation
648
CHRONOLOGY OF CHINA S FIFTH
GENERATION
649
The Sixth Generation and Illegal Films
650
New Cinemas in East Asia
652
The Philippines
653
I Hong Kong
654
I Taiwan
659
BOX: EDWARD YANG AND
HOU
HSIAO-HSIEN
660
South Korea
662
Australia and New Zealand
663
Australia
663
I New Zealand
665
Filmmaking in the Middle East
666
Israel
667
I Egypt
668
I Turkey
668
I Iraq
and Iran
669
African Cinema
671
North Africa
671
I Sub-Saharan Africa
672
I
The
1990s 674
Notes and Queries
675
Pinning the Tail on Pinochet
675
I Storytelling in
Third World Cinema
675
References
676
Further Reading
676
#
s
»
β
Part Six CINEMA
IN THE AGE OF
ELECTRONIC MEDIA
677
27
AMERICAN
CINEMA
AND THE
ENTERTAINMENT ECONOMY:
THE
1980s
AND AFTER
679
Hollywood, Cable Television, and Videotape
680
Concentration and Consolidation in the
Film Industry
681
The Megapicture Mentality
683
I The Bottom
bine
684
I Prime Packagers
685
I New Revenue
Streams
685
I Megaplexing: The New Face
of Exhibition
686
Artistic Trends
687
Form and Style
687
BOX: INTENSIFIED CONTINUITY: A STYLE FOR
THE VIDEO AGE
688
Directors: Coming to Terms with Megapics
689
I
Genres
692
A New Age of Independent Cinema
694
Support Systems
695
I The Arty Indies
696
I
Off-Hollywood Indies
697 /
Retro-Hollywood
Independents
700
Digital Cinema
701
A TIMELINE OF
3-D
COMPUTER ANIMATION
Notes and Queries
703
Video Versions
703
I George Lucas: Is Film
Dead?
704
References
704
Further Reading
704
28
TOWARD A GLOBAL FILM CULTURE
705
Hollyworld?
The Media Conglomerates
706
I Cooperation and
Cooptation
707
706
BOX: JURASSIC PARK, GLOBAL FILM
708
Battles over
GATT
709
I Multiplexing the Planet
709
Regional Alliances and the New
International Film
710
Europe and Asia Try to Compete
710
I Media
Empires
711
I Polygram: A European
Majori
711
I
Global Films from Europe
711
I East Asia: Regional
Alliances and Global Efforts
712
BOX: BACK TO BASICS:
DOGME
95 713
Diasporas
and the Global Soul
715
The Festival Circuit
716
BOX: THE TORONTO INTERNATIONAL FILM
FESTIVAL
717
Global Subcultures
718
Video Piracy: An Efficient Distribution System?
718
I
Fan Subcultures: Appropriating the Movies
718
Digital Convergence
720
The Internet as Movie Billboard
720
I Digital
Moviemaking from Script to Screen
721
Notes and Queries
723
Akira,
Gundam,
Sailor Moon, and their
friends
723
I
Auteurs on
the Web
723
References
723
Further Reading
723
Bibliography
725
Glossary
732
Index
739
|
any_adam_object | 1 |
author | Thompson, Kristin 1950- Bordwell, David 1947-2024 |
author_GND | (DE-588)131823833 (DE-588)119411091 |
author_facet | Thompson, Kristin 1950- Bordwell, David 1947-2024 |
author_role | aut aut |
author_sort | Thompson, Kristin 1950- |
author_variant | k t kt d b db |
building | Verbundindex |
bvnumber | BV014497847 |
callnumber-first | P - Language and Literature |
callnumber-label | PN1993 |
callnumber-raw | PN1993.5.A1 |
callnumber-search | PN1993.5.A1 |
callnumber-sort | PN 41993.5 A1 |
callnumber-subject | PN - General Literature |
classification_rvk | AP 44400 |
ctrlnum | (OCoLC)49719388 (DE-599)BVBBV014497847 |
dewey-full | 791.43/09 |
dewey-hundreds | 700 - The arts |
dewey-ones | 791 - Public performances |
dewey-raw | 791.43/09 |
dewey-search | 791.43/09 |
dewey-sort | 3791.43 19 |
dewey-tens | 790 - Recreational and performing arts |
discipline | Allgemeines |
edition | 2. ed. |
era | Geschichte gnd |
era_facet | Geschichte |
format | Book |
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genre_facet | Hochschulschrift |
id | DE-604.BV014497847 |
illustrated | Illustrated |
indexdate | 2024-07-09T19:03:08Z |
institution | BVB |
isbn | 9780071151412 0070384290 0071151419 |
language | English |
lccn | 2002070976 |
oai_aleph_id | oai:aleph.bib-bvb.de:BVB01-009883424 |
oclc_num | 49719388 |
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physical | XX, 788 S. Ill. |
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publisher | McGraw-Hill |
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spelling | Thompson, Kristin 1950- Verfasser (DE-588)131823833 aut Film history an introduction Kristin Thompson ; David Bordwell 2. ed. Boston, Mass. [u.a.] McGraw-Hill 2003 XX, 788 S. Ill. txt rdacontent n rdamedia nc rdacarrier Geschichte gnd rswk-swf Cinéma - Histoire Cinéma - Histoire ram Filmkunst gtt História do cinema larpcal Film Geschichte Motion pictures History Film (DE-588)4017102-4 gnd rswk-swf Geschichte (DE-588)4020517-4 gnd rswk-swf 1\p (DE-588)4113937-9 Hochschulschrift gnd-content Film (DE-588)4017102-4 s Geschichte (DE-588)4020517-4 s DE-604 Geschichte z 2\p DE-604 Bordwell, David 1947-2024 Verfasser (DE-588)119411091 aut Digitalisierung UB Passau application/pdf http://bvbr.bib-bvb.de:8991/F?func=service&doc_library=BVB01&local_base=BVB01&doc_number=009883424&sequence=000002&line_number=0001&func_code=DB_RECORDS&service_type=MEDIA Inhaltsverzeichnis 1\p cgwrk 20201028 DE-101 https://d-nb.info/provenance/plan#cgwrk 2\p cgwrk 20201028 DE-101 https://d-nb.info/provenance/plan#cgwrk |
spellingShingle | Thompson, Kristin 1950- Bordwell, David 1947-2024 Film history an introduction Cinéma - Histoire Cinéma - Histoire ram Filmkunst gtt História do cinema larpcal Film Geschichte Motion pictures History Film (DE-588)4017102-4 gnd Geschichte (DE-588)4020517-4 gnd |
subject_GND | (DE-588)4017102-4 (DE-588)4020517-4 (DE-588)4113937-9 |
title | Film history an introduction |
title_auth | Film history an introduction |
title_exact_search | Film history an introduction |
title_full | Film history an introduction Kristin Thompson ; David Bordwell |
title_fullStr | Film history an introduction Kristin Thompson ; David Bordwell |
title_full_unstemmed | Film history an introduction Kristin Thompson ; David Bordwell |
title_short | Film history |
title_sort | film history an introduction |
title_sub | an introduction |
topic | Cinéma - Histoire Cinéma - Histoire ram Filmkunst gtt História do cinema larpcal Film Geschichte Motion pictures History Film (DE-588)4017102-4 gnd Geschichte (DE-588)4020517-4 gnd |
topic_facet | Cinéma - Histoire Filmkunst História do cinema Film Geschichte Motion pictures History Hochschulschrift |
url | http://bvbr.bib-bvb.de:8991/F?func=service&doc_library=BVB01&local_base=BVB01&doc_number=009883424&sequence=000002&line_number=0001&func_code=DB_RECORDS&service_type=MEDIA |
work_keys_str_mv | AT thompsonkristin filmhistoryanintroduction AT bordwelldavid filmhistoryanintroduction |