French Film in the Blockbuster Era: Globalization and the Cultural Politics of a Popular Cinema

Author:   Charlie Michael
Publisher:   Edinburgh University Press
ISBN:  

9781474424233


Pages:   224
Publication Date:   31 July 2019
Format:   Hardback
Availability:   In Print   Availability explained
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French Film in the Blockbuster Era: Globalization and the Cultural Politics of a Popular Cinema


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Author:   Charlie Michael
Publisher:   Edinburgh University Press
Imprint:   Edinburgh University Press
ISBN:  

9781474424233


ISBN 10:   1474424236
Pages:   224
Publication Date:   31 July 2019
Audience:   College/higher education ,  Postgraduate, Research & Scholarly
Format:   Hardback
Publisher's Status:   Active
Availability:   In Print   Availability explained
This item will be ordered in for you from one of our suppliers. Upon receipt, we will promptly dispatch it out to you. For in store availability, please contact us.

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Reviews

Expose(s) the fissures of a nation deeply concerned with its status globally yet one that tends to favour culturally approved notions of French cinema as auteur cinema in favour of popular fare that is more aligned with popular tastes. --Elizabeth Miller ""French ScreenStudies"" [An] original book in English that offers fresh readings of the local/global and popular/art cinema tensions found in the French industry, often adopting a comparative approach (combining for example French perspectives and those of Anglo-American audiences and film scholars). --Isabelle Vanderschelden, Manchester Metropolitan University ""Modern & Contemporary France, 2020"" Balancing an array of historical influences, Michael gives us a new language for navigating the internal conflicts that have marked a period of dynamic change, and when the intermittent success stories of 'big' films became fodder for debate about what forms of recognition (both economic and symbolic) are most appropriate for a national industry with transnational ambitions. Written briskly like a behind-the-scenes saga, this original book will challenge the preconceptions of anyone who thinks that notions of 'French cinema' and 'blockbusters' should remain diametrically opposed. --Professor Frédéric Gimello-Mesplomb, University of Avignon For a number of years now, Charlie Michael has been exploring the cultural paradoxes of French blockbusters, questioning their place within the French film industry, their international reception and the policies underlying their production. [...] French Blockbusters convincingly reaffirms the vitality of the commercial strand French cinema and its presence worldwide. --Isabelle Vanderschelden, Manchester Metropolitan University ""Modern & Contemporary France 28.3"" French Blockbusters provides a well-informed, intelligent and engaging discussion of the cultural politics of an increasingly significant trend in French film production. The analysis deftly blends theory, factual detail and commentary in a discussion that represents a welcome development in Anglophone research on Francophone cinema. Michael's work is innovative, accomplished and important. --Dr Hugh Dauncey, Newcastle University Michael's book is certainly relevant for anyone interested in the recent history of the French film industry and how economic policy and cultural politics have shaped recent filmmaking practices in France. [...] it gives the relevant cultural and political histories while also foregrounding how to read blockbuster hits as texts themselves, which, as Michael demonstrates, do have artistic approaches worthy of such analysis. --Mackenzie Leadston, The Ohio State University ""Contemporary French Civilization 45.3-4"" This book is perfect for 200- and 300-level global media classes that seek to interrogate and enlarge the category of ""popular"" cinema. It adroitly weaves together cinema history, media industry studies, and cultural policy. This book is a novel and groundbreaking way to illustrate the effects and implications of the cultural exemption in international trade policy. The work is valuable because attention to French popular cinema is sadly all too rare, despite its impact, viewership, and effects on labor, policy, and global Francophone media flows. I highly recommend that people teaching undergraduate global media courses use Michael's book to help our students revise their understandings of European media systems, content forms, policy debates, and industrial strategy. --Professor Benjamin Aslinger, Bentley University This is an exciting, well-researched, and urgent retelling of the tropes and trajectories of contemporary French transnational, blockbuster cinema. Michael's rich case studies, confident grasp of political and cultural theory, and engaging, fluid writing style make for a compelling account of France's dalliance with big-budget cinema. His engagement with current sources and methodologies is excellent (each end-of-chapter bibliography is impressively extensive), while the use of box-office statistics, specific production histories, and the reception of the chosen films add much-needed contextual data. French Blockbusters is ultimately all about a series of tense, strategic compromises that the industry has made since the 1980s, and how the emergence of new types of genre films (comedies, action, martial arts, parkour) has encouraged it to ""go global.""--Ben McCann ""H-France Review""


"Expose(s) the fissures of a nation deeply concerned with its status globally yet one that tends to favour culturally approved notions of French cinema as auteur cinema in favour of popular fare that is more aligned with popular tastes. --Elizabeth Miller ""French ScreenStudies"" [An] original book in English that offers fresh readings of the local/global and popular/art cinema tensions found in the French industry, often adopting a comparative approach (combining for example French perspectives and those of Anglo-American audiences and film scholars). --Isabelle Vanderschelden, Manchester Metropolitan University ""Modern & Contemporary France, 2020"" Balancing an array of historical influences, Michael gives us a new language for navigating the internal conflicts that have marked a period of dynamic change, and when the intermittent success stories of 'big' films became fodder for debate about what forms of recognition (both economic and symbolic) are most appropriate for a national industry with transnational ambitions. Written briskly like a behind-the-scenes saga, this original book will challenge the preconceptions of anyone who thinks that notions of 'French cinema' and 'blockbusters' should remain diametrically opposed. --Professor Fr�d�ric Gimello-Mesplomb, University of Avignon For a number of years now, Charlie Michael has been exploring the cultural paradoxes of French blockbusters, questioning their place within the French film industry, their international reception and the policies underlying their production. [...] French Blockbusters convincingly reaffirms the vitality of the commercial strand French cinema and its presence worldwide. --Isabelle Vanderschelden, Manchester Metropolitan University ""Modern & Contemporary France 28.3"" French Blockbusters provides a well-informed, intelligent and engaging discussion of the cultural politics of an increasingly significant trend in French film production. The analysis deftly blends theory, factual detail and commentary in a discussion that represents a welcome development in Anglophone research on Francophone cinema. Michael's work is innovative, accomplished and important. --Dr Hugh Dauncey, Newcastle University Michael's book is certainly relevant for anyone interested in the recent history of the French film industry and how economic policy and cultural politics have shaped recent filmmaking practices in France. [...] it gives the relevant cultural and political histories while also foregrounding how to read blockbuster hits as texts themselves, which, as Michael demonstrates, do have artistic approaches worthy of such analysis. --Mackenzie Leadston, The Ohio State University ""Contemporary French Civilization 45.3-4"" This book is perfect for 200- and 300-level global media classes that seek to interrogate and enlarge the category of ""popular"" cinema. It adroitly weaves together cinema history, media industry studies, and cultural policy. This book is a novel and groundbreaking way to illustrate the effects and implications of the cultural exemption in international trade policy. The work is valuable because attention to French popular cinema is sadly all too rare, despite its impact, viewership, and effects on labor, policy, and global Francophone media flows. I highly recommend that people teaching undergraduate global media courses use Michael's book to help our students revise their understandings of European media systems, content forms, policy debates, and industrial strategy. --Professor Benjamin Aslinger, Bentley University This is an exciting, well-researched, and urgent retelling of the tropes and trajectories of contemporary French transnational, blockbuster cinema. Michael's rich case studies, confident grasp of political and cultural theory, and engaging, fluid writing style make for a compelling account of France's dalliance with big-budget cinema. His engagement with current sources and methodologies is excellent (each end-of-chapter bibliography is impressively extensive), while the use of box-office statistics, specific production histories, and the reception of the chosen films add much-needed contextual data. French Blockbusters is ultimately all about a series of tense, strategic compromises that the industry has made since the 1980s, and how the emergence of new types of genre films (comedies, action, martial arts, parkour) has encouraged it to ""go global.""--Ben McCann ""H-France Review"""


Author Information

Charlie Michael earned his PhD in Film Studies from the University of Wisconsin-Madison and currently teaches cinema and media studies courses at several institutions in the Atlanta area. He co-edited the Directory of World Cinema: France (Intellect, 2013) and his work has also appeared in SubStance, The Velvet Light Trap, Quebec Studies, French Politics, Culture & Society, and A Companion to Contemporary French Cinema.

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