Film Viewers Guide / Edition 7

Film Viewers Guide / Edition 7

by David Bordwell
ISBN-10:
0072484578
ISBN-13:
2900072484570
Pub. Date:
07/10/2003
Publisher:
McGraw-Hill Companies, The
Film Viewers Guide / Edition 7

Film Viewers Guide / Edition 7

by David Bordwell
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Overview

Packaged free with each copy of Film Art, this new guide by David Bordwell explains how to analyze and write about films.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 2900072484570
Publisher: McGraw-Hill Companies, The
Publication date: 07/10/2003
Edition description: New Edition
Pages: 34
Product dimensions: 6.00(w) x 1.25(h) x 9.00(d)

About the Author

David Bordwell is Jacques Ledoux Professor of Film Studies at the University of Wisconsin-Madison. He holds a master's degree and a doctorate from the University of Iowa. He is the author of The Films of Carl Theodor Dreyer (University California Press, 1981), Narration in the Fiction Film (University Wisconsin Press, 1985), Ozu and the Poetics of Cinema (British Film Institute/Princeton University Press, 1988), Making Meaning: Inference and Rhetoric in the Interpretation of Cinema (Harvard University Press, 1989), The Cinema of Eisenstein (Harvard University Press, 1993), On the History of Film Style (Harvard University Press, 1997) and Planet Hong Kong: Popular Cinema and the Art of Entertainment (Harvard University Press, 2000). He has won a University Distinguished Teaching Award.

Kristin Thompson is an Honorary Fellow at the University of Wisconsin - Madison. She holds a master's degree in film from the University of Iowa and a doctorate in film from the University of Wisconsin - Madison. She has published Eisenstein's Ivan the Terrible (Princeton University Press, 1981), Exporting Entertainment: America's Place in World Film Markets, 1907-1934 (British Film Institute, 1985), Breaking the Glass Armor: Neoformalist Film Analysis (Princeton University Press, 1988), Wooster Proposes, Jeeves Disposes; or Le Mot Juste (James H. Heinman, 1992), Storytelling in the New Hollywood (Harvard University Press, 1999), Storytelling in Film and Television (Harvard University Press, 2003), and Herr Lubitsch Goes to Hollywood: German and American Film after World War I (University of Amsterdam, 2005). In her sparetime she studies Egyptology.

The authors have collaborated on Film History (McGraw-Hill, 1994) with Janet Staiger, on The Classical Hollywood Cinema (Columbia University Press, 1985) and Storytelling in the New Hollywood (Harvard University Press, 1999).

Table of Contents

Part One:Film Production, Distribution,and Exhibition

Chapter One:Film Production, Distribution,and Exhibition

Part Two:Film Form

Chapter Two:The Significance of Film Form

Chapter Three:Narrative as a Formal System

Part Three:Types of Films

Chapter Four:Film Genres

Chapter Five:Documentary,Experimental,and Animated Films

Part Four:Film Style

Chapter Six:The Shot:Mise-en-Scene

Chapter Seven:The Shot:Cinematography

Chapter Eight:The Realation of Shot to Shot:Editing

Chapter Nine:Sound in the Cinema

Chapter Ten:Style as a Formal System

Part Five:Critical Analysis of Films

Chapter Eleven:Film Criticism:Sample Analyses

Part Six:Film History

Chapter Twelve:Film Form and Film HistoryGlossaryInternet Resources:CreditsIndex

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