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Bertolucci's "Last Emperor - Multiple Takes (Paperback, New)
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Bertolucci's "Last Emperor - Multiple Takes (Paperback, New)
Series: Contemporary Approaches to Film and Media Series
Expected to ship within 10 - 15 working days
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In this anthology, filmmakers, psychoanalysts, film scholars and
cultural historians use a psychoanalytic approach to examine
Bernardo Bertolucci's epic film ""The Last Emperor"" (1988).
Evolving out of a conference on Bertolucci's work, the essays
interweave psychological, political and cinematic themes in ""The
Last Emperor"" as well as in much of Bertolucci's other works. This
volume includes a foreword by Bernardo Bertolucci and is organized
into four parts or ""takes"", including ""Filmcraft"",
""Psychoanalysis"", ""Film Scholarship"" and ""Cultural History"".
The collection begins with the filmmaker's perspective. In ""Take
One"", an interview with Bertolucci discusses the potential of
psychoanalysis to transgress social order which Bertolucci explores
in ""The Last Emperor""; cinematographer Vittorio Storaro's essay
on the photographic conception of ""The Last Emperor"" offers a
glimpse of the creative impulse at work; and a chapter from Fabien
S. Gerard's shooting diary records the excitement and tedium on the
set of ""The Last Emperor"". Analyzing the character and
psychopathology of Aisingioro Pu Yi as Bertolucci represented him,
clinicians Bruce H. Sklarew, Estelle Shane and Morton Shane explore
the relationship between psychoanalytic theory and art criticism in
""Take Two"". Diane Borden and Bonnie S. Kaufman look at the use of
psychoanalysis and the formal aspects of filmmaking, such as
images, camera shots and framing in ""The Last Emperor"". In ""Take
Three"", Farimah Tobing Rony investigates Bertolucci's
representation of Eastern culture from what she argues is a
Europhallocentric position; T. Jefferson Kline gives an overview of
Marxist, psychoanalytic and cinematic issues intersecting in the
film; and Lynda K. Bundtzen looks at the theme of castration and
its resonance with ""auteur"" theory. In ""Take Four"", the late
sinologist John K. Fairbank and academic art historian Ding Ning
look at historical versus artistic representations of history in
""The Last Emperor"", while Robert Burgoyne, Robert Zaller and
Ellen Handler Spitz look at contrasting historical processes.
Although we can never fully know the real Aisingioro Pu Yi,
Bertolucci used his vision of the intricate relationship between
art, ideology and the psychic experience to tell the story of one
ordinary man's extraordinary life. ""Bertolucci's 'The Last
Emperor'"" hopes to illuminate this complex and often enigmatic
creation as well as renew an excitement about the possibilities of
interdisciplinary criticism in film studies.
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