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Books > Arts & Architecture > Performing arts > Films, cinema > Film theory & criticism

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I Lost it at the Movies - Film Writings, 1954-65 (Paperback, New edition) Loot Price: R420
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I Lost it at the Movies - Film Writings, 1954-65 (Paperback, New edition): Pauline Kael

I Lost it at the Movies - Film Writings, 1954-65 (Paperback, New edition)

Pauline Kael

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List price R458 Loot Price R420 Discovery Miles 4 200 You Save R38 (8%)

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Pauline Kael is a polemical writer engaged in a lover's quarrel with films. Her reviews come to us almost like dispatches from the front lines; everything seems typed out under fire. Now she's slamming her colleagues (and they can be intellectuals like Dwight MacDonald, institutionalized fuddy-duddies like Bosley Crowther, or those cute, cocktail party moralists of Time). Next she's deflating the "arty," the pondersome and fashionable (this on the N.Y. Film Festival: "I've never seen so many people sleeping through movies as at Lincoln Center; no wonder there is talk of 'cinema' achieving the social status of opera"). Hollywood is called "canned Americana," Kracauer's social-realist theories are majestically torn limb from limb, the poor pop-culture addicts of the so-called New American Cinema get it every which way (Are they perhaps "making a comment on our civilization by the suggestion that trash is the true film art?"). Does this irrepressible dreadnought like anything? Yes, quite a bit: e.g. Griffith, Renoir, Kurosawa, Ray, Singin' in the Rain, L'Aventura, Shoeshine. Are contradictions involved? Indeed: she salutes the slam-bang surrealism of Shoot the Piano Player, but not the anarchic stylizations of Resnais or 8?? she reads too much into too little (as in Jules and Jim); she misses the point of the later Bergman; at times her reasoning is delinquently flippant. But whatever her faults, her virtues predominate. Never dull, blazingly personal, provokingly penetrating, awfully funny, her collection may well do for film criticism what Mary McCarthy's Sights and Spectacles achieved in the theatre. Miss Kael is a "find." (Kirkus Reviews)
"I Lost it at the Movies" is vintage Kael on such classics of post-War cinema as "On the Waterfront, Smiles of a Summer Night, West Side Story, The Seven Samurai, Lolita, Jules et Jim" etc. Her comments are so fresh and direct, it's as if the movies had only been released last week.

General

Imprint: Marion Boyars Publishers Ltd
Country of origin: United Kingdom
Release date: 1994
First published: 1994
Authors: Pauline Kael
Dimensions: 216 x 135 x 27mm (L x W x T)
Format: Paperback
Pages: 366
Edition: New edition
ISBN-13: 978-0-7145-2975-2
Categories: Books > Arts & Architecture > Performing arts > Films, cinema > Film theory & criticism
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LSN: 0-7145-2975-3
Barcode: 9780714529752

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