The End Of Cinema As We Know It : : American Film in the Nineties / / ed. by Jon Lewis.

Almost half a century ago, Jean-Luc Godard famously remarked, "I await the end of cinema with optimism." Lots of us have been waiting forand wondering aboutthis prophecy ever since. The way films are made and exhibited has changed significantly. Films, some of which are not exactly "f...

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Superior document:Title is part of eBook package: De Gruyter New York University Press Backlist eBook-Package 2000-2013
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HerausgeberIn:
Place / Publishing House:New York, NY : : New York University Press, , [2001]
©2001
Year of Publication:2001
Language:English
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Physical Description:1 online resource
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Table of Contents:
  • Frontmatter
  • Contents
  • The End of Cinema As We Know It and I Feel . . .: An Introduction to a Book on Nineties American Film
  • PART I MOVIES, MONEY, AND HISTORY
  • 1 The Blockbuster: Everything Connects, but Not Everything Goes
  • 2 Those Who Disagree Can Kiss Jack Valenti’s Ass
  • 3 The Hollywood History Business
  • 4 The Man Who Wanted to Go Back
  • PART II THINGS AMERICAN (SORT OF)
  • 5 “American” Cinema in the 1990s and Beyond: Whose Country’s Filmmaking Is It Anyway?
  • 6 Marketing Marginalized Cultures: The Wedding Banquet, Cultural Identities, and Independent Cinema of the 1990s
  • 7 Hollywood Redux: All about My Mother and Gladiator
  • 8 The Zen of Masculinity—Rituals of Heroism in The Matrix
  • 9 Ikea Boy Fights Back: Fight Club, Consumerism, and the Political Limits of Nineties Cinema
  • 10 The Blair Witch Project, Macbeth, and the Indeterminate End
  • 11 Empire of the Gun: Steven Spielberg’s Saving Private Ryan and American Chauvinism
  • 12 Saving Private Ryan Too Late
  • PART IV PICTURES AND POLITICS
  • 13 The Confusions of Warren Beatty
  • 14 Movie Star Presidents
  • 15 The Fantasy Image: Fixed and Moving
  • 16 Men with Guns: The Story John Sayles Can’t Tell
  • 17 The End of Chicano Cinema
  • PART V THE END OF MASCULINITY AS WE KNOW IT
  • 18 Being Keanu
  • 19 Woody Allen,“the Artist,” and “the Little Girl”
  • 20 Affliction: When Paranoid Male Narratives Fail
  • 21 The Phallus UnFetished: The End of Masculinity As We Know It in Late-1990s “Feminist” Cinema
  • PART VI BODIES AT REST AND IN MOTION
  • 22 Bods and Monsters: The Return of the Bride of Frankenstein
  • 23 Having Their Cake and Eating It Too: Fat Acceptance Films and the Production of Meaning
  • PART VII INDEPENDENTS
  • 24 A Rant
  • 25 The Case of Harmony Korine
  • 26 Where Hollywood Fears to Tread: Autobiography and the Limits of Commercial Cinema
  • 27 Smoke ’til You’re Blue in the Face
  • PART VIII NOT FILMS EXACTLY
  • 28 Pamela Anderson on the Slippery Slope
  • 29 King Rodney: The Rodney King Video and Textual Analysis
  • 30 Live Video
  • PART IX ENDGAMES
  • 31 End of Story: The Collapse of Myth in Postmodern Narrative Film
  • 32 Waiting for the End of the World: Christian Apocalyptic Media at the Turn of the Millennium
  • 33 The Four Last Things: History, Technology, Hollywood, Apocalypse
  • 34 Twenty-five Reasons Why It’s All Over
  • Contributors
  • Index