Britton on film : the complete film criticism of Andrew Britton / edited by Barry Keith Grant ; with an introduction by Robin Wood.
2009
PN1994 .B68 2009
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Details
Title
Britton on film : the complete film criticism of Andrew Britton / edited by Barry Keith Grant ; with an introduction by Robin Wood.
Author
ISBN
9780814335505 (electronic bk.)
0814335500 (electronic bk.)
0814335500
9780814333631 (pbk. ; alk. paper)
081433363X (pbk. ; alk. paper)
0814335500 (electronic bk.)
0814335500
9780814333631 (pbk. ; alk. paper)
081433363X (pbk. ; alk. paper)
Imprint
Detroit : Wayne State University Press, ©2009.
Language
English
Language Note
English.
Description
1 online resource (xviii, 533 pages) : illustrations
Call Number
PN1994 .B68 2009
System Control No.
(OCoLC)835415368
Summary
"For fifteen years before his untimely death, Andrew Britton produced a body of undeniably brilliant film criticism that has been largely ignored within academic circles. Though Britton's writings are extraordinary in their depth and range and are closely attuned to the nuances of the texts they examine, his humanistic approach was at odds with typical theory-based film scholarship. Britton on Film demonstrates that Britton's humanism is also his strength, as it presents all of his published writings together for the first time, including Britton's persuasive readings of such important Hollywood films as Meet Me in St. Louis, Spellbound, and Now, Voyager and of key European filmmakers such as Sergei Eisenstein, Jean-Luc Godard, and Bernardo Bertolucci." "Renowned film scholar and editor Barry Keith Grant has assembled all of Britton's published essays of film criticism and theory for this volume, spanning the late 1970s to the early 1990s. The essays are arranged by theme: Hollywood cinema, Hollywood movies, European cinema, and film and cultural theory. In all, twenty-eight essays consider such varied films as Hitchcock's Spellbound, Jaws, The Exorcist, and Mandingo and topics as diverse as formalism, camp, psychoanalysis, imperialism, and feminism. Included are such well-known and important pieces as "Blissing Out: The Politics of Reaganite Entertainment" and "Sideshows: Hollywood in Vietnam," among the most perceptive discussions of these two periods of Hollywood history yet published. In addition, Britton's critiques of the ideology of Screen and Wisconsin formalism display his uncommon grasp of theory even when arguing against prevailing critical trends." "An introduction by influential film critic Robin Wood, who was also Britton's teacher and friend, begins this landmark collection. Students and teachers of film studies as well as general readers interested in film and American popular culture will enjoy Britton on Film."--Jacket.
Bibliography, etc. Note
Includes bibliographical references (pages 509-519) and index.
Formatted Contents Note
Cary Grant: comedy and male desire
A new servitude: Bette Davis, Now, voyager, and the radicalism of the woman's film
The devil, probably: the symbolism of evil
Sideshows: Hollywood in Vietnam
Blissing out: the politics of Reaganite entertainment
Meet me in St. Louis: Smith, or The ambiguities
Alfred Hitchcock's Spellbound: text and countertext
Detour
Notes on Pursued
The family in The reckless moment
The exorcist
Jaws
Mandingo
10
The great Waldo Pepper
The other side of midnight
Sexuality and power, or the two others
Their finest hour: Humphrey Jennings and the British imperial myth of World War II
Metaphor and mimesis: Madame de ...
Thinking about father: Bernardo Bertolucci
Living historically: two films by Jean-Luc Godard
"Foxed": Fox and his friends
In defense of criticism
For interpretation: notes against camp
The ideology of Screen
The philosophy of the pigeonhole: Wisconsin formalism and "the classical style"
The myth of postmodernism: the bourgeois intelligentsia in the age of Reagan
Consuming culture: the development of a theoretical orthodoxy.
A new servitude: Bette Davis, Now, voyager, and the radicalism of the woman's film
The devil, probably: the symbolism of evil
Sideshows: Hollywood in Vietnam
Blissing out: the politics of Reaganite entertainment
Meet me in St. Louis: Smith, or The ambiguities
Alfred Hitchcock's Spellbound: text and countertext
Detour
Notes on Pursued
The family in The reckless moment
The exorcist
Jaws
Mandingo
10
The great Waldo Pepper
The other side of midnight
Sexuality and power, or the two others
Their finest hour: Humphrey Jennings and the British imperial myth of World War II
Metaphor and mimesis: Madame de ...
Thinking about father: Bernardo Bertolucci
Living historically: two films by Jean-Luc Godard
"Foxed": Fox and his friends
In defense of criticism
For interpretation: notes against camp
The ideology of Screen
The philosophy of the pigeonhole: Wisconsin formalism and "the classical style"
The myth of postmodernism: the bourgeois intelligentsia in the age of Reagan
Consuming culture: the development of a theoretical orthodoxy.
Source of Description
Print version record.
Added Author
Series
Contemporary approaches to film and television series.
Available in Other Form
Print version: Britton, Andrew, 1952-1994. Britton on film. Detroit : Wayne State University Press, ©2009
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