BFI Publishing
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BFI Publishing
BFI Publishing New and Key Backlist Titles Coming in October: Gothic BFI Film Classics New titles: The Shining • Pan’s Labyrinth • Nosferatu (1922) • The Innocents New second editions: Vampyr • Das Cabinet des Dr. Caligari • Nosferatu (1979) • Cat People Publishing to coincide with the BFI’s Gothic season in late 2013 Front and back cover credits: Tron (Steven Liseberger, 1982), © Walt Disney Productions The Chelsea Girls (Andy Warhol, 1966), Factory Films BFI Publishing 2013 Welcome to the 2013 BFI Publishing catalogue. In July of this year we are publishing a new Screen Guide, 100 Science Fiction Films, which provides an indispensible guide to 100 of the best films from this hugely popular genre. BFI Film Classics BFI TV Classics BFI Screen Guides This fall we will be publishing a new set of BFI Film Classics, including The Shining, Pan’s Labyrinth, The Innocents and Nosferatu (1922), to coincide with BFI Southbank’s Gothic season on influential horror and gothic films. Film Stars Students and academics will be interested in The Documentary Film Book, a major new collection of essays exploring the field, The Italian Cinema Book, and a new addition to our International Screen Industries series: Hollywood in the New Millennium. Cultural Histories of Cinema We hope you enjoy the books. The BFI Publishing team. Jenna Steventon, Senior Commissioning Editor and Head of Humanities | j.steventon@palgrave.com BFI Silver Film Studies British and Irish Cinema European Cinema World Cinema Jenni Burnell, Commissioning Editor | j.burnell@palgrave.com Contact Jenni to discuss projects and proposals Film Makers Sophie Contento, Senior Production Editor | s.contento@palgrave.com Television Studies Kara Kikel, Marketing Manager | kara.kikel@palgrave-usa.com *Prices are correct at the time of print 1 BFI FILM CLASSICS The BFI Film Classics series introduces, interprets and celebrates landmarks of world cinema. Each volume offers an argument for the film’s ‘classic’ status, together with discussion of its production and reception history, its place within a genre or national cinema, an account of its technical and aesthetic importance, and in many cases, the author’s personal response to the film. Editoral Advisory Board: Geoff Andrew, Edward Buscombe, William Germano, Lalitha Gopalan, Lee Grieveson, Nick James, Laura Mulvey, Alastair Phillips, Dana Polan, B. Ruby Rich and Amy Villarejo Written on the Wind Peter William Evans, Emeritus Professor of Film, Queen Mary, University of London, UK This is the first single study of Douglas Sirk’s 1956 film Written on the Wind, a melodrama about an alcoholic playboy who marries the woman his best friend secretly loves. Peter Evans incorporates original archival research to examine the production, promotion and reception of this masterpiece of Hollywood melodrama. May 2013 Paperback New 2 104pp $17.95 (C$19.95) 978-1-84457-420-9 The Tales of Hoffmann Salesman William Germano, Professor of English Literature and Dean of the Faculty of Humanities and Social Sciences, Cooper Union for the Advancement of Science and Art, USA The Tales of Hoffmann (1951) is a unique and important film, both in the history of British cinema and in the history of interdisciplinary art-making. It is the first full-throttle presentation of an opera on screen: a Technicolor exploration of romance, fantasy, and failure, more danced than sung. June 2013 Paperback 120pp $17.95 (C$19.95) J.M. Tyree, Writer-atLarge for Film Quarterly Released in 1968, the Maysles’ Salesman is widely acknowledged as a landmark in documentary film. In his compelling and detailed study, J.M. Tyree discusses the film’s various technical and artistic innovations, tracing their theoretical roots and enduring influence. October 2012 Paperback 104pp $17.95 (C$19.95) 978-1-84457-387-5 978-1-84457-446-9 New “ Praise for the BFI Film Classics: ‘Magnificently concentrated examples of flowing freeform critical poetry.’ - Uncut ‘The series is a landmark in film criticism.’ Quarterly Review of Film and Video ‘A formidable body of work collectively generating some fascinating insights into the evolution of cinema.’ - Times Higher Education Supplement Olympia 20th Anniversary Editions 2nd edition Taylor Downing, Television Producer, Writer and co-founder of Flashback Television ‘...it’s hard to think of what more a reader would want without straying too far from the film in hand. This is as thorough and detailed an account of a classic as you could hope for.’ - The Digital Fix ‘...this is a timely updated edition of filmmaker Downing’s excellent study of Leni Riefenstahl’s controversial documentary about the 1936 Berlin Olympics.’ - P.D. Smith, The Guardian Taylor Downing provides an indispensible guide to one of the most controversial films ever made, Leni Riefenstahl’s Olympia. Incorporating discussion of new material and new archival information about its development, Downing also gives a film-maker’s insights into the logistical and technical problems faced by the production. March 2012 Paperback 128pp $17.95 (C$19.95) La Règle du jeu V.F. Perkins, Honorary Professor of Film Studies, Warwick University, UK La Règle du jeu was a disaster at its premiere in 1939, just weeks before the outbreak of war. Renoir had to wait twenty years for his vindication. In 1959, a reconstructed print triumphed in its first screening at the Venice Film Festival. Since then it has claimed its place among the cinema’s most profound and fascinating achievements. V.F. Perkins traces the film’s fortunes from the time of its production. He offers a nuanced account that explores its shifting moods, the depth of its themes and the uniqueness of its style. September 2012 Paperback 112pp $14.95 (C$16.95) Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs Eric Smoodin, Professor of American Studies and Cinema and Technocultural Studies, University of California, Davis, USA ‘...gives us the essential background...’ - Total Film Based on extensive research in materials from the period of the film’s production and distribution, Eric Smoodin’s study presents a careful history of the events that led up to Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs, the trajectory of Disney’s career that made this extraordinary project a logical next step, the reception of the film in the US and around the world, and its impact on so many aspects of contemporary culture. 978-0-85170-965-9 September 2012 Paperback 112pp $14.95 (C$16.95) 978-1-84457-475-9 978-1-84457-470-4 3 20th Anniversary Editions Don’t Look Now The Wizard of Oz Blade Runner 2nd edition 2nd edition 2nd edition Mark Sanderson, Literary Critic, London Evening Standard and Sunday Telegraph With a new foreword by Jason Wood Don’t Look Now, released in 1973, confirmed director Nicolas Roeg as one of the most stylish and innovative British directors of the postwar period. The book includes an exclusive interview with Roeg as well as rare unpublished comments from Julie Christie. September 2012 Paperback 88pp $14.95 (C$16.95) Salman Rushdie, Award-winning Novelist With a new foreword by the author The Wizard of Oz ‘was my very first literary influence,’ writes Salman Rushdie in his account of the great MGM children’s classic. For Rushdie The Wizard of Oz is more than a children’s film, and more than a fantasy. It is a story whose driving force is the inadequacy of adults, where the weakness of grown-ups forces children to take control of their own destinies. 978-1-84457-515-2 September 2012 Paperback 4 Scott Bukatman, Cultural Theorist and Professor of Film and Media Studies, Stanford University, USA 80pp $14.95 (C$16.95) 978-1-84457-516-9 With a new foreword by the author Scott Bukatman details the making of Blade Runner and its steadily improving fortunes following its release in 1982. He situates the film in terms of debates about postmodernism, which have informed much of the criticism devoted to it, but argues that its tensions derive also from the quintessentially twentiethcentury, modernist experience of the city. September 2012 Paperback 112pp $14.95 (C$16.95) 978-1-84457-522-0 20th Anniversary Editions Citizen Kane Metropolis Singin’ in the Rain 2nd edition 2nd edition 2nd edition Laura Mulvey, Professor of Film and Media Studies, Birkbeck College, University of London, UK With a new foreword by the author Laura Mulvey illuminates the richness of Citizen Kane, both thematically and stylistically, relating it to Welles’s political background and its historical context. She also investigates the psychoanalytic structure that underlies the film’s presentation of Kane’s biography. September 2012 Paperback 104pp $14.95 (C$17.95) 978-1-84457-497-1 Thomas Elsaesser, Emeritus Professor, University of Amsterdam, The Netherlands With a new foreword by the author Thomas Elsaesser explores the cultural phenomenon of Metropolis: its different versions (there is no definitive one), its changing meanings, and its role as a database of twentieth-century imagery and ideologies. In his foreword to this special edition Elsaesser discusses the impact of the 27 minutes of ‘lost’ footage discovered in Buenos Aires in 2008. September 2012 Paperback 112pp $14.95 (C$16.95) Peter Wollen, formerly, University of California at Los Angeles, USA With a new foreword by Geoff Andrew Singin’ in the Rain remains one of the best loved films ever made. In a shot-by-shot analysis of the famous title number, Peter Wollen shows how Gene Kelly binds the dance and musical elements into the narrative, and convincingly argues that the film was the high point in the careers of those who worked on it. September 2012 Paperback 88pp $14.95 (C$16.95) 978-1-84457-514-5 978-1-84457-501-5 5 20th Anniversary Editions Taxi Driver Vertigo Went the Day Well? 2nd edition 2nd edition 2nd edition Amy Taubin, Contributing Editor, Film Comment and Sight & Sound and Writer, Artforum Charles Barr, Adjunct Professor, John Huston Centre for Film and Digital Media, National University of Ireland With a new foreword by the author 6 With a new foreword by the author Taxi Driver is one of the major films of the 1970s, which established Martin Scorcese’s reputation as a prominent American director. In her foreword to this special edition Amy Taubin considers Taxi Driver anew in the context of contemporary politics of race and masculinity in the US, and draws on an exclusive interview with Robert De Niro about his memories of making the film. Although it can be seen as Hitchcock’s most personal film, Charles Barr argues that Vertigo is at the same time a triumph not so much of individual authorship as of creative collaboration. He highlights the crucial role of screenwriters Alec Coppel and Samuel Taylor and, by a combination of textual and contextual analysis, explores the reasons why Vertigo continues to inspire such fascination. September 2012 Paperback September 2012 Paperback 88pp $14.95 (C$16.95) 978-1-84457-499-5 104pp $14.95 (C$16.95) 978-1-84457-498-8 Penelope Houston, British Film Critic With a new foreword by Geoff Brown Went the Day Well? is one of the most unusual Ealing Studios pictures,a distinctly unsentimental war film made in the darkest days of WWII. Houston studies why the film avoids the cosy Ealing trademark. In his foreword to this special edition, Geoff Brown pays homage to Penelope Houston’s astute study, and places the book in the context of Went the Day Well?’s changing critical reception. September 2012 Paperback 72pp $14.95 (C$16.95) 978-1-84457-500-8 Selected Backlist Caché (Hidden) The Shawshank Redemption Catherine Wheatley Mark Kermode 978-1-84457-349-3 978-0-85170-968-0 Back to the Future The Exorcist Star Wars Andrew Shail & Robin Stoate Mark Kermode Will Brooker 978-1-84457-293-9 978-0-85170-967-3 978-1-84457-277-9 The Big Lewbowski The Godfather Withnail and I J.M. Tyree & Ben Walters Jon Lewis Kevin Jackson 978-1-84457-173-4 978-1-84457-292-2 978-1-844570-35-5 The Birds Jaws 2001: A Space Odyssey Camille Paglia Antonia Quirke Peter Krämer 978-0-85170-651-1 978-0-85170-929-1 978-1-84457-286-1 For a full list of titles available in this series visit http://us.macmillan.com/ series/BFIFilmClasics Paperback • $17.95 (C$19.95) each 7 BFI TV CLASSICS BFI TV Classics is a series of books celebrating key individual television programmes and series. Television scholars, critics and novelists provide critical readings underpinned with careful research, alongside a personal response to the programme and a case for its ‘classic’ status. Editorial Advisory Board: Stella Bruzzi, Glyn Davis, Mark Duguid, Jason Jacobs, Karen Lury, Toby Miller, Rachel Moseley and Phil Wickham The World at War Taylor Downing, Television Producer, Writer and co-founder of Flashback Television The World at War is the most successful history series ever produced by British television. TV producer and writer Taylor Downing explores the style, ethos, television context and impact of the program, in a study that draws on interviews with the producer, Jeremy Isaacs, and original archive research. November 2012 Paperback 8 192pp $23.95 (C$27.95) 978-1-84457-483-4 Bleak House The Beiderbecke Affair Christine Geraghty, Honorary Professorial Fellow, University of Glasgow, UK and Honorary Research Fellow, Goldsmiths, University of London, UK Bleak House is one of Charles Dickens’s darker works: a vision of London as the polluted, diseased heart of an industrializing nation. In 2005, the BBC broadcast a major new adaptation, scripted by Andrew Davies, which controversially combined the suspense of soap opera with visual innovation, careful attention to period detail, and outstanding performances. Christine Geraghty’s revealing study strongly makes the case for the contemporary BBC adaptation of Bleak House as a true television classic. October 2012 Paperback 152pp $19.95 (C$22.95) 978-1-84457-417-9 William Gallagher, Journalist and Television Historian The Beiderbecke Affair was an immensely popular 1980s television drama, which, unusually, led to sequels, novels, albums and even jazz tours. Written by a personal friend of Alan Plater, this book is the first to be published about the drama. It explores the making, impact and influence of the series. October 2012 Paperback 144pp $22.95 (C$26.95) 978-1-84457-469-8 Deadwood Selected Backlist Jason Jacobs, Reader in Cultural History, School of English, Media Studies and Art History, University of Queensland, Australia Jason Jacobs’ study of Deadwood (HBO, 2004-6) combines an in-depth production and reception history with astute analysis of the series’ key themes and aesthetic strategies to argue that the show not only marked a radical revision of the Western genre but an outstanding work of television art. July 2012 Paperback 200pp $15.00 (C$17.00) 978-1-84457-362-2 Prime Suspect For a full list of titles available in this series visit http://us.macmillan.com/ series/BFITVClassics Deborah Jermyn 978-1-84457-305-9 CSI: Crime Scene Investigation Seinfeld Steven Cohan Nicholas Mirzoeff 978-1-84457-255-7 978-1-84457-201-4 Edge of Darkness Seven Up John Caughie Stella Bruzzi 978-1-84457-200-7 978-1-84457-196-3 Queer as Folk Star Trek Glyn Davis Ina Rae Hark 978-1-84457-199-4 978-1-84457-214-4 9 BFI SCREEN GUIDES 100 Science Fiction Films 100 Cult Films Barry Keith Grant, Professor of Film and Popular Culture, Brock University, Canada An indispensible guide to 100 of the best science fiction films. With an in-depth exploration of each film, this is an accessible but rigorous exploration both for fans who want to know more and for students. Contents: Introduction • Aelita • Alien • Alphaville • Altered States • Avatar • Back to the Future • The Beast From 20,000 Fathoms • Blade Runner • Born in Flames • A Boy and his Dog • Brazil • The Brother From Another Planet • The Cabin in the Woods • A Clockwork Orange • Close Encounters of the Third Kind • Colossus: The Forbin Project • The Damned • Dark City • Dark Star • The Day the Earth Stood Still • Destination Moon • District 9 • Dune • Enemy Mine • E.T.: The Extra-Terrestrial • Fahrenheit 451 • Fantastic Voyage • The Fifth Element • Flash Gordon (serial) • The Fly • Forbidden Planet • Frankenstein • Frau im mond (Woman in the Moon) • Galaxy Quest • Ghost in the Shell • Gojira (Godzilla) • The Host • The Incredible Shrinking Man • I Am Legend • Invaders From Mars • Invasion of the Body Snatchers • The Invisible Man • Island of Lost Souls • La Jetée • Jurassic Park • Just Imagine • Last Night • Liquid Sky • Mad Max • The Man Who Fell to Earth • Mars Attacks! • The Matrix • Metropolis • Nineteen Eighty-Four • Paris qui dort • Plan 9 From Outer Space • Planet of the Apes • Quatermass and the Pit • The Quiet Earth • The Road • Robo-cop • Seconds • Signs • Silent Running • The Silent Star • Slaughterhouse-Five • Sleep Dealer • Sleeper • Solaris • Soylent Green • Star Trek: The Motion Picture • Star Wars • Starship Troopers • Strange Days • Superman • The Terminator • Tetsuo: The Iron Man • Them! • They Live • The Thing From Another World • The Thing • Things to Come • THX 1138 • The Time Machine • Total Recall • Tribulation 99: Alien Anomolies Under America • Tron • The Tunnel • 20,000 Leagues Under the Sea • 2001: A Space Odyssey • Videodrome • Village of the Damned • Le Voyage dans la lune • WALL-E • The War Game • The War of the Worlds • Westworld • When Worlds Collide • X: The Man with the X-Ray Eyes • Zardoz • Notes • Further Reading July 2013 Paperback New 10 256pp $20.00 (C$23.00) 978-1-84457-457-5 Ernest Mathijs, Associate Professor of Film Studies, University of British Columbia, Canada and Xavier Mendik, Director of the Cine-Excess International Film Festival and DVD label, University of Brighton, UK The essential guide to 100 of world cinema’s most fascinating and influential cult films. This lavishly illustrated guide provides an entertaining and eye-opening account of 100 cult favourites, from a range of genres and directors. It features entries on films from 1920 to the present, including The Wizard of Oz, This is Spinal Tap, Donnie Darko, Dirty Dancing, Suspiria and Night of the Living Dead. Drawing on exclusive interviews with some of the world’s most iconic cult creators and performers, and featuring a foreword by cult director Joe Dante, 100 Cult Films is your ultimate ticket to the midnight movie show. December 2011 Paperback 256pp $21.00 (C$24.00) 978-1-84457-408-7 100 Silent Films 100 Film Musicals Bryony Dixon, Senior Curator at the BFI National Archive ‘This is no bluffer’s guide. The enjoyment of silent cinema is Dixon’s priority. As Dixon says when discussing Hell’s Hinges (1916): ‘Nearly everything in current cinema can be traced back to the silent era.’ And that’s why this guide is so valuable anyone interested in how cinema became what it is today will find many of the answers here, both in Bryony Dixon’s illuminating book and the films you will rush to watch the minute you put it down.’ - Silent London ‘Dixon captures some of silent cinema’s most sublime moments - Charlie Chaplin mournfully eating his shoelaces in The Gold Rush (1925) or the woodland chase in People on Sunday (1930) - with an infectious joy.’ - Lucian Robinson, The Times Literary Supplement This illuminating guide provides a selection of one hundred key films of the silent period (1895-1930), featuring films from a variety of countries, genres and directors, together with an introductory overview and useful filmographic and bibliographic information. August 2011 Hardback Paperback 272pp $80.00 (C$92.00) $21.00 (C$24.00) 978-1-84457-309-7 978-1-84457-308-0 100 Animated Feature Films Jim Hillier and Douglas Pye, Visiting Fellows in the Department of Film, Theatre and Television, University of Reading, UK A selection of 100 films from one of the best-loved genres of Hollywood and world cinema, with entries ranging from Gold Diggers of 1933 to High School Musical of 2006, and from the Reggae classic The Harder They Come to Guru Dutt’s Pyaasa (1957). The authors’ introduction outlines the history and key features of the film musical. August 2011 Paperback 296pp $21.00 (C$24.00) 978-1-84457-378-3 Andrew Osmond, Journalist and writer, Sight & Sound ‘…this compendium couldn’t be better timed. Flaunting both excellent taste and in-depth knowledge, Osmond’s book certainly won’t disappoint aficionados...’ - Total Film ‘...The effect is that we consider not only the individual title in question, but also the history of animated cinema as a whole; for Osmond it is all interconnected, and rightly so.’ - The Digital Fix ‘...a learned attempt at an overview of full-length cinematic animation from the sublime to the whimsical...’ - The Evening Standard ‘...a thoughtful romp through every animation discipline...If you want animation-buff status, seeing this ton of ‘toons armed with Osmond’s insights is a pretty good place to start.’ - Empire Magazine The animated feature film has been long underrepresented in film criticism. Yet animated films have probably never been a stronger force in world cinema than they are today. This book discusses 100 key animated films from around the world, from Shrek to Svankmajer. April 2010 Hardback 252pp $30.00 (C$34.50) 978-1-84457-340-0 11 100 American Independent Films 100 Film Noirs Jim Hillier, Visiting Fellow, Department of Film and Television Studies, University of Reading, UK and Alastair Phillips, Associate Professor, Department of Film and Television Studies, University of Warwick, UK 2nd edition Jason Wood, Director of Programming for Curzon Cinemas This revised and updated edition provides a guide to 100 of the most interesting and influential American independent films, from Bonnie and Clyde to Junebug by way of Reservoir Dogs and The Blair Witch Project with an introduction to the genre and a rich selection of images from the films discussed, plus key credits. September 2009 Hardback Paperback 272pp $90.00 (C$104.00) $20.95 (C$23.95) 978-1-84457-290-8 978-1-84457-289-2 ‘100 Film Noirs offers many insights into the history and visual grammar of the genre and provides the perfect excuse to revisit some classics and discover some forgotten masterpieces.’ - P.D. Smith, The Guardian Apps 100 Cult Films: BFI Screen Guides ‘As has already been indicated, this is an authoritative work, as one might expect with the imprint of the British Film Institute. It is extremely readable in style and is recommended for students of film studies in school, college, or university, as well as for public libraries where it would be eagerly read by lovers of film noir.’ - Eric Jukes, Reference Reviews This BFI Screen Guide provides an accessible, richlyillustrated introduction to 100 key noir films, from Hollywood classics such as Double Indemnity to more recent titles such as Sin City, as well as examples from Europe, Japan, India and Mexico, together with an editorial overview of the genre and its key debates. June 2009 Paperback 296pp $20.95 (C$23.95) 12 BFI Screen Guides 978-1-84457-216-8 100 American Independent Films: BFI Screen Guides Available to buy soon from the iTunes App Store for iPad and iPhone FILM stars Each book in this major new BFI series focuses on an international film star, tracing the development of their star persona, their career trajectory and their acting and performance style. Some also examine the cultural significance of a star’s work, as well as their lasting influence and legacy. The series ranges from silent to contemporary cinema and from Hollywood to Asian cinemas, and addresses both child and adult stardom. Series Editors: Martin Shingler and Susan Smith, both at University of Sunderland, UK Barbara Stanwyck Andrew Klevan, University of Oxford, UK During her Hollywood career, Barbara Stanwyck starred in many major genres including film noir, melodrama, and Western. Andrew Klevan considers Stanywck the performer, and also offers a fresh way of approaching the achievements of Classic Hollywood cinema, and Hollywood film performance more generally. October 2013 Paperback New 170pp $22.95 (C$26.50) 978-1-84457-348-7 Brigitte Bardot Carmen Miranda Ginette Vincendeau, Professor in Film Studies, King’s College London, UK In this original and illuminating study, film scholar and Brigitte Bardot fan Ginette Vincendeau explores the star’s complex and revolutionary image of femininity, her film career and her lasting and controversial celebrity. Analyzing all Bardot’s output, encompassing popular comedies and melodramas, work with New Wave directors Louis Malle and Jean-Luc Godard, and international productions such as Dear Brigitte (1965) and Shalako (1968), Vincendeau shows how Bardot’s enduring fame is based on her status as a sexual, lifestyle, musical, and fashion role model and even, in her guise as Marianne, the emblem of the French Republic, an icon of national identity. Finally, she considers the ageing Bardot’s continued prominence in popular culture through her own writings and animal rights activism, arguing that, as well as a glamorous film star, Bardot was one of the inventors of modern celebrity. April 2013 Paperback New 184pp $19.95 (C$22.95) 978-1-84457-492-6 Lisa Shaw, University of Liverpool, UK Lisa Shaw’s study of Miranda’s film career and star persona traces her emergence as one of the first stars of the Brazilian film industry and her subsequent triumph in Hollywood. Shaw charts Miranda’s transition from singer to film star, analyzing how her star persona drew on performance techniques honed during her singing career. She examines shifts in Miranda’s star identity after her move to Broadway in 1939, and Hollywood a year later, with her identification as an ‘ethnic’ star emphasized by extravagant baiana costumes. Shaw shows how Miranda consciously constructed an identity that both endorsed and subverted stereotypes about Latin America during the era of the ‘Good Neighbor Policy’, and explores Miranda’s appeal across mainstream and marginalised audiences, both in the US and Brazil. Finally, she examines Miranda’s impact on material culture, particularly women’s fashions, both during her lifetime and until the present day, and the role played in the consecration of her ‘tropical’ star persona by imitators, ranging from Bugs Bunny, Lucille Ball and Mickey Rooney, to contemporary Carmen Miranda imitators of both genders. April 2013 Paperback 168pp $19.95 (C$22.95) 978-1-84457-432-2 New 13 Elizabeth Taylor Nicole Kidman Susan Smith, Senior Lecturer in Film Studies, University of Sunderland, UK Pam Cook, Professor Emerita in Film, University of Southampton, UK ‘Smith packs her slim volume with telling detail and a vivid re-evaluation of the actress’ incredible flair for engaging with audiences.’ - Total Film Nicole Kidman is a high-profile, successful exponent of contemporary commodity stardom, and a product of fundamental changes in the media industries over the last two decades. Pam Cook vividly brings to life her journey from Australian actress to global superstar, looking at her work in different contexts from film and television to fashion, commercials, philanthropy and the Internet. In-depth analysis of key films such as Dead Calm, To Die For, Eyes Wide Shut and The Hours reveals Kidman’s development of an ‘actorly’ performance style that enables her to combine stardom and celebrity with award-winning acting. Cook delves into the intricate media networks that circulate Kidman’s image and story, assessing the contribution of her Australian identity to building her personal brand, the Botox controversy, her recent move into production and her cultural impact. This absorbing case study unveils a star narrative as compelling as any that appears in her films. Elizabeth Taylor was one of the major film stars of the twentieth century, embodying all the glamour and allure of Hollywood stardom. Yet her achievements as an actress have often been overshadowed by her beauty and tumultuous life off-screen. To redress this imbalance, Susan Smith offers an illuminating study of Elizabeth Taylor’s work in film, exploring her fascinating trajectory from child to adult star. Smith reveals the influence that Taylor’s early work exerted over her later career and the ways in which her on-screen identity is profoundly rooted in her association with animals and nature. Smith carefully unpicks what made Taylor such a distinctive and dynamic on-screen performer – from the expressive use she made of her eyes to the dramatic significance of her voice – and considers the importance of certain professional collaborations that Taylor forged during her career, most notably her acting partnership with Montgomery Clift. September 2012 Paperback 14 Star Studies 184pp $19.95 (C$22.95) 978-1-84457-486-5 August 2012 Paperback 160pp $19.95 (C$22.95) 978-1-84457-488-9 A Critical Guide Martin Shingler, Senior Lecturer in Radio and Film Studies, University of Sunderland, UK This book provides a lively introduction to the major approaches and key developments within this area of film studies. It identifies a number of dominant themes, explains major theories, concepts and methodologies, and explores the diversity of approaches that have helped shape the international study of stars and stardom. Comparing the stars and star systems of Hollywood, Bollywood, China and many European countries, Martin Shingler considers the multiple functions of stars: as an elite workforce within the film industry, as actors and performers, as role models and cultural representatives, as icons and images, as transnational and national symbols, and as commodities. This book provides a cogent overview of star studies, while suggesting some useful avenues for further research. Star Studies provides an essential theoretical and historical companion to the individual star volumes in the Film Stars series. September 2012 Paperback 240pp $20.00 (C$23.95) 978-1-84457-490-2 bfi silver Signs and Meaning in the Cinema Fetishism and Curiosity A Mirror for England Cinema and the Mind’s Eye British Movies from Austerity to Affluence 5th edition 2nd edition 2nd edition Laura Mulvey, Birkbeck College, University of London, UK Peter Wollen, formerly, University of California, USA With a new foreword by D.N. Rodowick First published in 1969, Signs and Meaning in the Cinema transformed the emerging discipline of film studies. Remarkably eclectic and informed, Peter Wollen’s highly influential and groundbreaking work remains a brilliant and accessible theorization of film as an art form and as a sign system. This fifth edition brings together material from the four previous editions, inviting the reader to trace the development of Wollen’s thinking, and the unfolding of the discourse of cinema. May 2013 Hardback Paperback New 288pp $85.00 (C$98.00) $29.95 (C$34.50) 978-1-84457-361-5 978-1-84457-360-8 Raymond Durgnat, (1932–2002) was the author of many groundbreaking books about the cinema With a new foreword by the author This new edition of Laura Mulvey’s classic work of feminist theory contains writings which range from analyses of Xala, Citizen Kane, and Blue Velvet to an extended engagement with the work of American Indian artist Jimmie Durham and the feminist photographer Cindy Sherman. The essays explore the concept of fetishism as developed by Marx and Freud, and how it relates to the ways in which artistic texts work. Mulvey here returns to some of the knottier issues in contemporary cultural theory, especially the links between looking, fantasy and theorization, on the one hand, and the processes of historical change on the other. What are the modes of address that characterize ‘societies of the spectacle’? How might ‘curiosity’ be directed towards deciphering the politics of popular culture? These are some of the questions raised in this brilliant and subtle collection. August 2013 Hardback Paperback New 256pp $85.00 (C$98.00) $19.95 (C$22.95) 978-1-84457-509-1 978-1-84457-508-4 With a foreword by Kevin Gough-Yates Raymond Durgnat’s classic study of British films from the 1940s to the 1960s, first published in 1970, remains one of the most important books ever written on British cinema. Durgnat used Mirror to assert the validity of British cinema against its dismissal by the critics of Cahiers du cinéma and Sight & Sound. His analysis takes in classics such as In Which We Serve (1942), A Matter of Life and Death (1946) and The Blue Lamp (1949), alongside ‘B’ films and popular genres such as Hammer horror. Durgnat makes a cogent and compelling case for the success of British films in reflecting British predicaments, moods and myths, at the same time as providing some disturbing new insights into a national character by whose enigmas and contradictions we continue to be perplexed and fascinated. December 2011 Hardback Paperback 416pp $95.00 (C$109.00) $25.95 (C$29.95) 978-1-84457-454-4 978-1-84457-453-7 15 CULTURAL HISTORIES OF CINEMA This series examines the relationship between cinema and culture. It features interdisciplinary scholarship that focuses on the national and transnational trajectories of cinema as a network of institutions, representations, practices and technologies. Of primary concern is analyzing cinema’s expansive role in the complex social, economic and political dynamics of the twentieth and twenty-first centuries. Series Editors: Lee Grieveson, University College London, UK, and Haidee Wasson, Concordia University, Canada Shadow Economies of Cinema Mapping Informal Film Distribution Ramon Lobato, Swinburne University of Technology, Australia Shadow Economies of Cinema examines how films travel through time and space, both inside and outside established circuits of audiovisual trade. Combining industrial and cultural analysis, this book looks at distribution circuits from across the Americas, Africa and the Asia-Pacific, and explains how they shape film culture in their own image. April 2012 Hardback Paperback 176pp $85.00 (C$98.00) $25.95 (C$29.95) 978-1-84457-412-4 978-1-84457-411-7 Empire and Film October 2011 Hardback Paperback 304pp $100.00 (C$115.00) 978-1-84457-422-3 $30.00 (C$34.50) 978-1-84457-421-6 Film and the End of Empire November 2011 Hardback Paperback 320pp $95.00 (C$109.00) $29.95 (C$34.50) 978-1-84457-424-7 978-1-84457-423-0 Edited by Lee Grieveson, Director of Film Studies, University College London, UK and Colin MacCabe, Distinguished Professor of English and Film, University of Pittsburgh and Associate Director of the London Consortium In these two volumes of original essays, scholars from around the world address the history of British colonial cinema stretching from the emergence of cinema at the height of imperialism, to moments of decolonization and the ending of formal imperialism in the post-Second World War period. 16 film studies The Cinema Book New Vampire Cinema 3rd edition Edited by Pam Cook, Professor Emerita in Film, University of Southampton, UK ‘With excellent essays, close textual analysis of films and further reading lists from some of the leading lights in the area, the book has proved an invaluable asset for those negotiating their way through the minefield of ideas and conflicting theories that make up the study of film...This weighty, yet still surprisingly succinct tome also has an excellent sense of design allowing the reader to dip in and out and pull out the relevant information as they wish... obvious must for any student of film...excellent resource.’ - Laurence Boyce, Films and Festivals The Cinema Book is widely recognized as the ultimate guide to cinema. Authoritative and comprehensive, the third edition has been extensively revised, updated and expanded in response to developments in cinema and cinema studies. Lavishly illustrated in color, this edition features a wealth of exciting new sections and indepth case studies. December 2007 Paperback 450pp $47.95 (C$54.95) 978-1-84457-193-2 Ken Gelder, University of Melbourne, Australia New Vampire Cinema lifts the coffin lid on forty contemporary vampire films, charting the evolution of the genre. Ken Gelder’s study begins by looking at Francis Ford Coppola’s Bram Stoker’s Dracula and Fran Rubel Kuzui’s Buffy the Vampire Slayer. New Vampire Cinema then examines what happened afterwards, across a remarkable range of reiterations of the vampire that take it far beyond its original Transylvanian setting: the suburbs of Sweden (Let the Right One In), the forests of North America (the Twilight films), New York City (Nadja, The Addiction), Mexico (Cronos, From Dusk Till Dawn), Japan (Blood: The Last Vampire, Vampire Hunter D: Bloodlust), South Korea (Thirst), New Zealand (Perfect Creature), Australia (Daybreakers), and elsewhere. In a series of readings, Gelder determines what is at stake when the cinematic vampire and the modern world are made to encounter one another – where the new, the remake and the sequel find the vampire struggling to survive the past, the present and, in some cases, the distant future. December 2012 Hardback Paperback 168pp $85.00 (C$98.00) $24.95 (C$29.95) 978-1-84457-441-4 978-1-84457-440-7 What If I Had Been the Hero? Investigating Women’s Cinema Sue Thornham, University of Sussex, UK What happens when women tell their own stories in film? In What If I Had Been the Hero?, Sue Thornham addresses this question through an exploration of a wide range of films, from experimental feminist film to mainstream Hollywood, and from the 1970s to the present day, by film-makers including Sally Potter, Jane Campion, Deepa Mehta, Patricia Rozema and Lynne Ramsay. Her discussion takes in films from India and Argentina as well as Europe, Canada, Australia and the US. Sue Thornham raises key issues about women as authors, subjects and heroes of their narratives. She argues that simple reversals of gendered positions of hero/heroine, active/ passive, and subject/object are not enough. Drawing on a wide range of feminist theoretical sources, What If I Had Been the Hero? makes an important intervention into contemporary debates, situating film-making within a rich history of female creativity, and insisting on the continuing importance of feminist theory. August 2012 Hardback Paperback 248pp $74.95 (C$86.00) $24.95 (C$28.95) 978-1-84457-364-6 978-1-84457-363-9 17 Film Moments Shadows of Progress Criticism, History, Theory Documentary Film in Post-War Britain Edited by James Walters, Lecturer in Film and Television Studies, University of Birmingham, UK and Tom Brown, Lecturer, Department of Film, Theatre and Television, University of Reading, UK ‘Certain moments in films stay with us, and often we don’t know why. Here is an array of such memorable moments, with an array of notable critics and scholars endeavoring to tell us why. Concise like the moments that inspired them, the essays gathered here open our eyes in various ways to the meaning of moving images. This is a book full of insights into the details that make all the difference.’ - Gilberto Perez, Sarah Lawrence College, USA ‘...a terrific collection of short essays which each address a specific sequence in a movie...’ lluminations Film Moments brings together specially commissioned essays by leading international scholars to provide a close analysis of key films of world cinema, including The Wizard of Oz, United 93, 8 1/2, Wild Strawberries and Magnolia. The essays represent a range of critical approaches to and concepts in film studies. December 2010 Hardback Paperback 192pp $95.00 (C$109.00) $29.95 (C$34.50) 978-1-84457-336-3 978-1-84457-335-6 Edited by Patrick Russell, Senior Curator (Non-Fiction), BFI National Archive and James Piers Taylor, Independent Curator and Film Historian This unique book addresses the sponsorship, production, distribution and key themes of British documentary cinema from 1945 to the early 1980s. It features contributions from the curatorial and academic worlds, providing profiles of major filmmakers of the period, outlining their career histories and key themes of their work. November 2010 Hardback Paperback 448pp $105.00 (C$121.00) 978-1-84457-322-6 $42.95 (C$49.50) 978-1-84457-321-9 The Documentary Film Book Edited by Brian Winston, Lincoln Chair of Communications, University of Lincoln, UK Powerfully posing questions of ethics, ideology, authorship and form, documentary cinema has never been more popular than it is today. Edited by the leading British authority in the field, The Documentary Film Book is an essential guide to current thinking on documentary film. In a series of fascinating essays, key international experts discuss the theory of documentary, outline current understanding of the history of documentary (from before Flaherty to the post-Griersonian world of digital ‘i-Docs’), survey documentary production (from Africa to Europe, and from the Americas to Asia), consider documentaries by marginalized minority communities, and assess documentary’s contribution to other disciplines and other arts. Brought together here in one volume, these scholars offer compelling evidence as to why, over the last decades, documentary has come to the centre of screen studies. October 2013 Hardback Paperback New 18 400pp $95.00 (C$109.00) $29.95 (C$34.50) 978-1-84457-342-4 978-1-84457-341-7 Claiming the Real From IBM to MGM Ephemeral Media Documentary: Grierson and Beyond Cinema at the Dawn of the Digital Age Transitory Screen Culture from Television to YouTube 2nd edition Andrew Utterson, Senior Lecturer in Film and Digital Media, Canterbury Christ Church University, UK Brian Winston, Lincoln Chair of Communications, University of Lincoln, UK Claiming the Real describes the origins, development and current state of documentary cinema, and the social, political, industrial and ethical factors that determine its production. This edition addresses the ethical quagmires, digital technologies and proliferating forms that have transformed documentary cinema. January 2009 Hardback Paperback 336pp $100.00 (C$115.00) 978-1-84457-272-4 $29.95 (C$34.50) 978-1-84457-271-7 ‘...a stimulating and very engaging read.’ Illuminations ‘Utterson adroitly draws out the tensions between ‘technophobic’ film portrayals of computers and an avant-garde of digital utopians engaged in computer-aided art (spare a thought for the sad fate of the ‘lightpen’), who tempted directors to adopt their technology, as with Westworld’s pixellated point-of-view shots. Quirky technoanecdotes abound: the hacking of scavenged second-world-war ballistics computers; the origin of ASCII art; talk of a computer that makes a ‘Freudian slip’; and even an evocative appeal to ‘robotic ontology’. Is it time to watch The Matrix again yet?’ - The Guardian Edited by Paul Grainge, Associate Professor of Film and Television Studies, University of Nottingham, UK Ephemeral Media explores the practices, strategies and textual forms helping producers negotiate a fast-paced mediascape. Examining dynamics of brevity and evanescence in the television and new media environment, this book provides a new perspective on the transitory, and transitional, nature of screen culture in the early twenty-first century. November 2011 Hardback Paperback 248pp $95.00 (C$109.00) $25.95 (C$29.95) 978-1-84457-435-3 978-1-84457-434-6 Andrew Utterson’s unique study charts the beginnings of digital cinema, addressing both how filmmakers used new digital technologies and how attitudes and anxieties about the rise of the computer were represented in films such as Lang’s Desk Set, Godard’s Alphaville, Kubrick’s 2001: A Space Odyssey and Crichton’s Westworld. February 2011 Hardback Paperback 184pp $100.00 (C$115.00) 978-1-84457-324-0 $35.95 (C$41.50) 978-1-84457-323-3 19 Cinema and Colour The Saturated Image Paul Coates, University of Western Ontario, Canada A study of the use of color in film, and of the ways in which color has been theorized, both as a concept and specifically in terms of cinema. Paul Coates focuses on the use of color in films ranging including All that Heaven Allows, Deux ou trois choses que je sais d’elle, Three Colours: Red and The Wizard of Oz. November 2010 Hardback Paperback 184pp $100.00 (C$115.00) 978-1-84457-315-8 $30.95 (C$35.50) 978-1-84457-314-1 A History of Experimental Film and Video Edited by Steven Cohan, Professor of English, Syracuse University, USA 2nd edition A.L. Rees, Research Tutor in Visual Communication, Royal College of Art, UK This revised and updated edition covers the history of avante-garde film and video, ranging from Cezanne and dada, via Cocteau, Brakhage and Le Grice, to the new wave of British video artists from the 1990s to the present day. The author also reconstitutes the avante-garde film as an independent form of art practice with its own internal logic and aesthetic discourse. November 2011 Hardback Paperback 208pp $70.00 (C$81.00) $30.00 (C$34.50) 20 The Sound of Musicals 978-1-84457-437-7 978-1-84457-436-0 ‘...a rewarding volume of recent papers...’ Illuminations This collection addresses the film musical, a central genre in the Hollywood studio system, which has also been important within British, Hindi and Chinese cinema. Leading international scholars explore key issues, traditions, subgenres, stars and films of the musical film from the 1930s to the present. December 2010 Hardback Paperback 232pp $85.00 (C$98.00) $25.95 (C$29.95) 978-1-84457-347-9 978-1-84457-346-2 BRITISH AND IRISH CINEMA Behind the Scenes at the BBFC Film Classification from the Silver Screen to the Digital Age Edited by Edward Lamberti, Information Services Manager, BBFC With a foreword by Mark Kermode Established by the film industry in 1912 as the nation’s only official and independent classifier of the moving image, the British Board of Film Classification (originally the British Board of Film Censors) has long been a source of fascination – and sometimes a bone of contention – for filmgoers, filmmakers and industry figures. This book, published in the BBFC’s centenary year, addresses Britain’s film classification history, and marks an unparalleled collaboration between the Board and leading film critics, historians and cultural commentators. These writers, given unprecedented access to the BBFC’s archives, chart the organization’s history alongside the cultural, social and political forces that have helped shape it. Together they explore shifting public attitudes towards cinema’s portrayal of sex and drugs, horror and violence; the different perspectives of the Board’s successive leaders; the impact of controversial decisions, and the ever-changing nature of moving image distribution and exhibition. The book also features unique case studies, written by BBFC staff, focusing on significant films that have provoked debate and controversy both within the BBFC and more widely - Battleship Potemkin, The Snake Pit, A Clockwork Orange, Indiana Jones and the Temple of Doom, and many more. Behind the Scenes at the BBFC is an entertaining and invaluable insight into shifts in public attitudes over the last century, and how film classification shapes what we see on screen. December 2012 Paperback 240pp $29.95 (C$34.50) 978-1-84457-476-6 Ealing Revisited Edited by Mark Duguid, Senior Curator at the BFI National Archive, Lee Freeman, PhD Student in Ealing Studios, University of Hull, UK, Keith Johnston, Senior Lecturer in Film and Television and Melanie Williams, Lecturer in Film and Television Studies, both at University of East Anglia, UK Ealing Revisited provides a major reappraisal of one of British cinema’s best-loved institutions, Ealing Studios. During its heyday, Ealing produced a string of classic comedies, including Kind Hearts and Coronets (1949), The Lavender Hill Mob (1951) and The Ladykillers (1955), but there is much more to Ealing than these films, as this volume of new writing on the studio shows. Addressing both known and less familiar aspects of Ealing’s story, its films, actors and technicians, the contributors uncover what has gone unexplored, or unspoken, in previous histories of the studio, and consider the impact that Ealing has had on British cultural life from the 1930s to the present. November 2012 Hardback Paperback 304pp $100.00 (C$115.00) 978-1-84457-511-4 $29.95 (C$34.50) 978-1-84457-510-7 21 British Trash Cinema I.Q. Hunter, De Montfort University, UK Written by one of the leading scholars in the field, British Trash Cinema is the first book to offer a comprehensive survey of the full range of British exploitation and paracinema, looking beyond horror and sexploitation, to social problem films, art house camp, ‘badaptations’, unregarded Hammer, erotic adaptations and private eye and spy films. August 2013 Hardback Paperback New 256pp $85.00 (C$98.00) $25.00 (C$29.00) 978-1-84457-416-2 978-1-84457-415-5 Colour Films in Britain British Colour Cinema The Negotiation of Innovation 1900-1955 Practices and Theories Sarah Street, Professor of Film, University of Bristol, UK Technical Appendix by Simon Brown ‘Sarah Street’s groundbreaking study is that rare film history text which is at once absolutely authoritative, and pitched at a very high level in terms of discourse, but still readily accessible to the general reader. In addition, the volume is richly — and I mean intensely – illustrated with numerous, exquisitely printed frame blowups from the many films it examines, all in full colour, and Street’s analysis of the development of colour, not only in the commercial British cinema, but also in the the experimental work of artists such as Len Lye, is meticulous and detailed.’ - Wheeler Winston Dixon, University of Nebraska-Lincoln, USA Sarah Street provides an economic, cultural and aesthetic study of commercial color films in Britain, from silent cinema to the 1950s, presenting a detailed history of color processes and a textual analysis of individual color films, including The Open Road and Black Narcissus, and their place in British film culture. November 2012 Hardback Paperback 22 Edited by Simon Brown, Director of Studies for Film and Television and New Broadcasting Media, Kingston University, UK, Sarah Street, Professor of Film, University of Bristol, UK and Liz Watkins, Lecturer, University of Leeds, UK 320pp $100.00 (C$115.00) 978-1-84457-313-4 $34.95 (C$39.95) 978-1-84457-312-7 Created as a companion volume to Colour Films in Britain, this book features a series of unique interviews conducted by Simon Brown, Sarah Street and Liz Watkins with practitioners who worked in the UK with Technicolor and/or Eastmancolor during the 1930s-1950s. June 2013 Hardback Paperback New 320pp $90.00 (C$104.00) $29.95 (C$43.50) 978-1-84457-414-8 978-1-84457-413-1 The Projection of Britain Ken Loach The British Cinema Book A History of the GPO Film Unit The Politics of Film and Television 3rd edition Edited by Scott Anthony, Journalist and Historian, Christ’s College, University of Cambridge, UK and James G. Mansell, Historian and Lecturer in Cultural Studies, University of Nottingham, UK ‘The Projection of Britain is, like the GPO Film Unit itself, a bold, fascinating, eccentric and ambitious endeavour... this is a fine tribute to an exciting and influential cultural project, and an essential companion to the films now available in lavishly packaged anthologies from the BFI.’ - Times Literary Supplement This beautifully illustrated volume provides a comprehensive resource guide to the films, filmmakers and social and cultural importance of the GPO Film Unit. In addition to original essays by leading film and cultural historians, the volume reprints rare archival material about the work of the Unit, as well as a GPO filmography and profiles of key figures. October 2011 Hardback Paperback 352pp $100.00 (C$115.00) 978-1-84457-375-2 $32.95 (C$37.95) 978-1-84457-374-5 John Hill, Professor of Media, Royal Holloway, University of London, UK ‘Not only offers a detailed critical study of virtually Loach’s entire output, but also explores the internal and external politics governing [the works’] production and reception, in often fascinating detail... [This is] clearly the most important addition to Loach scholarship since Graham Fuller’s booklength 1998 interview Loach on Loach.’ - Michael Brooke, Sight & Sound ‘Hill’s definitive study of Loach’s television and film production from the mid-1960s to the present combines first-rate primary research with insightful thematic analysis to situate the director and his work within the political, institutional, and artistic contexts that gave the work form.’ CHOICE John Hill’s definitive study looks at the career and work of British director Ken Loach. From his early television work (Cathy Come Home) through to landmark films (Kes) and examinations of British society (Looking For Eric) this landmark study reveals Loach as one of the great European directors. August 2011 Hardback Paperback 288pp $95.00 (C$109.00) $29.95 (C$34.50) Edited by Robert Murphy, Professor of Film Studies, De Montfort University, UK ‘The third edition of this excellent, illustrated collection of essays on British cinema provides an overview of the key issues, debates and history. First published in 1997, it has been expanded to include case studies of individual films, and several new essays on subjects such as the representation of women in 1950s cinema and the birth of British Asian cinema in the 90s. Its range is impressive.’ - Peter Smith, The Guardian ‘...a delightful gateway into the rich world of British cinema.’ - Simon Brown, Viewfinder The third edition of The British Cinema Book provides a comprehensive introduction to the history, key debates and genres in British cinema, from 1895 to the present. Individual articles by leading scholars are grouped in historical and thematic sections, illuminated by in-depth case studies of key films and a wealth of images. April 2009 Paperback 352pp $34.95 (C$39.95) 978-1-84457-275-5 978-1-84457-202-1 978-1-84457-203-8 23 The British ‘B’ Film Steve Chibnall, Professor of British Cinema at De Montfort University, UK and Brian McFarlane, Adjunct Associate Professor, Monash University, Melbourne, Australia and Visiting Professor, University of Hull, UK ‘Both an invocation and a loving catalogue, the book is rich in detail drawn from the history of the Bs before changing taste, alterations in the law and the irresistible rise of television rendered the species extinct.’ - Times Literary Supplement This is the first book to provide a thorough examination of the British ‘B’ movie, from the war years to the 1960s. The authors draw on archival research, contemporary trade papers and interviews with key ‘B’ filmmakers to map the ‘B’ movie phenomenon both as artefact and as industry product, and as a reflection on their times. British Film Posters An Illustrated History Sim Branaghan, Information Librarian and Steve Chibnall, Professor of British Cinema, De Montfort University, UK The first complete history of illustrated film posters in the UK covers every aspect of design, printing and display from the Victorian era to the arrival of DeskTop Publishing in the 1980s. British Film Posters examines the contribution ‘vintage’ film posters have made to British popular art of the twentieth century. Sign up to our newsletter to keep up-to-date with the latest publications, news and competitions A selected number of our books are available as ‘exam copies’ for professors teaching relevant courses, to assess the suitability of the books as recommended January 2007 Hardback Paperback 288pp $135.00 (C$155.00) 978-1-84457-148-2 $44.95 (C$51.95) 978-1-84457-221-2 reading to students. Visit www.palgrave.com for more information. November 2009 Hardback Paperback 24 368pp $90.00 (C$104.00) $31.95 (C$36.95) 978-1-84457-320-2 978-1-84457-319-6 european cinema The Italian Cinema Book Edited by Peter Bondanella, Distinguished Professor Emeritus of Comparative Literature, Film Studies and Italian, Indiana University, USA The Italian Cinema Book provides an accessible, dynamic, innovative guide to the major critical issues in the study of Italian cinema. It brings together some of the most distinguished and innovative scholars, critics, and film historians in the field to consider a number of historical, cultural, and theoretical issues. Moving beyond familiar approaches, the book showcases a number of new critical methodologies through detailed exploration of case studies and analysis of key filmic texts. Chapters span the history and evolution of the Italian film culture over a century. The silent era, the birth of ‘talkies’, realism during the Fascist period, the golden age of the art film, and the age of crisis up to 2010 are all discussed. The Italian Cinema Book offers a diverse range of original perspectives on the rise of Italian film stars, the structure of the film industry, the importance of the art and the genre film, and the representation of Italian culture and history in cinema. November 2013 Hardback Paperback 320pp $95.00 (C$109.00) 978-1-84457-405-6 $29.95 (C$34.50) 978-1-84457-404-9 Antonioni Nino Rota Centenary Essays Music, Film and Feeling Edited by Laura Rascaroli, Senior Lecturer in Film Studies, University College Cork, Republic of Ireland and John David Rhodes, Senior Lecturer in Literature and Visual Culture, University of Sussex, UK ‘The essays collected in this volume reappraise the centrality and continuing influence of Antonioni’s unique, demanding, and controversial language to world filmmakers. They testify that, even from a cultural and historical moment different from ours, his films can give us insights that allow to look with new eyes at the complexities and contradictions of late-modernity.’ - British Universities Film & Video Council Richard Dyer, King's College London, UK The great Italian composer Nino Rota wrote some of the loveliest and most beloved of all film music, including The Godfather trilogy, Zeffirelli’s Shakespeares and Fellini’s masterpieces 8 1/2 and La Dolce Vita. Richard Dyer’s study of Rota’s life and work provides a detailed account of Rota’s aesthetic and of his unique genius. September 2010 Hardback Paperback 232pp $85.00 (C$98.00) $25.95 (C$29.95) 978-1-84457-209-0 978-1-84457-210-6 This collection of essays by leading film scholars addresses Michelangelo Antonioni as a preeminent figure in European art cinema, explores his continuing influence and legacy, and engages with his ability to both interpret and shape ideas of modernity and modern cinema. December 2011 Hardback Paperback 344pp $95.00 (C$109.00) $30.95 (C$35.50) 978-1-84457-385-1 978-1-84457-384-4 New 25 The French New Wave The French Cinema Book Critical Landmarks Edited by Peter Graham, Critic and Writer and Ginette Vincendeau, Professor of Film Studies, King’s College London, UK ‘This is an indispensable point of reference for anyone interested in the movement.’ - Sight& Sound ‘...the re-printed essays in The French New Wave encapsulate an exciting time of cultural change with their fierce opinions and alternative approach towards reading film.’ - Scope This expanded edition of a classic anthology on the French New Wave features original writings by and interviews with filmmakers and critics such as Godard, Truffaut and Bazin. Some newly translated for this edition, they are accompanied by critical and contextualizing commentary by the editors, leading authorities in the field. May 2009 Hardback Paperback 288pp $90.00 (C$104.00) $26.95 (C$31.00) 978-1-84457-283-0 978-1-84457-282-3 Edited by Michael Witt, University of Surrey, UK and Michael Temple, Birkbeck College, University of London, UK ‘French cinema has... been the subject of numerous academic studies over the years, but I doubt if any offer quite such an accessible and arresting introduction as The French Cinema Book. Its editors, Michael Temple and Michael Witt, state that the 25 contributors pledged to avoid the academic jargon and footnotes, and the approach has produced wonderful results.’ - Christopher Wood, Times Higher Education Supplement The French Cinema Book is addressed to all lovers of French cinema, students and teachers, specialists and fans. It provides not only an accessible and innovative survey of key topics in French cinema from the 1890s to the twenty-first century but also new insights into familiar areas and sets out a fresh agenda for the study and appreciation of French cinema. February 2008 Paperback 294pp $32.95 (C$37.95) 26 The German Cinema Book 978-1-84457-012-6 Edited by Tim Bergfelder, Lecturer in Film Studies, University of Southampton, UK, Erica Carter, Professor of Film Studies and German, Kings College London, UK and Deniz Göktürk, Associate Professor of German, University of California, Berkeley, USA The German Cinema Book brings together film specialists from Europe and the United States to explore German film history from the late nineteenth to the early twenty-first century. This comprehensive and accessible book re-evaluates traditional areas of interest in German Cinema (such as Weimar cinema, Nazi propaganda, New German Cinema) and complements this with a fresh look at hitherto neglected aspects, including Early Cinema, the cinema of the GDR, popular genre traditions, questions of national cinema and identity, and German film’s transnational connections to Hollywood, as well as to exile and migrant cinemas. January 2003 Paperback 304pp $29.95 (C$34.50) 978-0-85170-946-8 WORLD CINEMA INTERNATIONAL SCREEN INDUSTRIES The Chinese Cinema Book Edited by Song Hwee Lim, University of Exeter, UK and Founding Editor, Journal of Chinese Cinemas and Julian Ward, University of Edinburgh, UK and Associate Editor, Journal of Chinese Cinemas The Chinese Cinema Book provides an essential guide to the cinemas of the People’s Republic of China, Hong Kong, Taiwan and the Chinese diaspora, from early cinema to the present day. With contributions from leading international scholars, the book is structured around five thematic sections: Territories, Trajectories, Historiographies; Early Cinema to 1949; The Forgotten Period: 1949–80; The New Waves; and Stars, Auteurs and Genres. This important collection addresses issues of film production and exhibition and places Chinese cinema in its national and transnational contexts. Individual chapters examine major film movements such as the Shanghai cinema of the 1930s, Fifth Generation film-makers and the Hong Kong New Wave, as well as key issues such as stars and auteurs. The book will be an invaluable resource for students and scholars, as well as for anyone wanting to deepen their understanding of the cinemas of Greater China. June 2011 Hardback Paperback 232pp $95.00 (C$109.00) $28.95 (C$33.50) 978-1-84457-345-5 978-1-84457-344-8 Series Editors: Michael Curtin, University of California, Santa Barbara, USA and Paul McDonald, University of Nottingham, UK Hollywood in the New Millennium The American Television Industry Tino Balio, Emeritus Professor of Communication Arts, University of Wisconsin-Madison, USA This book examines the challenges facing the contemporary film industry. It explores the merging of the major old-line studios such as Warner Bros. and Paramount into entertainment conglomerates, the impact of globalization, new distribution methods, franchises, and attempts to reach new markets. Filled with case studies, this comprehensive study is a must-read. May 2013 Hardback Paperback 176pp $85.00 (C$98.00) $25.00 (C$29.00) 978-1-84457-381-3 978-1-84457-380-6 Michael Curtin, Mellichamp Professor of Global Media, Department of Film and Media Studies, University of California, Santa Barbara, USA and Jane Shattuc, Professor of Visual and Media Arts, Emerson College, USA Two high profile US television scholars provide a concise and accessible introduction to TV production, programming, advertising, and distribution in the United States. This up-to-date study incorporates recent developments and current issues, and includes useful case studies and illustrations. December 2009 Hardback Paperback 208pp $90.00 (C$104.00) $28.95 (C$33.50) 978-1-84457-338-7 978-1-84457-337-0 New 27 FILM MAKERS Warhol in Ten Takes Edited by Glyn Davis, University of Edinburgh, UK and Gary Needham, Senior Lecturer in Film and Television, Nottingham Trent University, UK A collection of ten essays by leading scholars of film, art and culture which provide fresh and unique perspectives on the cinema of Andy Warhol. Drawing on original research in the Warhol archives, this unique volume casts new light on Warhol’s filmmaking career and offers new insights and contexts for a number of the director’s films. September 2013 Hardback Paperback 224pp $95.00 (C$109.00) $24.95 (C$28.95) 978-1-84457-402-5 978-1-84457-401-8 BFI WORLD DIRECTORS Baz Luhrmann Lars von Trier Pam Cook, Professor Emerita in Film, University of Southampton, UK This is the first major book-length study of the work of Australian filmmaker Baz Luhrmann, one of the most exciting and controversial personalities working in World Cinema today. May 2010 Hardback Paperback 216pp $90.00 (C$104.00) $27.95 (C$31.95) 978-1-84457-157-4 978-1-84457-158-1 Jack Stevenson, American Critic, Curator and Lecturer With the international success of Breaking the Waves and Dancer in the Dark, Lars von Trier has established himself as one of the most provocative and daring film directors. In this study, Jack Stevenson explores the achievements as well as the paradoxes of Lars von Trier. September 2008 Hardback Paperback New Also available in the series: Pedro Almodovar, by Ernesto Acevedo-Muñoz Wong Kar-Wai, by Stephen Teo 28 232pp $90.00 (C$104.00) $27.95 (C$31.95) 978-0-85170-902-4 978-0-85170-903-1 TELEVISION studies No Known Cure Small Screen Aesthetics The Comedy of Chris Morris From Television to the Internet Edited by James Leggott and Jamie Sexton, Senior Lecturers in Film and Television Studies, Northumbria University, UK Chris Morris is one of the most singular and controversial figures in recent UK media, at one point being described as the ‘most hated man in Britain’ for his corrosive media satire. With shows such as the notorious spoof Brass Eye, this writer, performer, DJ and director has not only pushed boundaries of taste and acceptability, but altered perceptions of current affairs broadcasting, moral panics and celebrity culture. At the same time, cult programs such as Blue Jam, Jam and Nathan Barley have pushed conventional comedy formats such as sketch comedy and sitcom to the limits of possibility. In the first full-length scholarly book on the comedy of Chris Morris, writers discuss his early DJ career, his pioneering radio satire, his television mockumentary, his experimental black comedy and his more recent move into filmmaking. No Known Cure approaches the work of Chris Morris from a diverse range of perspectives in order to fully grapple with his wide-ranging and groundbreaking media output. June 2013 Hardback Paperback New 272pp $90.00 (C$104.00) $28.95 (C$28.95) Reality Television and Class Edited by Helen Wood, Reader in Media and Communication, De Montfort University, UK and Beverley Skeggs, Professor of Sociology, Goldsmiths, University of London, UK Glen Creeber, Senior Lecturer in Film and Television Studies, University of Wales, Aberystwyth, UK This new study provides an introduction to tv aesthetics and viewership from the 1940s to the present day, at a time when television as a medium is ‘converging’ with the PC and laptop. August 2013 Hardback Paperback New 256pp $90.00 (C$104.00) $28.95 (C$33.50) 978-1-84457-410-0 978-1-84457-409-4 This is the first book about reality television to make class its central focus. Despite popular and media debate about the ‘classed’ behavior of reality stars such as Jade Goody and Shilpa Shetty, and the class confrontations depicted in shows such as Wife Swap, class politics have been overlooked in much political and academic discussion of reality television. In their introduction, the editors spell out how reality television – by making visible new forms of performance labor – invites a serious discussion of class. Internationally-renowned media scholars and sociologists explore the ways in which ‘ordinary people’ enter the television frame, and how discourses of class are routed through national concerns and fears. December 2011 Hardback Paperback 264pp $90.00 (C$104.00) $28.95 (C$33.50) 978-1-84457-398-1 978-1-84457-397-4 978-1-84457-480-3 978-1-84457-479-7 29 The Television Genre Book Tele-visions 2nd edition An Introduction to Studying Television Edited by Glen Creeber, Senior Lecturer in Film and Television Studies, University of Wales, Aberystwyth, UK This key text brings together leading scholars to provide an accessible and comprehensive introduction to the debates, issues and concerns of television genre. It is structured in eleven sections which introduce the concept of ‘genre’ itself and how it has been understood in television studies, and then addresses in turn key genres: drama, soap opera, children’s television, animation, prime time and day time. Each section is illustrated throughout with case studies of classic and contemporary programming. January 2009 Hardback Paperback 30 240pp $105.00 (C$121.00) 978-1-84457-217-5 $27.95 (C$31.95) 978-1-84457-218-2 Glen Creeber, Senior Lecturer in Film and Television Studies, University of Wales, Aberystwyth, UK An authoritative introductory guide to television studies written by many of the key international figures in the field. Gives an insight to how television is produced, broadcast, controlled, consumed and critically examined and offers an expansive and clearly structured account of both how and why we study television. May 2006 Paperback 208pp $32.95 (C$37.95) 978-1-84457-086-7 A selected number of our books are available as ‘exam copies’ for professors teaching relevant courses, to assess the suitability of the books as recommended reading to students. Visit www.palgrave.com for more information. 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