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Movie Wars: How Hollywood and the Media Limit What Films We Can See Paperback – 10 Sept. 2002
Purchase options and add-ons
- Print length234 pages
- LanguageEnglish
- PublisherWallflower Press
- Publication date10 Sept. 2002
- ISBN-101903364604
- ISBN-13978-1903364604
Product description
Review
Product details
- Publisher : Wallflower Press
- Publication date : 10 Sept. 2002
- Edition : New
- Language : English
- Print length : 234 pages
- ISBN-10 : 1903364604
- ISBN-13 : 978-1903364604
- Item weight : 322 g
- Best Sellers Rank: 333 in Film Industry
- 4,886 in Film History & Criticism (Books)
- 30,173 in The Performing Arts
- Customer reviews:
About the author

Jonathan Rosenbaum grew up in a Frank Lloyd Wright house in Florence, Alabama (1943-59), the son and grandson of movie exhibitors. Attended The Putney School (1959-61), Highlander Folk School (summer 1961), Washington Square College (1961-62), Bard College (1962-66, the best part of his education, along with Highlander). Wasted three years in graduate school, mainly draft-dodging (1966-68, State University of New York at Stony Brook, English & American Literature, M.A.+ everything but a dissertation). Moved to Paris in 1969, finished second unpublished novel and started working as a film critic. Hired by the British Film Institute to work for Sight and Sound and Monthly Film Bulletin; moved to London in 1974. Returned to the U.S. in 1977 to replace Manny Farber for two quarters at the University of California, San Diego. 1978-1979, wrote first book to be published, Moving Places: A Life at the Movies (Harper & Row, 1980), moved to New York and then to Hoboken.1983, taught for one semester at Berkeley, then moved to Santa Barbara to teach there. Basically, 1977-1987 was a decade in the wilderness, mainly working as an exploited freelancer. 1987-2007, lead film critic for the Chicago Reader, a wonderful job. Retired in 2007, started jonathanrosenbaum.com (later succeeded by jonathanrosenbaum.net); has been working as a mainly non-exploited freelance writer and teacher ever since.
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selffateReviewed in the United States on 28 July 20044.0 out of 5 stars must have if you are passionate about film
Rosenbaum's book is simply a great introductory read into the failures of how the American audience, and the distributors of cinema in the States are leading to a 'possible' decline in quality of film being seen in the United States. Rosenbuam points to America as being the leader and champion of exported culture (regardless if this a good thing or not is not the point), and the cause of a dumbing down of cinema all over the world, as great works get pushed to the side seemingly never meant to be appreciated.
One of the best things that comes across in the book is Rosenbaum's passion. Simply put he waxes poeticaly talking back to the days of his past and finding films on his own, be it an odd trek to see John Carpenters 'The Thing', or about his education with film in his years in Paris, or his insight about how the festival of Cannes has chaned, to his reaction of a critic during the first hour of a seven hour film masterpiece (the name right now escapes me and I don't have the book with me to quote the name it starts with an 'S'). The other side is filled with not so much venom as 'concern' if I could say with the concept of how America is not getting the film education and greatness it deserves.
He highlights this in several ways, such as his dicussions about Miramax (He points out that if Miramax gets a film chances of you seeing it are even LESS than if they didn't, and if you do chances are it's going to be chopped/altered in someway), the myth of independent film (he points out that Sundance and Telluride is just a cover and is in no way an independent showcase), and how most film critics are more in-debt to their papers and editors who call the shots (he highlights that with one critic as his popularity grew his word count and column got less real-estate space).
It's an absolutlely FASCINATING look at cinema and the state that it is heading in. This is a MUST have film book if you are passionate about film.
Some criticism's of the book though come from some of Rosenbaums overly-long wordy sentences, and his use of examples with films that can be for the most part with many first time readers, unknown. When he starts using films that he has seen for his arguments chances are you are not going to guess where he is coming from due to the fact you haven't seen the films yourself. But he certainly does point you in some interesting directions. However, with the films he does point out that you may know you get exactly where he is coming from.
Secondly, even though the book is merely only 4 years old, it is a little dated. Rosenbaum likes to bring up the obscurity of director Ozu (one of my personal favs) as a problem, however there has lately been a renaisance of his work and he is already starting to become quite a well known name (Criterion DVD releases are already proving that, and a recent tribute festival that I saw that came through DC).
Even with all that said, the book is a fascinating insight into the realm of how cinema is marketed and distributed to the mass American public. Rosenbaum throws in examples of dumbed down culture, coroporate marketing, distributor strangleholding and numerous other things that will keep you intrigued about the workings of the film process.
Great book, ecspecialy if you are a film nut like myself.
Pedro Max SchwarzReviewed in the United States on 4 June 20145.0 out of 5 stars Wonderful book
Format: HardcoverVerified PurchaseWonderful book from one of the greatest film critics of all time, Jonathan Rosenbaum. Cinema is not dead. aa aa