Schilling, Mark

Contemporary Japanese Film

Contemporary Japanese Film
  • Verlag: Weatherhill
  • Erscheinungsdatum: 1999-11-01
  • Format: Taschenbuch
  • Umfang: 400
  • ISBN: 0834804158
  • EAN: 9780834804159
  • Amazon.de Verkaufsrang: 470.633
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Beschreibung von buecher.de

This comprehensive look at Japanese cinema in the 1990s includes nearly four hundred reviews of individual films and a dozen interviews and profiles of leading directors and producers. Interpretive essays provide an overview of some of the key issues and themes of the decade, and provide background and context for the treatment of individual films and artists. In Mark Schilling's view, Japanese film is presently in a period of creative ferment, with a lively independent sector challenging the conventions of the industry mainstream. Younger filmmakers are rejecting the stale formulas that have long characterized major studio releases, reaching out to new influences from other media--television, comics, music videos, and even computer games--and from both the West and other Asian cultures. In the process they are creating fresh and exciting films that range from the meditative to the manic, offering hope that Japanese film will not only survive but thrive as it enters the new millennium.

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5 von 5 Sternen The most comprehensive resource on the subject available

Mark Schilling is a film reviewer for one of the Tokyo newspapers, so this book is made up of all the films released in the past 10 years, bundled up with a load of articles/interviews with the like of Shunji 'Swallowtail Butterfly' Iwai and Juzo 'Tampopo' Itami. He writes very well, but most interesting is the wide diversity of the films reviewed. It's far more comprehensive than Weisser's book, which would have you believe that Pinku Eiga were the only type of films being made in Japan in the 90's. Most of the films reviewed have probably had little release outside of Asia. This definitely the best book out there on the subject.

Contemporary Japanese Film



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