Interpreting the Moving Image
£30.99
Part of Cambridge Studies in Film
- Author: Noel Carroll, University of Wisconsin, Madison
- Date Published: August 1998
- availability: Available
- format: Paperback
- isbn: 9780521589703
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Interpreting the Moving Image is a collection of essays by one of the most astute critics of cinema at work today. This volume provides a close analysis of major films of both the narrative and the avant-garde traditions. Written in accessible and engaging language, it also serves as a guide to such classics as The Cabinet of Dr Caligari and Citizen Kane, as well as the art of cinema in the post-modern era.
Read more- Can be used in introductory film history courses as a supplement to a film history textbook
- Carroll is one of the pre-eminent film critics of our time
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×Product details
- Date Published: August 1998
- format: Paperback
- isbn: 9780521589703
- length: 392 pages
- dimensions: 230 x 153 x 20 mm
- weight: 0.542kg
- availability: Available
Table of Contents
Forward
'Through Carroll's Looking Glass of Criticism' Tom Gunning
Introduction
1. The cabinet of Dr. Kracauer
2. Entr'acte, Paris and Dada
3. The Gold Rush
4. Keaton: film acting as action
5. Buster Keaton, The General and visible intelligibility
6. For God and Country
7. Lang, Pabst and Sound
8. Notes on Dreyer's Vampyr
9. King Kong: ape and essence
10. Becky Sharp takes over
11. Interpreting Citizen Kane
12. Mind, medium and metaphor in Harry Smith's Heaven and Earth Magic
13. Welles and Kafka
14. Nothing But A Man and The Cool World
15. Identity and difference: from ritual symbolisim to condensation in Anger's Inauguration of the Pleasure Dome
16. Text of Light
17. Joan Jonas: making the image visible
18. Introduction to Journeys from Berlin/1971
19. The future of allusion: Hollywood in the seventies (and Beyond)
20. Back to basics
21. Amy Taubin's bag
22. Herzog, presence and paradox
23. Film in the age of postmodernism.
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