This book consists of 50 categories arranged in alphabetical order centred on film modernism. Each category, though autonomous, interacts, intersects, juxtaposes with the others, entering into a dialogue with them and in so doing creates connections, illuminations, associations and rhymes which may not have arisen in a more conventional framework. The categories refer to particular films and directors that raise questions related to modernism, and, inevitably thereby to classicism. The book is more in the way of questions and speculations than answers and conclusions. Its intention is to stimulate not simply by the substance of what is said, but by the way it is said and structured. Most attention is given to the works of Michelangelo Antonioni, Bernardo Bertolucci, John Ford, Jean-Luc Godard, Howard Hawks, Alfred Hitchcock, João César Monteiro, Pier Paolo Pasolini, Nicholas Ray, Alain Resnais, Roberto Rossellini, Luchino Visconti and Orson Welles. The apparent arbitrary order and openness of the book, based as it is on the alphabet is indebted to Jean-Luc Godard’s interrogation of History and of film history especially true in his stunning Histoire(s) du cinema.
Author(s): Sam Rohdie
Publisher: Manchester University Press
Year: 2015
Film modernism
Copyright
Contents
Foreword
Acknowledgements
Introduction
Allegory
Ambulation
Archive
Arrangements
Authorship
Bodies
Bricolage
Characters
Classicism
Colour
Contradiction
Desire
Destructuring
Drama
Duplication
Elsewhere
Film noir
Frames
History
Images
Immediacy
Inertia
Insufficiency
Investigations (1)
Investigations (2)
Language
Levels
Masquerade
Melodrama
Minimalism
Mise en scène
Modernity
Montage (1)
Montage (2)
Museum
Myth
Narrative
Networks
Nowhere
Pop
Portraiture
Randomness
Realism (1)
Realism (2)
Realities
Reproduction
Returns
Theatre
Time
Truth
Vertigo
Voyages (1)
Voyages (2)
Writing
Bibliography
Filmography