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The Cinema of Ettore Scola (Hardcover)
Remi Lanzoni, Edward Bowen; Contributions by Edward Bowen, Remi Lanzoni, Mariapia Comand, …
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R2,566
Discovery Miles 25 660
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Ships in 10 - 15 working days
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The Cinema of Ettore Scola offers contemporary perspectives on
Ettore Scola (1931-2016), one of the premier filmmakers of Italian
cinema. Scola was a crucial figure in postwar Italy as a
screenwriter of comedies in the 1950s and 1960s who later became
one of the country's most beloved directors in the 1970s and 1980s
with his bittersweet comedies and dramas on history, politics, and
social customs. While Scola has received extensive attention from
scholars based in Italy and France, Remi Lanzoni and Edward Bowen's
edited volume is the first English-language book on Scola's
cinematographic career. The volume (containing fourteen chapters)
is organized in four parts, the first two of which focus both on
Scola's contributions to Comedy Italian Style-as a screenwriter and
director-and his commentaries on the history of Italy, Rome, and
the film industry. The second half of the book is divided into
sections on Scola's relationship to and use of place, politics, and
legacy. Mariapia Comand's chapter begins the volume with an
exploration of the development of Scola's narrative methods by
examining his early work as an illustrator, ghostwriter, and
screenwriter. Later, Brian Tholl approaches one of Scola's
best-known and most frequently studied films, Una giornata
particolare, from a less-explored perspective, namely its
commentary on surveillance and internal exile, or confino, during
the fascist period. At the close of the volume is a broad-sweeping
tribute to and reflection on Scola's filmmaking by Gian Piero
Brunetta, a leading historian of Italian cinema who developed a
close relationship with Scola over the years, who reveals the
varied narrative strategies linked to food that the director
utilized for character development and social commentary. The
Cinema of Ettore Scola makes Scola accessible to English-reading
audiences and helps readers better understand his film style, the
major themes of his work, and the representations of
twentieth-century Italian history in his films.
Spectacle, myth, fable - these words instantly leap to mind when
considering director Sergio Leone's celebrated films. His
popularization of the Spaghetti Western genre, through works like A
Fistful of Dollars (1964) and Once Upon a Time in the West (1968),
continues to have a profound impact on filmmakers worldwide. In
this exciting new study, Italian film scholar Christian Uva
explores a side of Leone's works rarely before discussed: the
political. Grappling with the contradictions between Leone's
politically critical cinematic eye and his aversion to ideological
classification, Sergio Leone: Cinema as Political Fable makes sense
of how the director's internal political tensions shaped the
radical themes of his Western fables. Looking at Leone and his
films through a number of lenses, the book examines the elements of
Italian history and identity interwoven in the director's stories,
provides cultural context for a career spanning from Italy's
fascist regime to Leone's death in 1989, and discusses the
influences that formed Leone's directorial identity. Uva focuses in
particular on the postmodernist theory behind Leone's works,
revealing the critical basis of his stylistic and narrative
innovations and newly analyzing the most iconic sequences from The
Good, the Bad, and the Ugly (1967), Duck, You Sucker (1971), and
Once Upon a Time in America (1984). An admirably thorough take on
the man and his works, Sergio Leone: Cinema as Political Fable
provides fresh perspective on a director long-established in cinema
canon.
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The Cinema of Ettore Scola (Paperback)
Remi Lanzoni, Edward Bowen; Contributions by Edward Bowen, Remi Lanzoni, Mariapia Comand, …
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R1,402
R904
Discovery Miles 9 040
Save R498 (36%)
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Ships in 12 - 17 working days
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The Cinema of Ettore Scola offers contemporary perspectives on
Ettore Scola (1931-2016), one of the premier filmmakers of Italian
cinema. Scola was a crucial figure in postwar Italy as a
screenwriter of comedies in the 1950s and 1960s who later became
one of the country's most beloved directors in the 1970s and 1980s
with his bittersweet comedies and dramas on history, politics, and
social customs. While Scola has received extensive attention from
scholars based in Italy and France, Remi Lanzoni and Edward Bowen's
edited volume is the first English-language book on Scola's
cinematographic career. The volume (containing fourteen chapters)
is organized in four parts, the first two of which focus both on
Scola's contributions to Comedy Italian Style-as a screenwriter and
director-and his commentaries on the history of Italy, Rome, and
the film industry. The second half of the book is divided into
sections on Scola's relationship to and use of place, politics, and
legacy. Mariapia Comand's chapter begins the volume with an
exploration of the development of Scola's narrative methods by
examining his early work as an illustrator, ghostwriter, and
screenwriter. Later, Brian Tholl approaches one of Scola's
best-known and most frequently studied films, Una giornata
particolare, from a less-explored perspective, namely its
commentary on surveillance and internal exile, or confino, during
the fascist period. At the close of the volume is a broad-sweeping
tribute to and reflection on Scola's filmmaking by Gian Piero
Brunetta, a leading historian of Italian cinema who developed a
close relationship with Scola over the years, who reveals the
varied narrative strategies linked to food that the director
utilized for character development and social commentary. The
Cinema of Ettore Scola makes Scola accessible to English-reading
audiences and helps readers better understand his film style, the
major themes of his work, and the representations of
twentieth-century Italian history in his films.
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