By Sheldon Hall and Steve Neale
Paper - 9780814330081
Price: $34.95s
Subjects: Film and Television
Series: Contemporary Approaches to Film and Media Studies
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Published by Wayne State University Press
Sheldon Hall is a senior lecturer in stage and screen studies at Sheffield Hallam University and author of Zulu: With Some Guts Behind It – The Making of the Epic Film and co-editor (with John Belton and Steve Neale) of Widescreen Worldwide.
Steve Neale is professor of English at the University of Exeter and author and editor of several books, most recently, Genre and Contemporary Hollywood.
“Sheldon Hall and Steve Neale’s new book Epics, Spectacles, and Blockbusters offers a necessary corrective to the balance of the blockbuster debate. It provides a clear, chronological account of industry trends, starting with imported ‘passion plays’ in the 1900s, and culminating with the release of Avatar at the end of 2009. Throughout, it refrains from drawing conclusions beyond what can be empirically demonstrated. The result is an invaluable tool for future scholarship on popular cinema.”
— Jim Whalley, New Review of Film and Television Studies
“This 363-page compendium presents a comprehensive and detailed history of the large-scale, high-cost movie from the beginning of movie-making in the 1890s down to the present day. Chronologically organized, the impact of technological developments on movie making is fully integrated into this superbly written and scholarly history, making Epics, Spectacles, and Blockbusters an invaluable and core addition to personal, professional, academic, and community library Hollywood History & Film reference collections and supplemental reading lists.”
— Midwest Book Review
“From Birth of a Nation to Titanic, from Intolerance to Heaven’s Gate, Hollywood’s greatest triumphs and disasters have been big-budget spectaculars marketed on their monumental scale. Pioneering a new kind of cinema history, Sheldon Hall and Steve Neale tell the epic story of how these commercial behemoths have been packaged and sold to the public, showing us that the movies’ cultural significance is as much a product of how they are distributed and consumed as it is of their production.”
— Richard Maltby, professor of screen studies at Flinders University and author of Hollywood Cinema
“This is the book many of us have been waiting for: a comprehensive and systematic new account of American film history which puts its costliest productions and biggest hits first. Accessibly written and extremely well researched, this study forces us to revise our understanding of Hollywood’s past and present.”
— Peter Krmer, senior lecturer in film studies, University of East Anglia, author of The New Hollywood: From Bonnie and Clyde to Star Wars
“Hall and Neale have produced the first serious history of the type of film that made—and continues to make—Hollywood famous. Built on a solid foundation of serious scholarship, all the major archives have been consulted along with an enormous range of books and articles on Hollywood cinema.”
— Rick Altman, professor of cinema and comparative literature at the University of Iowa and author of Silent Film Sound