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Death 24x a Second
 
 

Death 24x a Second [Kindle Edition]

Laura Mulvey
3.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (1 customer review)

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Review

elegiac ... a wonderful close analysis. Despite the melancholy in cinema's enounters with a fleeting past, the prospects opened up by filmic slowness are, for Mulvey, productive of optimism. Times Higher Education Supplement Rethinking the fundamentals of fim history through modern audiovisual technology Independent on Sunday Mulvey ... continues to provoke new ways of seeing - or re-seeing - the cinema we think we know. Film Comment Death 24x a Second takes up both the challenge to critical thinking represented by new technological developments, and the impulse towards reflection on film's past that they have occasioned ... a thoughtful book. New Left Review

Product Description

In "Death 24 x a Second", Laura Mulvey addresses some of the key questions of film theory, spectatorship and narrative. New media technologies, such as video and DVD, have transformed the way we experience film, and the viewers' relationship to film image and cinema's narrative structure has also been fundamentally altered. These technologies give viewers the means to control both image and story, so that films produced to be seen collectively and followed in a linear fashion may be found to contain unexpected (even unintended) pleasures. The tension between the still frame and the moving image coincides with the cinema's capacity to capture the appearance of life and preserve it after death. Mulvey proposes that with the arrival of new technologies and new ways of experiencing the cinematic image, film's hidden stillness comes to the fore, thereby acquiring a new accessibility and visibility. The individual frame, the projected film's best-kept secret, can now be revealed, by anyone, at the simple touch of a button. As Mulvey argues, easy access to repetition, slow motion and the freeze-frame may well shift the spectator's pleasure to a fetishistic rather than a voyeuristic investment in the cinematic object. The manipulation of the cinematic image by the viewer also makes visible cinema's material and aesthetic attributes. By exploring how new technologies can give new life to old' cinema, "Death 24 x a Second" offers an original re-evaluation of film's history and also its historical usefulness.

Product details

  • Format: Kindle Edition
  • File Size: 1119 KB
  • Print Length: 220 pages
  • Page Numbers Source ISBN: 1861892632
  • Publisher: Reaktion Books (16 Jun 2011)
  • Sold by: Amazon Media EU S.à r.l.
  • Language English
  • ASIN: B0056HO896
  • Text-to-Speech: Enabled
  • Average Customer Review: 3.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (1 customer review)
  • Amazon Bestsellers Rank: #172,655 Paid in Kindle Store (See Top 100 Paid in Kindle Store)
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Laura Mulvey
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Most Helpful Customer Reviews
By D. Fear
Format:Paperback
will find this a good addition to their theoretical reading. Read alongside 'Stillness and Time: Photography and the Moving Image.Stillness and Time: Photography and the Moving Image
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Amazon.com:  1 review
3 of 13 people found the following review helpful
uptodate 10 Jan 2007
By Buroshiva Dasgupta - Published on Amazon.com
Format:Paperback
its a very good book on films. its uptodate, integrating lots of knowledge of the new technologies that have affected - good and bad - the film media. the articles however could have been more integrated with one another.
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Popular Highlights

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&quote;
The cinema combines, perhaps more perfectly than any other medium, two human fascinations: one with the boundary between life and death and the other with the mechanical animation of the inanimate, particularly the human, figure. &quote;
Highlighted by 5 Kindle users
&quote;
The still, inanimate, image is drained of movement, the commonly accepted sign of life. &quote;
Highlighted by 4 Kindle users
&quote;
In Jean-Luc Godards film of 1960, Le Petit Soldat, the answer to the question what is cinema? is truth 24 times a second. But these frames as individual photographs are also a testament to cinemas uncanny. So the answer to the question what is cinema? should also be death 24 times a second. &quote;
Highlighted by 4 Kindle users

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