A Short History of the MoviesThe seventh edition of A Short History of the Movies continues the tradition that has made it the most widely used textbook ever for college courses in film history. This volume offers students a panoramic overview of the worldwide development of film, from the early Mack Sennett and Charlie Chaplin shorts, through the studio heyday of the 1930s and 1940s and the 'Hollywood Renaissance' of the 1960s and 1970s, to the pictures and their technology appearing in the multiplexes and sound palaces of today.* Significantly revised discussions of Paul Robeson, Quentin Tarantino, Michelangelo Antonioni, Ingmar Bergman, Federico Fellini, Jean-Luc Godard, and Peter Greenaway. * Includes new treatment of such important filmmakers as Atom Egoyan, Im Kwon-Taek, Abbas Kiarostami, Moshen Makhmalbaf, Nell Shipman, and Alexander Sokurov. * 21 new stills include lobby cards for the first time. * Includes new coverage of the national cinemas of Korea and Iran. * Coverage of the national cinemas of Canada, Denmark, England, France, India, Italy, Ireland, Japan, and Russia, as well as the cinemas of Hong Kong and Taiwan, have been updated to 1998. * Kawins continued meticulous attention to the details |
Contents
Birth | 8 |
Film Narrative Commercial Expansion 275 | 27 |
Mack Sennett and the Chaplin Shorts | 83 |
Copyright | |
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Abel Gance action actors American film Angeles Antonioni artistic audience became become camera Chaplin characters Charlie cinema CinemaScope Cinerama Citizen Kane City color comedy comic completely D. W. Griffith death directed director documentary dream editing Eisenstein emotional feature film industry film's filmmakers Ford's frame French genre German Godard Griffith Hitchcock Hollywood human images Italian Jean John Jules and Jim Kane Kinetoscope later light Lillian Gish live Lola Montès Lubitsch Lumière machines Méliès metaphor montage moral Motion Picture movie moving murder narrative Neorealist novel Phonofilm played political produced Pudovkin realistic released Renoir reveal Robert romantic scene screen script Sennett sequence sexual shooting shot silent silent film social song sound film soundtrack Soviet Stan Brakhage stars story Street Stroheim studio style television theatre theme tion Truffaut University Press visual Warner Bros woman York young Zéro de conduite