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[ecrea] Studying the British Crime Film (Paul Elliot) - a new book on an under-published area
Sun Sep 21 10:51:16 GMT 2014
A new book from Auteur may well be of interest to list members (with
apologies for cross-posting), for whom a discount is available (see
below) -
*Studying The British Crime Film*
/Paul Elliott/
ISBN: 978-1-906733-74-2 £18.99
http://auteur.co.uk/?product=studying-the-british-crime-film-paul-elliott
Ever since its inception, British cinema has been obsessed with crime
and the criminal. One of the first narrative films to be produced in
Britain, the 1905 short /Rescued by Rover/, was a fast paced tale of
abduction and kidnap and the first British sound film, Alfred
Hitchcock’s /Blackmail/ (1929), was concerned with murder and criminal
guilt. Yet for a genre that is seemingly so important to the British
cinematic character, there is little direct theoretical or historical
work written upon it. The Britain of British cinema is often written
about in terms of its national history, its ethnic diversity or its
cultural tradition but very rarely in terms of its criminal tendencies
and its darker underbelly. /*Studying the British Crime Film */makes the
assumption that, in order to know how British cinema truly works, it is
necessary to pull back the veneer of the costume piece, the historical
drama or the rom-com and take a glimpse at what hides beneath.
/*Studying the British Crime Film*/ looks closely at a variety films
relating to different aspects of criminal behaviour, including gangland
culture from /Brighton Rock/ (1947) to /Essex Boys /(2000), the heist
film from /The League of Gentlemen/ (1960) to /Sexy Beast/ (2000), from
the post-war serial killer of /10 Rillington Place/ (1971) to the seedy
underworld of contemporary Britain in /London to Brighton/ (2006). Each
chapter not only offers an in-depth reading of the films under
discussion but also guides the reader through the processes of studying
British cinema in terms of both genre and nationality, giving practical
skills as well as theoretical knowledge.
*Paul Elliott* teaches Film and Film Theory at the University of
Worcester. He has published on Hitchcock, embodied film theory and the
French psychoanalyst Félix Guattari, as well as various elements of
British cinema.
*MECCSA list members can order the book for a special price of £15.00
(free p+p) by emailing (office /at/ auteur.co.uk) <mailto:(office /at/ auteur.co.uk)>
with 'British Crime Film' in the subject line.
*
--
Auteur Publishing
24 Hartwell Crescent
Leighton Buzzard
LU7 1NP
www.auteur.co.uk <http://www.auteur.co.uk>
t: 01525 373896
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