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Books > Arts & Architecture > Photography & photographs > Special kinds of photography > Cinematography, television camerawork
With sound becoming more important in cinema exhibition and DVD
release, this book offers user-friendly knowledge and stimulating
exercises to help compose a story, develop characters and create
emotion through skilful creation of the sound track.
Psychoacoustics, music theory, voice study and analysis of
well-known films expand perception, imagination and the musical
skills of the reader.
This is the first book to concentrate on the visual culture of
Indian cinema, specifically Bombay-based cinema since 1913. Cinema
is one of India's most vibrant cultural products, as well as a
major industry, producing the largest number of films in the world.
Drawing on a wide range of sources, Dwyer and Patel examine Bombay
cinema's unique styles, genres and themes, tracing its roots in
early photography, theatre and chromolithography and its
development as a visual regime that dominates Indian popular
culture. The authors consider mise-en-scene, looking at sets,
locations and costumes crucial to understanding Indian fashion,
lifestyle and consumption. They examine the use of hairstyles and
make-up in the context of representations of the body in order to
explore changing ideas of beauty and sexuality. Other crucial
elements that are discussed include ethnicity and Westernization,
thus highlighting issues of class, caste, regional variation and
religion. Finally the authors look at publicity materials and
examine the development of the imagery employed in
film-advertising.
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