Film genre 2000 : new critical essays

Bibliographic Information

Film genre 2000 : new critical essays

edited by Wheeler Winston Dixon

(SUNY series, cultural studies in cinema/video)

State University of New York Press, c2000

  • : pbk

Available at  / 9 libraries

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Note

Includes bibliographical references and index

Description and Table of Contents

Description

Covering over 100 feature films in critical depth and detail, this reader provides an excellent introduction to American genre filmmaking since 1990. These previously unpublished essays by prominent film scholars each address a different film genre—from science fiction to romance to '90s noir—as well as the ways in which genre filmmaking as a whole has been changed by the new technologies and market forces that are shaping the future of cinema. One of the peculiar aspects of recent American genre filmmaking is its apparent facelessness, its desire to subsume itself into the larger framework of genre cinema, and not to identify each film as a unique exemplar. What this book argues, among other things, is that the implicit message in contemporary genre films is rarely that which is signified by a film's external or even internal narrative structure. What drives the thematic and structural concerns of recent genre cinema is the recovery of initial investment, made all the more pressing by the fact that each film released theatrically now represents an investment of many millions of dollars. For better or worse, American genre cinema dominates the globe. The Hollywood genre film has become one of America's most prolific and profitable social exports. These contemporary genre films all seek to further the values of their nation of origin as they journey through the world on film, videotape, DVDs, and television; it is the pervasive influence, and numerous subjects, of these films that are analyzed here. Contributors include Heather Addison, Chuck Berg, Ton Conley, David M. Desser, Wheeler Winston Dixon, Marc Miller, Catherine Preston, Stephen Prince, David Sanjek, Mark A. Reid, John Tibbets, Jim Welsh, and Ron Wilson.

Table of Contents

List of Illustrations Chapter One Introduction: The New Genre Cinema Wheeler Winston Dixon Chapter Two New Wave Black Cinema in the 1990s Mark A. Reid Chapter Three So Much is Lost in Translation: Literary Adaptations in the 1990s John C. Tibbetts Chapter Four Of Tunes and Toons: The Movie Musical in the 1990s Marc Miller Chapter Five Political Film in the Nineties Stephen Prince Chapter Six The Martial Arts Film in the 1990s David Desser Chapter Seven Same as It Ever Was: Innovation and Exhaustion in the Horror and Science Fiction Films of the 1990s David Sanjek Chapter Eight "Fighting and Violence and Everything, That's Always Cool": Teen Films in the 1990s Wheeler Winston Dixon Chapter Nine The Left-Handed Form of Human Endeavor: Crime Films during the 1990s Ron Wilson Chapter Ten Action Films: The Serious, the Ironic, the Postmodern James M. Welsh Chapter Eleven Children's Films in the 1990s Heather Addison Chapter Twelve Noir in the Red and the Nineties in the Black Tom Conley Chapter Thirteen Fade-Out in the West: The Western's Last Stand? Chuck Berg Chapter Fourteen Hanging on a Star: The Resurrection of the Romance Film in the 1990s Catherine L. Preston Notes on Contributors Index

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Details

  • NCID
    BA47418034
  • ISBN
    • 0791445135
    • 0791445143
  • LCCN
    99029901
  • Country Code
    us
  • Title Language Code
    eng
  • Text Language Code
    eng
  • Place of Publication
    Albany, NY
  • Pages/Volumes
    vii, 266 p.
  • Size
    23 cm
  • Classification
  • Subject Headings
  • Parent Bibliography ID
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