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Film Past, Film Future: an enquiry into cinema and the imagination
 
 

Film Past, Film Future: an enquiry into cinema and the imagination [Kindle Edition]

Tim Cawkwell
4.8 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (4 customer reviews)

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Product Description

Product Description

What is the cinematic imagination? Is it the spectator using his or her imagination in a creative manner to absorb the images presented? Or is it the spectator spellbound before the film-maker’s imagination spilled out on the screen? In the first, the imagination is firmly in the minds of the spectators; in the second, in the mind of the filmmaker. 'Film Past, Film Future' ranges widely over the history of the cinema in all its forms to show how film-makers have exploited both their own imagination and that of the spectator to create compelling films, narrative and non-narrative.

Part One covers the way the cinema has delved deep into history, into contemporary events, and into tales of the subconscious – indeed the whole of the human condition – to exploit the desires, the fears and the obsessions of people across the globe. It is capped by a long essay on the cinema and the Holocaust to illustrate the immense effort the cinema has made to represent the unrepresentable.

Part Two then gets to grip with the question of how the cinema is unique, and focuses in particular on the way in which it manipulates time. It identifies a weakness in the fact that film-makers have yet to develop more subtle and sophisticated ways of depicting interiority, and concludes with an assessment of whether conditions are right for a Shakespeare to emerge in the cinema.

In undertaking this journey, Tim Cawkwell draws on the examples of films right from the invention of the cinema at the end of the nineteenth century up to the present day, and across the complete spectrum of film-making: silent and sound; commercial, arthouse, experimental; narrative and documentary; long and short. Reference is made to drama, opera, literature and painting in order to seek continuities between the classical artistic canons and current cinematic ones. Along the way it takes a swipe at the cinema of hyperbole from which we currently suffer, in a plea for greater exactitude, and outlines some of the drawbacks inherent in the theatrical stylistics that have held too great sway in much film-making.

‘Film Past, Film Future’, written in a crisp and highly readable style, will stimulate anyone who takes an interest in and derives pleasure from watching films.

TIM CAWKWELL is a freelance writer with a lifelong interest in the cinema. He co-edited ‘The World Encyclopaedia of Film’ (1972) and is the author of ‘The Filmgoer’s Guide to God’ (2004). He has published articles in journals, and his essays and comments appear on his website, www.timcawkwell.co.uk. From 1968 to 1987 he was a film-maker, first in Standard 8 mm then in 16 mm.

Product details

  • Format: Kindle Edition
  • File Size: 383 KB
  • Publisher: Sforzinda Books; 1 edition (25 Mar 2011)
  • Sold by: Amazon Media EU S.à r.l.
  • Language English
  • ASIN: B004U34CCA
  • Text-to-Speech: Enabled
  • Average Customer Review: 4.8 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (4 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Bestsellers Rank: #226,291 Paid in Kindle Store (See Top 100 Paid in Kindle Store)
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Customer Reviews

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Average Customer Review
4.8 out of 5 stars (4 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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5.0 out of 5 stars A TREMENDOUS READ, 28 Oct 2011
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This review is from: Film Past, Film Future: an enquiry into cinema and the imagination (Kindle Edition)
Tim Cawkwell has seen a lot of films. And in his new book, FILM PAST, FILM FUTURE, he writes elegantly, with passion and insight, about individual films as diverse as Robert Bresson's claustrophobic, modernist masterpiece, A MAN ESCAPED and Peter Jackson's epic, Oscar-laden and effects-strewn, LORD OF THE RINGS trilogy.

In the first part of his book Cawkwell's curiosity leads him to range across film history and genres as he considers questions such as "How does film engage the imagination?" and "What is `the essence of cinema'?" in relation to mankind's incessant exploration of the human condition. And in the second part, he looks at acting, the manipulation of time and its relationship to editing and at the ways in which cinema accesses characters' inner lives, before closing with some reflections on the future of cinema.

Cawkwell's viewing is impressive and he also draws freely on music, literature, painting and history in his exploration of cinema. This is a book for enthusiastic and enquiring filmgoers; for those who want to find connections between films that go beyond a film star's list of credits. And Cawkwell is an exemplary and generous guide through this seductive but sometimes challenging landscape. A tremendous read.
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5.0 out of 5 stars A compelling study of the past and future nature of film, 10 Jun 2011
This review is from: Film Past, Film Future: an enquiry into cinema and the imagination (Kindle Edition)
Tim Cawkwell's latest book is an orginal and thought-provoking series of reflections on the nature and art of film. Structured in the form of 10 chapters, this is certainly not a book for the film novice. It assumes quite detailed knowledge of film history, using the work of a panoply of directors from the earliest beginnings of film (like Melies and Lumiere), through more recent luminaries like Antonioni, Tarkovsky and John Ford, right up to the present, and recent films such as 'The Terminator' and 'Road to Perdition'. As such, the author is able to theorize, philosophize and stargaze, basing his ideas on a whole battery of film theory and practice through the ages. This book is encyclopaedic in its references and polymathic in its approach, with the author not afraid to use literary, artistic and musical references as aids in the discussion of what film has already been able to do, what it can do best and where it might head in search of a new film language in the 21st century and beyond. Above all, it is film-based, using famous and less famous films and directors (have you ever heard of Stan Brakhage or Jan Svankmayer? - neither had I!) as examples of film art, film practice and film theory. This book makes you want to watch a lot of films again, as well as making you want to see a lot of new material, that you never knew existed. This is a serious book about a serious topic - but it bristles with felicitous detail and intriguing asides, and is never afraid to let its hair down. You might not be expecting to read a long analysis of 'Lord of the Rings' in a 'serious' film book - but here is one!

I can recommend this book to anybody who has ever thought seriously about film as a lot more than just a series of clever visual gimmicks or Holywood blockbusters. The author is passionate about film as an art in itself, about its origins and its future. His passion and his flair for detailed analysis of individual scenes, coupled with deeper reflection on the meaning and possibilities of film, form a compelling narrative.
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4.0 out of 5 stars Cinema reviewed, 18 May 2011
By 
S. M. Adamson (Norwich, UK) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
This review is from: Film Past, Film Future: an enquiry into cinema and the imagination (Kindle Edition)
In part this is a history of the cinema, but it's not just a chronological narrative. It looks at how cinema works, and how we react to it. This helps explain why film has such a hold on us, despite its many changes and the many threats to it. It also pays cinema the respect of being a form of art, and not only in so-called 'art house' films, but also in films that have been highly successful commercially. The author conveys his enthusiasm for all varieties of film, and provides a lot factual information while stimulating us to think about film and take both it and our reactions to it seriously.
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