The hero stands on stage in high-definition 3-D while doubled on a crude pixel screen in Billy Lynn’s Long Halftime Walk. Alien ships leave Earth by dissolving at the conclusion of Arrival. An illusory death spiral in Vertigo transitions abruptly to a studio set, jolting the spectator. These are a few of the startling visual moments that Garrett Stewart examines in Cinemachines, a compelling, powerful, and witty book about the cultural and mechanical apparatuses that underlie modern cinema.
Engaging in fresh ways with revelatory special effects in the history of cinematic storytelling—from Buster Keaton’s breaching of the film screen in Sherlock Jr. to the pixel disintegration of a remotely projected hologram in Blade Runner 2049—Stewart’s book puts unprecedented emphasis on technique in moving image narrative. Complicating and revising the discourse on historical screen processes, Cinemachines will be crucial reading for anyone interested in the evolution of the movies from a celluloid to a digital medium.
Author(s): Garrett Stewart
Publisher: University of Chicago Press
Year: 2020
Language: English
Pages: vi+194
Contents
Prelude: Advance Press
1. Sneak Preview: Past the Apparatus?
2. Production Notes: Tech Specs
3. Featurette: The Making of a Medium
4. Rerun Triple Bill: Kinks of Comedy
5. VFX Festival: SF and Beyond
6. Omnibus Review: On the Technopoetics of CGI
PostScript: Special AffX
Notes
Index