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Books > Arts & Architecture > Performing arts
"Hearths of Darkness: The Family in the American Horror Film"
traces the origins of the 1970s family horror subgenre to certain
aspects of American culture and classical Hollywood cinema. Far
from being an ephemeral and short-lived genre, horror actually
relates to many facets of American history from its beginnings to
the present day. Individual chapters examine aspects of the genre,
its roots in the Universal horror films of the 1930s, the Val
Lewton RKO unit of the 1940s, and the crucial role of Alfred
Hitchcock as the father of the modern American horror film.
Subsequent chapters investigate the key works of the 1970s by
directors such as Larry Cohen, George A. Romero, Brian De Palma,
Wes Craven, and Tobe Hooper, revealing the distinctive nature of
films such as "Bone, It's Alive, God Told Me, Carrie, The Exorcist,
Exorcist 2, The Texas Chainsaw Massacre," as well as the
contributions of such writers as Stephen King. Williams also
studies the slasher films of the 1980s and 1990s, such as the
Friday the 13th series, "Halloween," the remake of "The Texas
Chainsaw Massacre," and "Nightmare on Elm Street," exploring their
failure to improve on the radical achievements of the films of the
1970s.
After covering some post-1970s films, such as "The Shining," the
book concludes with a new postscript examining neglected films of
the twentieth and early twenty-first century. Despite the overall
decline in the American horror film, Williams determines that, far
from being dead, the family horror film is still with us. Elements
of family horror even appear in modern television series such as
"The Sopranos." This updated edition also includes a new
introduction.
Place, Setting, Perspective examines the films of the Italian
filmmaker, Nanni Moretti, from a fresh viewpoint, employing the
increasingly significant research area of space within a filmic
text. The book is conceived with the awareness that space cannot be
studied only in aesthetic or narrative terms: social, political,
and cultural aspects of narrated spaces are equally important if a
thorough appraisal is to be achieved of an oeuvre such as
Moretti's, which is profoundly associated with socio-political
commentary and analysis. After an exploration of various existing
frameworks of narrative space in film, the book offers a particular
definition of the term based on the notions of Place, Setting, and
Perspective. Place relates to the physical aspect of narrative
space and specifically involves cityscapes, landscapes, interiors,
and exteriors in the real world. Setting concerns genre
characteristics of narrative space, notably its differentiated use
in melodrama, detective stories, fantasy narratives, and gender
based scenarios. Perspective encompasses the point of view taken
optically by the camera which supports the standpoint of Moretti's
personal philosophy expressed through the aesthetic aspects which
he employs to create narrative space. The study is based on a close
textual analysis of Moretti's eleven major feature films to date,
using the formal film language of mise-en-scene, cinematography,
editing, and sound. The aim is to show how Moretti selects,
organizes, constructs, assembles, and manipulates the many elements
of narrative space into an entire work of art, to enable meanings
and pleasures for the spectator.
Over the past forty years, American film has entered into a formal
interaction with the comic book. Such comic book adaptations as Sin
City, 300, and Scott Pilgrim vs. the World have adopted components
of their source materials' visual style. The screen has been
fractured into panels, the photographic has given way to the
graphic, and the steady rhythm of cinematic time has evolved into a
far more malleable element. In other words, films have begun to
look like comics. Yet, this interplay also occurs in the other
direction. In order to retain cultural relevancy, comic books have
begun to look like films. Frank Miller's original Sin City comics
are indebted to film noir while Stephen King's The Dark Tower
series could be a Sergio Leone spaghetti western translated onto
paper. Film and comic books continuously lean on one another to
reimagine their formal attributes and stylistic possibilities. In
Panel to the Screen, Drew Morton examines this dialogue in its
intersecting and rapidly changing cultural, technological, and
industrial contexts. Early on, many questioned the prospect of a
""low"" art form suited for children translating into ""high"" art
material capable of drawing colossal box office takes. Now the
naysayers are as quiet as the queued crowds at Comic-Cons are
massive. Morton provides a nuanced account of this phenomenon by
using formal analysis of the texts in a real-world context of
studio budgets, grosses, and audience reception.
Branded as rebels and traitors, the members of the Alliance worked
in the shadows, gathering information and support from across the
galaxy to bring an end to the Empire's tyranny. Concealed within a
secure case, their most vital and sensitive information was
collected by one of Mon Mothma's most trusted aides and kept hidden
until now. Discovered by the Resistance in the ruins of an old
rebel base, these files have been passed among key members of the
Resistance, who have added notes, updates, and new insights to the
documents. A repository of Alliance intelligence, The Rebel Files
weaves together classified documents, intercepted transmissions,
and gathered communications to trace the formation of the Rebel
Alliance. Unlock the secrets of the Rebel Alliance.
With the advancement of cybernetics, avatars, animation, and
virtual reality, a thorough understanding of how the puppet
metaphor originates from specific theatrical practices and media is
especially relevant today. This book identifies and interprets the
aesthetic and cultural significance of the different traditions of
the Italian puppet theater in the broader Italian culture and
beyond. Grounded in the often-overlooked history of the evolution
of several Italian puppetry traditions - the central and northern
Italian stringed marionettes, the Sicilian pupi, the glove puppets
of the Po Valley, and the Neapolitan Pulcinella - this study
examines a broad spectrum of visual, cinematic, literary, and
digital texts representative of the functions and themes of the
puppet. A systematic analysis of the meanings ascribed to the idea
and image of the puppet provides a unique vantage point to observe
the perseverance and transformation of its deeper associations,
linking premodern, modern, and contemporary contexts.
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Hamlet
(Hardcover)
William Shakespeare
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R598
Discovery Miles 5 980
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Ships in 10 - 15 working days
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The Tragedy of Hamlet, Prince of Denmark, is widely considered
Shakespeare's greatest play. Hamlet is confronted by the ghost of
his father, who tells him that Hamlet's uncle and mother conspired
to poison him. Knowing that his uncle, who now sits upon the
throne, and his mother, who has married his uncle and is now his
queen, have murdered his father, Hamlet sets out to avenge his
father's death and set things to right. But his plan could destroy
the entire realm. To be, or not to be-that is the question: Whether
'tis nobler in the mind to suffer The slings and arrows of
outrageous fortune Or to take arms against a sea of troubles, And
by opposing end them. To die-to sleep- No more; and by a sleep to
say we end The heartache, and the thousand natural shocks
This book examines how film articulates countercultural flows in
the context of the Egyptian Revolution. The book interrogates the
gap between radical politics and radical aesthetics by analyzing
counterculture as a form, drawing upon Egyptian films produced
between 2010 and 2016. The work offers a definition of
counterculture which liberates the term from its Western frame and
establishes a theoretical concept of counterculture which is more
globally redolent. The book opens a door for further research of
the Arab Uprising, arguing for a new and topical model of rebellion
and struggle, and sheds light on the interaction between cinema and
the street as well as between cultural narratives and politics in
the context of the 2011 Egyptian uprising. What is counterculture
in the twenty-first century? What role does cinema play in this new
notion of counterculture?
The Film Theory in Practice Series fills a gaping hole in the world
of film theory. By marrying the explanation of film theory with
interpretation of a film, the volumes provide discrete examples of
how film theory can serve as the basis for textual analysis. The
first book in the series, Psychoanalytic Film Theory and The Rules
of the Game, offers a concise introduction to psychoanalytic film
theory in jargon-free language and shows how this theory can be
deployed to interpret Jean Renoir's classic film. It traces the
development of psychoanalytic film theory through its foundation in
the thought of Sigmund Freud and Jacques Lacan through its
contemporary manifestation in the work of theorists like Slavoj
Zizek and Joan Copjec. This history will help students and scholars
who are eager to learn more about this important area of film
theory and bring the concepts of psychoanalytic film theory into
practice through a detailed interpretation of the film.
Hamlet is the most often produced play in the western literary
canon, and a fertile global source for film adaptation. Samuel
Crowl, a noted scholar of Shakespeare on film, unpacks the process
of adapting from text to screen through concentrating on two
sharply contrasting film versions of Hamlet by Laurence Olivier
(1948) and Kenneth Branagh (1996). The films' socio-political
contexts are explored, and the importance of their screenplay, film
score, setting, cinematography and editing examined. Offering an
analysis of two of the most important figures in the history of
film adaptations of Shakespeare, this study seeks to understand a
variety of cinematic approaches to translating Shakespeare's
"words, words, words" into film's particular grammar and rhetoric
Mysteriosophy Volume 2 builds on the previous volume with a further
collection of unique routines, effects and essays by Steve Drury
that delve into performance mentalism, magick and readings. It
features exclusive collaborations with Roni Shachnaey, Barrie
Richardson and Kenton Knepper too. Hardbound with over 170 pages.
The TV series that was never made and that you ve never heard of
celebrates its 40th year with an exhaustive retrospective guide!
Growing from a child's game, the bizarrely-titled The Magnet Editor
ran for ten years and a breathtaking 47 series. In bringing the
series to life, Nick Goodman drew from 70s pop culture including
Doctor Who and The New Avengers, and shared it only with his
bewildered mother and childhood friends. Jo Bunsell was one such
friend and soon the pair would be transported into a shared
universe of preposterous and badly designed monsters and non-stop
adventure with their extraordinary and strangely-named hero, Cabin
Relese. Goodman and Bunsell open up their archive of materials and
memories, and take you on a roller-coaster ride into their world!
Magnet Memories is an episode guide, a frank, critical, incredulous
and nostalgic reflection, a snapshot of childhood in the 70s and
80s... and it's possibly the most wonderfully bonkers cult TV book
ever published!
The first collection of its kind, The Continental Philosophy of
Film Reader is the essential anthology of writings by continental
philosophers on cinema, representing the last century of
film-making and thinking about film, as well as all of the major
schools of Continental thought: phenomenology and existentialism,
Marxism and critical theory, semiotics and hermeneutics,
psychoanalysis, and postmodernism. Included here are not only the
classic texts in continental philosophy of film, from Benjamin's
"The Work of Art in the Age of Mechanical Reproduction" to extracts
of Deleuze's Cinema and Barthes's Mythologies, but also the
earliest works of Continental philosophy of film, from thinkers
such as Georg Lukacs, and little-read gems by philosophical giants
such as Sartre and Beauvoir. The book demonstrates both the
philosophical significance of these thinkers' ideas about film, as
well their influence on filmmakers in Europe and across the globe.
In addition, however, this wide-ranging collection also teaches us
how important film is to the last century of European philosophical
thought. Almost every major continental European thinker of the
twentieth and twenty-first centuries has had something to
say-sometimes, quite a lot to say-about cinema: as an art form, as
a social or political phenomenon, as a linguistic device and
conveyor of information, as a projection of our fears and desires,
as a site for oppression and resistance, or as a model on the basis
of which some of us, at least, learn how to live. Purpose built for
classroom use, with pedagogical features introducing and
contextualizing the extracts, this reader is an indispensable tool
for students and researchers in philosophy of film, film studies
and the history of cinema.
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