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基本説明
This new book brings together leading scholars from a number of disciplines-film studies, literature, philosophy-to focus on some of the key historical and conceptual issues associated with Dogme 95's original formulation.
Full Description
The audacious, attention-grabbing, tongue-in-cheek filmmaker's manifesto that was "Dogme 95" has had a massive international impact. Coinciding with the arrival of cut-price digital technology, the aesthetic creed proposed by Thomas Vinterberg ("Festen") and Lars von Trier ("The Idiots") has resonated with young and indie filmmakers in all continents and been credited with a revival of radical back-to-basics guerrilla-style filmmaking. Many argue it has changed the critical terms in which art and popular cinema are discussed and that it has had an impact on a much wider range of contemporary arts from dance to computer games.This new book brings together leading scholars from a number of disciplines - film studies, literature, philosophy - in order to focus on some of the key historical and conceptual issues associated with the manifesto's original formulation. In addition to identifying many of the epistemological and aesthetic puzzles to which "Dogme 95" gives rise, the book looks at the relationships posited between the avant-garde and popular cinema, the role of 'minor cinemas' in a world dominated by Hollywood, and the history and future of art-cinema as a means of cultural exchange between national cinemas.
Contents
Introduction, Mette Hjort and Scott MacKenzie The Dogma Manifesto: Antecedents and Extensions Peter Schepelern, 'Kill Your Darlings: Lars von Trier and the Origin of Dogme 95' Scott MacKenzie, 'Film-makers of the World Unite! Dogme '95 and the Film Manifesto Murray Smith, 'Characterisation and Performance: Dogme '95 and New American Cinema' Ib Bondebjerg, 'Dogme '95 and the Danish "New-New Wave"' NoIl Carroll and Sally Banes, 'Dogme Dance' Dogme '95 and Film Theory Jon Elster, 'Creativity and Constraint' Catherine Grant, 'The Director Must Be Credited: Authorship, Auteurism and the Films of Dogme '95' Paisley Livingston, 'Artistic Self-Reflexivity in The King is Alive and Strass' Berys Gaut 'Naked Film: Dogma and Its Limits' Dogme '95: National and Transnational Dimensions Martin Roberts, 'Decoding D-Dag: Multi-Channel Television at the Millenium' Ginette Vincendeau, 'The Lovers and French Contemporary Cinema' Yvonne Tasker, 'Indie Cinema and Dogme '95' Mads Egmont Christensen 'Dogme 95 and Marketing' Mette Hjort 'Dogme 95: A Small Nation's Response to Globalisation' Index