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OverviewVolker Schlndorff's Cinema: Adaptation, Politics and the Movie-Appropriate examines the work of major postwar German director Volker Schlndorff in historical, economic, and artistic contexts. Incorporating a film-by-film, twenty-eight chapter study, Hans-Bernhard Moeller & George Lellis reveal a complexity and formal ambitiousness of Schlndorff that is comparable to that found in Wenders, Herzog, and Fassbinder. In spite of Schlndorff's successes with films like The Lost Honor of Katharina Blum and The Tin Drum, as well as his acclaimed work in the U.S. with Death of a Salesman, Gathering of Old Men and The Handmaid's Tale, this is the first in-depth critical study of the filmmaker's career. In the context of film and television history, this book relates Schlndorff's oeuvre to the New German Cinema, to his formative years as a student and production assistant in France, and to his roots in the Weimar cinema's tradition. It reveals how Schlndorff entered into the German film production system in the 1960s, how he came to rely on German public television in the 1970s, and then moved to the international and American financing in the 1980s, attempting to redevelop the Babelsberg studios in a 1990s post-Wall Germany while continuing to make his own films into the 21st century. The book captures how Schlndorff's nearly half century of ongoing creativity and productivity ties together. The authors analyze the artistry of each Schlndorff movie arguing that his output as a whole embodies a provocative and sometimes contradictory set of balances. Schlndorff combines commercial interest with significant artistic ambition, blends the kinesthetic pleasures of moving images with the seriousness of fine literature, links the intensity of individualized personal experience to an awareness of broader political issues, and represents a specifically German sensibility even as he reaches out to the international audiences. The authors demonstrate the cyclical recurrence in his cinema of certain themes (individual and collective rebellion, fascist suppression, masochistic love), narrative patterns (the Western, the thriller, the subjective mood piece), and stylistic approaches (Brechtian Verfremdung, the creation of careful leitmotif structures, the use of the grotesque). In over thirty years of filmmaking, Schlndorff has produced a remarkable unified body of work that deserves the attention of a book-length study. Authors Hans-Bernhard Moeller and George Lellis offer the first such study of its kind. Volker Schlndorff's Cinema: Adaptation, Politics, and the Movie-Appropriate features forty-one illustrations. Full Product DetailsAuthor: Hans Bernhard Moeller , George L LellisPublisher: Not Avail Imprint: Not Avail ISBN: 9786613901309ISBN 10: 661390130 Pages: 384 Publication Date: 30 August 2002 Audience: General/trade , General Format: Electronic book text Publisher's Status: Active Availability: In stock We have confirmation that this item is in stock with the supplier. It will be ordered in for you and dispatched immediately. Table of ContentsReviewsAuthor InformationTab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |