Livre Michael Mann chez Taschen

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Plisken
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Message par Plisken » lun. août 20, 2007 3:22 pm

De passage à Paris, chopé le Tashen pour 20 € chez Album... j'espère ne pas être déçu :D
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dario carpenter
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Message par dario carpenter » mar. sept. 25, 2007 1:26 pm

Jérôme a écrit :ça sent l'analyse pompeuse et prétentieuse :

"In this book, Steven Rybin takes the reader on a remarkable tour of the world of Michael Mann, a place replete with epic cityscapes, digitally composited dreamscapes, and domestic interiors intermittently inhabited by characters cut off from collective identity and meaning. Interrelating visual design and soundtrack with theme and mood, Rybin's work is the perfect guide to the consummately stylized postmodernist vision of Mann's films. From Rybin's analysis of influences such as Vertov and Kubrick, to his championing of The Insider, to his probing study of Miami Vice as movie, he demonstrates a command of the auteur that makes this book a pleasure to read."—Susan Linville, Professor, Department of English, University of Colorado at Denver

Few other contemporary Hollywood filmmakers fit the category of "genre stylist" as well as Michael Mann, the director of such films as Heat, The Insider, Ali, Collateral, Manhunter, Thief, and Miami Vice. Mann's film style marks him as a director who chooses the iconographic backdrop of a genre as a canvas upon which he and his collaborators can craft a unique cinematic vision. The Cinema of Michael Mann traces the innovative and under-explored stylistic contours of Mann's work, the director's inflection upon and innovation within preexisting genre frameworks, and the relationship of both style and genre to issues of authorship and film criticism. Steven Rybin's critical study of Mann's cinema, and the importance of the filmmaker's themes to our contemporary world, is valuable for both film scholars and cinephiles alike.

About the
Steven Rybin teaches in the School of Interdisciplinary Arts at Ohio University.

un avis sur Imdb:

Book came yesterday, and I have just began to read it. It's a really interesting book, reminiscent of Wildermuth's Blood in the moonlight (it's the same academic style, although clearer to understand). It offers a good analysis on the films of Mann (he even discusses the episodes he wrote for Starsky and Hutch, finding some of his trademarks!!!).
I think anyone interested in THE MANN should give it a try.

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