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Author Elsaesser, Thomas, 1943-2019

Title European cinema : face to face with Hollywood / Thomas Elsaesser.

Publication Info. Amsterdam : Amsterdam University Press, 2005.

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Description 1 online resource (563 pages) : illustrations.
Series Film culture in transition
Film culture in transition.
Bibliography Includes bibliographical references and index.
Contents Introduction -- European Cinema: Conditions of Impossibility? [2005] -- National Cinema: Re-Definitions and New Directions -- European Culture, National Cinema, the Auteur and Hollywood [1994] -- ImpersoNations: National Cinema, Historical Imaginaries [2005] -- Film Festival Networks: the New Topographies of Cinema in Europe [2005] -- Double Occupancy and Small Adjustments: Space, Place and Policy in the New European Cinema since the 1990s [2005] -- Auteurs and Art Cinemas: Modernism and Self-Reference -- Ingmar Berman -- Person and Persona: The Mountain of Modern Cinema on the Road to Morocco [1994] -- Late Losey: Time Lost and Time Found [1985] -- Around Painting and the "End of Cinema": A Propos Jacques Rivette's La Belle Noiseuse [1992] -- Spellbound by Peter Greenaway: In the Dark ... and Into the Light [1996] -- The Body as Perceptual Surface: The Films of Johan van der Keuken [2004] Television and the Author's Cinema: ZDF's Das Kleine Fernsehspiel [1992] -- Touching Base: Some German Women Directors in the 1980s [1987] -- Europe-Hollywood-Europe -- Two Decades in Another Country: Hollywood and the Cinephiles [1975] -- Raoul Ruiz's Hypothese du Tableau Vole [1984] -- Images for Sale: The "New" British Cinema [1984] -- "If You Want a Life": The Marathon Man [2003] -- British Television in the 1980s Through The Looking Glass [1990] -- German Cinema Face to Face with Hollywood: Looking into a Two-Way Mirror [2003] -- Central Europe Looking West -- Of Rats and Revolution: Dusan Makavejev's The Switchboard Operator [1968] -- Defining DEFA's Historical Imaginary: The Films of Konrad Wolf [2001] -- Under Western Eyes: Who Does Zizek Want? [1995] -- Our Balkanist Gaze: About Memory's No Man's Land [2003] -- Europe Haunted by History and Empire -- Is History an Old Movie? [1986] -- Edgar Reitz' Heimat: Memory, Home and Hollywood [1985] -- Discourse and History: One Man's War -- An Interview with Edgardo Cozarinsky [1984] -- Rendezvous with the French Revolution: Ettore Scola's That Night in Varennes [1989] -- Joseph Losey's The Go-Between [1972] -- Games of Love and Death: Peter Greenaway and Other Englishmen [1988] -- Border-Crossings: Filmmaking without a Passport -- Peter Wollen's Friendship's Death [1987] -- Andy Engel's Melancholia [1989] -- On the High Seas: Edgardo Cozarinsky's Dutch Adventure [1983] -- Third Cinema/World Cinema: An Interview with Ruy Guerra [1972] -- Ruy Guerra's Erendira [1986] -- Hyper-, Retro- or Counter-: European Cinema as Third Cinema Between Hollywood and Art Cinema [1992].
Summary Annotation Has European cinema, in the age of globalization, lost contact not only with the world at large, but with its own audiences? Between the thriving festival circuit and the obligatory late-night television slot, is there still a public or a public sphere for European films? Can the cinema be the appropriate medium for a multicultural Europe and its migrating multitudes? Is there a division of representational labor, with Hollywood providing stars and spectacle, the Asian countries exotic color and choreographed action, and Europe a sense of history, place and memory? This collection of essays by an acclaimed film scholar examines how independent filmmaking in Europe has been reinventing itself since the 1990s, faced by renewed competition from Hollywood and the challenges posed to national cinemas by the fall of the Wall in 1989. Elsaesser reassesses the debates and presents a broader framework for understanding the forces at work since the 1960s. These include the interface of "world nbsp;cinema" and the rise of Asian cinemas, the importance of the international film festival circuit, the role of television, and the changing aesthetics of auteur cinema. New audiences have different allegiances, and new technologies enable networks to reshape identities, but European cinema still has an important function in setting critical and creative agendas, even as its economic and institutional bases are in transition.
Note Print version record.
Access Use copy Restrictions unspecified star MiAaHDL
Reproduction Electronic reproduction. [S.l.] : HathiTrust Digital Library, 2010. MiAaHDL
System Details Master and use copy. Digital master created according to Benchmark for Faithful Digital Reproductions of Monographs and Serials, Version 1. Digital Library Federation, December 2002. http://purl.oclc.org/DLF/benchrepro0212 MiAaHDL
Processing Action digitized 2010 HathiTrust Digital Library committed to preserve pda MiAaHDL
Subject Motion picture industry -- Europe.
Motion pictures -- Europe.
Motion picture industry.
Motion pictures.
BUSINESS & ECONOMICS -- Industries -- Media & Communications.
TECHNOLOGY & ENGINEERING -- Telecommunications.
Society and social sciences.
Society and culture: general.
The arts.
Film, TV and radio.
Humanities.
History.
HISTORY -- General.
Motion picture industry. (OCoLC)fst01027150
Motion pictures. (OCoLC)fst01027285
Europe. (OCoLC)fst01245064
Filmkunst.
Filmindustrie.
Film.
Europa.
Indexed Term Multi-User.
Other Form: Print version: Elsaesser, Thomas, 1943- European cinema. Amsterdam : Amsterdam University Press, 2005 9053565949 9053566023 (DLC) 2005458897 (OCoLC)61132718
ISBN 1423746252 (electronic bk.)
9781423746256 (electronic bk.)
9048505178 (electronic bk.)
9789048505173 (electronic bk.)
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