Part 1 Film Art and Filmmaking 1. Film as Art: Creativity,
Technology, and Business
Part 2 Film Form2. The Significance of Film Form 3. Narrative
Form
Part 3 Film Style4. The Shot: Mise-en-Scene 5. The Shot:
Cinematography 6. The Relation of Shot to Shot:
Editing 7. Sound in the Cinema 8. Summary: Style and Film
Form
Part 4 Types of Films9. Film Genres 10. Documentary,
Experimental, and Animated Films
Part 5 Critical Analysis of Films11. Film Criticism: Sample
Analyses
Part 6 Film Art and Film History12. Historical Changes in Film Art:
Conventions and Choices, Tradition and Trends Additional
chapters available through McGraw-Hill Education's Create:
Film AdaptationsWriting a Critical Analysis of a Film
Additional Resources for Film Art
GlossaryCreditsIndex
David Bordwell is Jacques Ledoux Professor Emeritus of Film Studies
in the Department of Communication Arts at the University of
WisconsinMadison. He also holds a Hilldale Professorship in the
Humanities and an Honorary Doctorate from the University of
Copenhagen. He has also held the Kluge Chair in Modern Culture at
the Library of Congress. His books include Narration in the Fiction
Film (University of Wisconsin Press, 1985), On the History of Film
Style (Harvard University Press, 1997), Planet Hong Kong: Popular
Cinema and the Art of Entertainment (Harvard University Press,
2000; 2nd ed., Irvington Way Institute Press, 2011), Figures Traced
in Light: On Cinematic Staging(University of California Press,
2005), The Way Hollywood Tells It: Story and Style in Modern Movies
(University of California Press, 2006), The Rhapsodes: How 1940s
Critics Changed American Film Culture (University of Chicago Press,
2016), and Reinventing Hollywood: How 1940s Filmmakers Changed
Movie Storytelling (University of Chicago Press, 2017). He has
also written books on Carl Theodor Dreyer, Yasujiro Ozu, Sergei
Eisenstein, digital cinema, and Hong Kong film.
Kristin Thompson is an Honorary Fellow in the Department of
Communication Arts at the University of WisconsinMadison, where she
earned her Ph.D. Her books include Eisensteins Ivan the Terrible
(1981), Exporting Entertainment: Americas Place in World Film
Markets 19011934 (1985), Breaking the Glass Armor:
Neoformalist Film Analysis (1988), Storytelling in the New
Hollywood: Understanding Classical Narrative Technique (1999),
Herr Lubitsch Goes to Hollywood: German and American Film after
World War I (2005), and The Frodo Franchise: The Lord of the
Rings and Modern Hollywood (2007).
Jeff Smith is a Professor of Film Studies in the Department of
Communication Arts at the University of WisconsinMadison, where he
earned his Ph.D. He is the author of two books: The Sounds of
Commerce: Marketing Popular FilmMusic (1998) and Film Criticism,
the Cold War, and the Blacklist: Reading the Hollywood Reds (2014).
He has also published several articles and book chapters on the
role of sound and music in American cinema. He is currently at work
on a book that traces development of the classical Hollywood film
score during the 1930s that examines how studios allocated musical
resources to films based on their position within the hierarchy of
prestige pictures, programmers, and B films.
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