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Books > Arts & Architecture > Performing arts > Films, cinema > General
This book documents the making of Christopher Nolan's Interstellar
in fascinating detail. Featuring interviews with the acclaimed
director, screenwriter Jonathan Nolan, and key cast, with candid
pictures from the set, the book will also focus on scientist Kip
Thorne, whose revelatory theories about the nature of time and
space inspired the movie's narrative.INTERSTELLAR and all related
characters and elements are trademarks of and (c) Warner Bros.
Entertainment Inc (S14)
Migration, Mobility and Sojourning in Cross-cultural Films:
Interculturing Cinema draws on existing scholarship on global
movements and intercultural communication in cinema to analyze six
cross-cultural films. Ishani Mukherjee and Maggie Griffith Williams
locate key themes that tie into the complexity and implications of
global movements, including migrants' experiences of culture-shock,
cultural assimilation and/or integration, cultural identities in
transition, social mobility and movements, and the short-term
intercultural impact that sojourners experience in unfamiliar
cultural space. Mukherjee and Williams explore how intercultural
communication functions in the storytelling and in the formation of
character relationships in these films, arguing that the depictions
of migration, mobility, and the resulting intercultural
communications are complex and stressful moments of conflict that
lead to mixed results. Scholars of film studies, communication,
migrant studies, sociology, and cultural studies will find this
book particularly useful.
In 1936, Samuel Beckett wrote a letter to the Soviet film director
Sergei Eisenstein expressing a desire to work in the lost tradition
of silent film. The production of Beckett's Film in 1964, on the
cusp of his work as a director for stage and screen, coincides with
a widespread revival of silent film in the period of cinema's
modernist second wave. Drawing on recently published letters,
archival material and production notebooks, Samuel Beckett and
Cinema is the first book to examine comprehensively the full extent
of Beckett's engagement with cinema and its influence on his work
for stage and screen. The book situates Beckett within the context
of first and second wave modernist filmmaking, including the work
of figures such as Vertov, Keaton, Lang, Epstein, Flaherty, Dreyer,
Godard, Bresson, Resnais, Duras, Rogosin and Hitchcock. By
examining the parallels between Beckett's methods, as a
writer-director, and particular techniques, such as the embodied
presence of the camera, the use of asynchronous sound, and the
cross-pollination of theatricality and cinema, as well as the
connections between his collaborators and the nouvelle vague, the
book reveals how Beckett's aesthetic is fundamentally altered by
his work for the screen, and his formative encounters with
modernist film culture.
The Bosnian war of 1992-1995 was one of the most brutal conflicts
to have erupted since the end of the Second World War. But although
the war occurred in 'Europe's backyard' and received significant
media coverage in the West, relatively little scholarly attention
has been devoted to cultural representations of the conflict.
Stephen Harper analyses how the war has been depicted in global
cinema and television over the past quarter of a century. Focusing
on the representation of some of the war's major themes, including
humanitarian intervention, the roles of NATO and the UN, genocide,
rape and ethnic cleansing, Harper explores the role of popular
media culture in reflecting, reinforcing -- and sometimes
contesting -- nationalist ideologies.
Exploring the controversial history of an aesthetic - realism -
this book examines the role that realism plays in the negotiation
of social, political, and material realities from the mid-19th
century to the present day. Examining a broad range of literary
texts from French, English, Italian, German, and Russian writers,
this book provides new insights into how realism engages with
themes including capital, social decorum, the law and its
politicisation, modern science as a determining factor concerning
truth, and the politics of identity. Considering works from Gustave
Flaubert, Charles Baudelaire, Emile Zola, Henry James, Charles
Dickens, and George Orwell, Docherty proposes a new philosophical
conception of the politics of realism in an age where politics
feels increasingly erratic and fantastical.
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