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Showing 1 - 25 of
33 matches in All Departments
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Anticlockwise (Hardcover)
Rodney Marshall, Sam Denham, Bernard Ginez
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R1,082
Discovery Miles 10 820
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Ships in 12 - 17 working days
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Why? (Hardcover)
Rodney Marshall
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R802
Discovery Miles 8 020
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Ships in 10 - 15 working days
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Father of two, David Jennings is divorced and working as a
professor of literature in Singapore. Out of the blue he receives a
phone call from his ex-wife, Anne. Their daughter, Kate, a
promising university student, has been found dead on a bleak
hillside outside Brighton. The police are convinced that she has
taken her own life. The coroner's Open Verdict encourages him to
start his own, guilt-ridden investigations into her death. As
Jennings journeys into his daughter's past, the harrowing mission
takes us to London, Bogota and the English coastline, in a search
to understand 'Why?' But what if the truth is worse than not
knowing?
Subversive Champagne re-examines the 1960s cult television series,
The Avengers, through a close analysis of 25 filmed episodes. The
book examines how The Avengers - during the classic Emma Peel era
(1964-1967) - was continually shifting the boundaries of audience
expectation, defying both genre classification and viewers'
traditional desire for kitchen sink drama. Subversive Champagne
centres on eighteen episodes from the monochrome Peel Season 4 -
widely acknowledged as the artistic pinnacle of the series. It is
in this era - caught between video-tape and colour film - that The
Avengers was undergoing arguably its most profound stylistic and
thematic transitions, from mild eccentricity to something genuinely
experimental. The author extends his journey into the exhilarating
but 'uneven' colour Season 5, adding chapters on seven more
episodes, thus allowing us to explore the entire Emma Peel era.
Entertaining froth or groundbreaking art? Rediscover the most
iconic show in television history.
Rodney Marshall examines Northampton Town's 2017-18 season, in
addition to aspects of football which reach beyond NTFC: football
as business; fan ownership; the ever-evolving power of social
media; the mental health and safeguarding of players; racism,
football franchises and B teams; the demise of the FA Cup; glass
ceilings and transfer windows; referees, laws and the use of
technology; ground safety and redevelopment; the changing nature of
towns and football clubs in the 21st century.
The Avengers was a unique, genre-defying television series which
blurred the traditional boundaries between 'light entertainment'
and disturbing drama. It was a product of the constantly-evolving
1960s yet retains a timeless charm. The monochrome filmed Emma Peel
season had established a cult following for a series which became
an intrinsic part of the 'Swinging Sixties'. Backed by US dollars,
the show was now filmed 'in color' and Avengerland becomes stranger
and more playful than ever: Steed is shrunk to the size of a desk
pad, forced to evade a machine-gun-toting nanny; Emma Peel is
tortured in a medieval ducking stool and turned into a living
cybernaut. Mrs. Peel, We're Needed draws on the knowledge of a
broad range of experts and fans of The Avengers as it explores the
wonderfully mad Technicolor world of Emma Peel. "The Avengers in
pop culture is The Avengers with Diana Rigg and Patrick Macnee, in
colour. It is this season that defines the show." (Piers Johnson)
Lew Grade's pioneering ITC company created a production line of
quirky new drama series for British Independent Television in the
1960s, fulfilling a vision of providing entertaining, colour film
series for a global market. In the first of a proposed series of
critical guides, Avengers expert Rodney Marshall and television
historian Matthew Lee explore ITC's Man in a Suitcase. Their book
offers new, inventive readings of all thirty episodes. Man in a
Suitcase is a product of its mid-1960s context, exploring themes
such as Cold War espionage and Swinging Sixties playgirls, yet most
of the stories also have a timeless feel to them: political
corruption, blackmail, murder, missing persons or money, art theft.
Despite the private detective/bounty hunter formula, there are
welcome elements of playfulness, quirkiness, surrealism and a
healthy abundance of social and political critique. Man in a
Suitcase cannot be simplistically labelled as 'light entertainment'
given the dark subject matter and its treatment.
In the mid-1980s, in Edinburgh, Ian Rankin was hatching a plot for
a 'crime thriller' from his student digs. Knots & Crosses -
like its frayed protagonist John Rebus - was rough around the edges
but marked a promising debut. More than a quarter of a century
later, Rankin and Rebus have a global following. The series has
been both critically acclaimed and commercially popular. Detective
John Rebus is anything but conventional. The same can be said of
Ian Rankin's innovative texts which take crime fiction far beyond
formulaic genre, producing radical, disruptive, borderline texts.
In the first ever full-length study of all twenty-one Rebus novels,
Rodney Marshall argues that Rankin's fiction continues to break new
ground, blurring the boundaries between traditional detective novel
and modern literature. November 2016 fifth edition: now includes an
exclusive eighteen page interview with Ian Rankin and a chapter on
Rather Be The Devil, Rankin's new Rebus novel.
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Avengerland Regained (Hardcover)
Rodney Marshall, Sam Denham, Piers Johnson, James Speirs, Darren Burch, …
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R1,075
Discovery Miles 10 750
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Ships in 12 - 17 working days
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The Avengers was a unique, genre-defying television series which
blurred the traditional boundaries between 'light entertainment'
and disturbing drama. It was a product of the constantly-evolving
1960s yet retains a timeless charm. The creation of The New
Avengers, in 1976, saw John Steed re-emerge, alongside two younger
co-leads: sophisticated action girl Purdey and Gambit, a 'hard man'
with a soft centre. The cultural context had changed - including
the technology, music, fashions, cars, fighting styles and
television drama itself - but Avengerland was able to re-establish
itself. Nazi invaders, a third wave of cybernauts, Hitchcockian
killer birds, a sleeping city, giant rat, a deadly health spa, a
skyscraper with a destructive mind...The 1970s series is,
paradoxically, both new yet also part of the rich, innovative
Avengers history. Avengerland Regained draws on the knowledge of a
broad range of experts and fans as it explores the final vintage of
The Avengers.
Television drama is frequently marginalised as a piece of fleeting
popular culture rather than 'a more lasting art form'. The
emergence of television studies has helped to question this
mind-set. Innovative television drama can rival any field of the
arts in terms of material worthy of critical exploration. This
series of books focuses on 'outstanding' examples of British
television dramas, centring on a single episode in an attempt to
explain what makes both the episode in particular, and the series
in general, remarkable. The social context, script, characters
sets/locations, music, and direction are all focal points. This
Classic British Television Drama (CBTD) series of books continues
with an exploration of Man in a Suitcase's episode Day of
Execution. Elements of Cold War espionage, American gumshoe,
British thriller and 'Swinging' London combine in a series which is
hard to define and was, arguably, ahead of its time.
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Why? (Paperback)
Rodney Marshall
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R354
Discovery Miles 3 540
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Ships in 10 - 15 working days
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Father of two, David Jennings is divorced and working as a
professor of literature in Singapore. Out of the blue he receives a
phone call from his ex-wife, Anne. Their daughter, Kate, a
promising university student, has been found dead on a bleak
hillside outside Brighton. The police are convinced that she has
taken her own life. The coroner's Open Verdict encourages him to
start his own, guilt-ridden investigations into her death. As
Jennings journeys into his daughter's past, the harrowing mission
takes us to London, Bogota and the English coastline, in a search
to understand 'Why?' But what if the truth is worse than not
knowing?
Subversive Champagne re-examines the 1960s cult television series,
The Avengers, through a close analysis of 25 filmed episodes. The
book examines how The Avengers - during the classic Emma Peel era
(1964-1967) - was continually shifting the boundaries of audience
expectation, defying both genre classification and viewers'
traditional desire for kitchen sink drama. Subversive Champagne
centres on eighteen episodes from the monochrome Peel Season 4 -
widely acknowledged as the artistic pinnacle of the series. It is
in this era - caught between video-tape and colour film - that The
Avengers was undergoing arguably its most profound stylistic and
thematic transitions, from mild eccentricity to something genuinely
experimental. The author extends his journey into the exhilarating
but 'uneven' colour Season 5, adding chapters on seven more
episodes, thus allowing us to explore the entire Emma Peel era.
Entertaining froth or groundbreaking art? Rediscover the most
iconic show in television history.
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