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The city has long been an important location for filmmakers. Visually compelling and always modern, it is the perfect metaphor for mans place in the contemporary world.
In this provocative collection of essays, films as diverse as The Man with the Movie Camera, Annie Hall, Street of Crocodiles, Boyz N the Hood, Three Colors Red, and Crash are examined in terms of the relationship between cinema and the changing urban experience in Europe and the United States since the early twentieth century. Peter Jelavich, for example, links the suppression of the creative, liberal Weimar Berlin in the 1931 film Berlin Alexanderplatz to the rise of the Nazi regime and the end of one of the great eras of modernist experimentation in German visual culture; Jessie Labov considers Kieslowskis treatment of the Warsaw housing blok in Dekalog in terms of Solidaritys strategy of resisting totalitarianism in 1980s Poland; Allan Siegel examines the motif of the city in a broad range of American and international cinema to demonstrate how film and society since the 1960s have been driven by the fading of mass political radicalism and the triumph of privatization and capital; Paula Massood uses the socially illuminating theories of Mikhail Bakhtin to examine the representation of the ghetto and urban underclass in recent African-American films such as Menace II Society; and Matthew Gandy examines the focus on disease in Todd Hayness [Safe] as a metaphor for social and spatial breakdown in contemporary Los Angeles.
Mark Shiel is Lecturer in Film Studies at the Department of History of Art and the Centre for American Studies at the University of Leicester. Tony Fitzmaurice is College Lecturer in Film Studies at the Centre for Film Studies/UCD School of Film, University College Dublin. |
Publication
Feb. 2003
312 pages
24 b/w photographs
Paper
1 85984 476 6
US$20 / £14 / CAN$29
Cloth
1 85984 690 4
US$60 / £40 / CAN$87


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