The British New Wave in cinema, which ran from 1958 to 1962, was built around the adaptation of a number of literary texts that derived their ‘newness’ by vocalising working-class protagonists, hitherto largely suppressed in popular visions of British society. As a knock-on-effect, British screen culture refreshed, suffering as it did from the same level of under-representation that blighted literature. In a wider context, the films’ freshness and vigour can also be seen to be identified in a new approach to film style and aesthetics which had more in common with the European art cinema than the staid traditions of British filmmaking.
A presentation as part of British Silent Film Festival symposium held at King's College London, Apri...
After the collapse of the once dominant studio system in the 1950s, Hollywood executives were at a l...
The arrival of the talkies in Britain evoked mixed responses. While popular audiences enthusiastical...
The British New Wave in cinema, which ran from 1958 to 1962, was built around the adaptation of a nu...
A presentation as part of the Strange New Worlds Postgraduate Conference, held by the Cinema and Tel...
In recent years a number of new British filmmakers have emerged with feature length works that overt...
This thesis examines how the reading and writing of the post-war British novel is altered by the eme...
My dissertation investigates the idea of cinematic authorship in a twenty-first-century mediascape i...
A series of limiting definitions have tended to delineate the Franco-British cinematic relationship....
Our aim, in editing the ‘London Issue’ of this journal, is to contribute to a conversation between s...
In the period since 2001, cinema has witnessed what David Butler refers to as a ‘golden age’ of fant...
Conventional approaches to the British New Wave tend to place their greatest emphasis upon viewing t...
As a period of film history, The American New Wave (ordinarily understood as beginning in 1967 and e...
It could be said that the films of the director Peter Strickland are in many ways exemplars of a ric...
Book synopsis: The 1970s was an enormously creative period for experimental film. Its innovation...
A presentation as part of British Silent Film Festival symposium held at King's College London, Apri...
After the collapse of the once dominant studio system in the 1950s, Hollywood executives were at a l...
The arrival of the talkies in Britain evoked mixed responses. While popular audiences enthusiastical...
The British New Wave in cinema, which ran from 1958 to 1962, was built around the adaptation of a nu...
A presentation as part of the Strange New Worlds Postgraduate Conference, held by the Cinema and Tel...
In recent years a number of new British filmmakers have emerged with feature length works that overt...
This thesis examines how the reading and writing of the post-war British novel is altered by the eme...
My dissertation investigates the idea of cinematic authorship in a twenty-first-century mediascape i...
A series of limiting definitions have tended to delineate the Franco-British cinematic relationship....
Our aim, in editing the ‘London Issue’ of this journal, is to contribute to a conversation between s...
In the period since 2001, cinema has witnessed what David Butler refers to as a ‘golden age’ of fant...
Conventional approaches to the British New Wave tend to place their greatest emphasis upon viewing t...
As a period of film history, The American New Wave (ordinarily understood as beginning in 1967 and e...
It could be said that the films of the director Peter Strickland are in many ways exemplars of a ric...
Book synopsis: The 1970s was an enormously creative period for experimental film. Its innovation...
A presentation as part of British Silent Film Festival symposium held at King's College London, Apri...
After the collapse of the once dominant studio system in the 1950s, Hollywood executives were at a l...
The arrival of the talkies in Britain evoked mixed responses. While popular audiences enthusiastical...