This chapter reflects on the ways in which the reputation of the British film director Nicolas Roeg has developed from the 1970s through to the twenty-first century, and considers how this might tell us interesting things about the discursive and cultural frameworks that shape particular films (and the critical reception of them) historically within the contexts of British art cinema. Looking specifically at Performance (co-directed with Donald Cammell, 1970) and Don’t Look Now (1973), it argues that through an engagement with the ancillary discourses that have circulated around Roeg’s reputation and the reputation of the films he has worked on over the last fifty years we might develop a more nuanced understanding of how British art cinema...
The career of the British film director John Schlesinger (1926-2003) spanned a period of forty years...
LondonIn this chapter I consider the autonomy and independence of creative talent in the American fi...
Alexandre Astruc, in his brief manifesto ‘The Birth of a New Avant-Grade: The Camera Stylo&rsq...
The aim of this thesis is to analyse the function of colour in film through three films by British d...
This monograph on Tony Richardson is the first comprehensive study devoted entirely to work of this ...
This research examines the aesthetic elements of contemporary film criticism. Although a restricted ...
This chapter focuses on some of the overlaps between this anti-realist tradition and British art cin...
The story of Eastmancolor's arrival on the British filmmaking scene is one of intermittent trial and...
This article examines the significance of Roger Manvell’s Penguin paperback Film to the postwar gene...
The British Film Institute (BFI) is one of the UK's oldest and most important government-supported c...
Within his cinematic works, British filmmaker, painter, curator, and multi-media artist Peter Greena...
In the last two decades, film studies has effectively expanded the sites of its discipline to includ...
Hal Hartley’s films are organised around and characterised by issues of performance. This thesis ex...
This thesis shall largely concern itself with examining two general aspects of British art cinema be...
Tomasz Fryzeł writes about the film and stage work of Peter Brook through the focus of its political...
The career of the British film director John Schlesinger (1926-2003) spanned a period of forty years...
LondonIn this chapter I consider the autonomy and independence of creative talent in the American fi...
Alexandre Astruc, in his brief manifesto ‘The Birth of a New Avant-Grade: The Camera Stylo&rsq...
The aim of this thesis is to analyse the function of colour in film through three films by British d...
This monograph on Tony Richardson is the first comprehensive study devoted entirely to work of this ...
This research examines the aesthetic elements of contemporary film criticism. Although a restricted ...
This chapter focuses on some of the overlaps between this anti-realist tradition and British art cin...
The story of Eastmancolor's arrival on the British filmmaking scene is one of intermittent trial and...
This article examines the significance of Roger Manvell’s Penguin paperback Film to the postwar gene...
The British Film Institute (BFI) is one of the UK's oldest and most important government-supported c...
Within his cinematic works, British filmmaker, painter, curator, and multi-media artist Peter Greena...
In the last two decades, film studies has effectively expanded the sites of its discipline to includ...
Hal Hartley’s films are organised around and characterised by issues of performance. This thesis ex...
This thesis shall largely concern itself with examining two general aspects of British art cinema be...
Tomasz Fryzeł writes about the film and stage work of Peter Brook through the focus of its political...
The career of the British film director John Schlesinger (1926-2003) spanned a period of forty years...
LondonIn this chapter I consider the autonomy and independence of creative talent in the American fi...
Alexandre Astruc, in his brief manifesto ‘The Birth of a New Avant-Grade: The Camera Stylo&rsq...