subject clippings file
ADAPTATIONS. DICKENS, CHARLES
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A Christmas carol : being a ghost story of Christmas / by Charles Dickens wih 4 plates in colour and 60 illustrations from the Renown Pictures' film "Scrooge" London: Ward Lock, [192-?].
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Dickens and film / by A. L. Zambrano New York: Gordon Press, 1976.
Call No: 753DIC ZAMAuthor: Zambrano, A. L Place: New YorkPublisher: Gordon PressPubDate: 1976PhysDes: 442 pages : illustrations ; 24 cmSubject: ADAPTATIONS ; ADAPTATIONS. DICKENS, CHARLES ; LITERATURE AND THE CINEMA ; MUSICALS ; SURREALISM AND THE CINEMA ; THEATRE AND THE CINEMA ; GRIFFITH, DAVID WARK ; EISENSTEIN, SERGEI M. ; DAVID COPPERFIELD (US, George Cukor, 1935) ; GREAT EXPECTATIONS (UK, David Lean, 1946) ; GREAT EXPECTATIONS (UK, Joseph Hardy, 1975) ; OLIVER TWIST (UK, David Lean, 1948) ; SCROOGE (US, Brian Desmond Hurst, 1951) ; SCROOGE (UK, Ronald Neame, 1970) ; TALE OF TWO CITIES, A (US, Jack Conway, 1935) Summary: This book discusses the works of Charles Dickens that has been adapted into film up until the mid 1970s. It discusses Dickens's relationship to the theatre (cinema's closest ancestor), the Victorian values of Dickens's work, the cinematic elements of Dickens's writing, and modern filmic adaptations of his work.Notes: Includes filmography -- collection's copy is fragile, handle with careISBN: 0879684569LON: 76016479; 174074
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English filming, English writing / Jefferson Hunter Bloomington IN: Indiana University Press, c2010.
Call No: 408.1(41) HUNAuthor: Hunter, Jefferson Source: USPlace: Bloomington INPublisher: Indiana University PressPubDate: c2010PhysDes: xii, 357 p. ; 23 cmSubject: ADAPTATIONS ; ADAPTATIONS. DICKENS, CHARLES ; ADAPTATIONS. ORWELL, GEORGE ; BRITISH CINEMA ; CRIME DRAMAS ; LITERATURE AND THE CINEMA ; NATIONAL CULTURE AND THE CINEMA. UNITED KINGDOM ; WORLD WAR II AND THE CINEMA ; WORLD WAR II FILMS. UK ; BRIEF ENCOUNTER (UK, David Lean, 1945) ; CANTERBURY TALE, A (UK, Michael Powell & Emeric Pressburger, 1944) ; LISTEN TO BRITAIN (UK, Humphrey Jennings/Stewart McAllister, 1942) ; LOOK BACK IN ANGER (UK, Tony Richardson, 1959) ; REMAINS OF THE DAY, THE (UK/US, James Ivory, 1993) ; SINGING DETECTIVE, THE [TV] (UK, Jon Amiel, 1986) Summary: "Jefferson Hunter examines English films and television dramas as they relate to English culture in the twentieth century. He traces themes such as the influence of US crime drama on English film, and film adaptations of literary works as they appear in screen work from the 1930s to the present. A Canterbury Tale and the documentary Listen to Britain are analyzed in the context of village pageants and other wartime explorations of Englishness at risk. English crime dramas are set against the writings of George Orwell, while a famous line from Noel Coward also leads to a discussion of music and image in works including Brief Encounter and Look Back in Anger. Screen adaptation is also broached in analyses of the 1985 BBC version of Dickens's Bleak House and Merchant-Ivory's The Remains of the Day." - BOOK BLURBNotes: Includes notes and indexISBN: 9780253221773
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Film adaptation / edited and with an introduction by James Naremore New Brunswick, N.J: Rutgers University Press, c2000.
Call No: 753 FILAuthor: Naremore, James Source: USPlace: New Brunswick, N.JPublisher: Rutgers University PressPubDate: c2000PhysDes: x, 258 p. : ill. ; 23 cm.Series: Rutgers depth of field seriesSubject: ADAPTATIONS ; ADAPTATIONS. AUSTEN, JANE ; ADAPTATIONS. DICKENS, CHARLES ; ADAPTATIONS. DOSTOEVSKIJ, FEDOR MIHAJLOVIC ; ADAPTATIONS. SHAKESPEARE, WILLIAM ; CENSORSHIP ; LITERATURE AND THE CINEMA ; KUROSAWA AKIRA ; RENOIR, JEAN ; AMERICAN TRAGEDY, AN (Josef von Sternberg, 1931) ; CLUELESS (US, Amy Heckerling, 1995) ; DAVID COPPERFIELD (US, George Cukor, 1935) ; DAY IN THE COUNTRY, A (FR, Jean Renoir, 1946 [prod. 1936]) ; PARTIE DE CAMPAGNE, UNE (FR, Jean Renoir, 1946 [prod. 1936]) ; EMMA (UK, Douglas McGrath, 1996) ; HIGH AND LOW (JA, Akira Kurosawa, 1963) ; TENGOKU TO JIGOKU (JA, Akira Kurosawa, 1963) ; HOW TASTY WAS MY LITTLE FRENCHMAN (BL, Nelson Pereira dos Santos, 1971) Summary: "The essays in this volume, most of which have never before been published, raise fundamental questions about cinema and adaptation: what is the nature of the "literary" and the "cinematic"? Why do so many of the films described as adaptations seem to derive from canonical literature rather than from other sources? How do the different media affect the ways stories are told? Film Adaptation offers fresh approaches to the art, theory, and cultural politics of movie adaptations, even challenging what is meant by the term "adaptation" itself. Contributors examine the process of adaptation in both theory and practice, discussing a wide variety of films. James Naremore's introduction provides an accessible historical overview of the field and reveals the importance of adaptation study to the many different academic disciplines now attracted to the analysis of film as commodity, document, and cultural artifact." -- BOOK BLURB
(Contributors are André Bazin, Dudley Andrew, Robert B. Ray, Robert Stam, Richard Maltby, Guerric DeBona, O. M. B., Gilberto Perez, Michael Anderegg, Matthew Bernstein, Darlene J. Sadlier, Jonathan Rosenbaum, and Lesley Stern.)Notes: Includes bibliographical references (p. 239-243) and indexISBN: 0813528135Contents: -- introduction: film and the reign of adaptation -- adaptation, or the cinema as digest -- adaptation -- The field of "literature and film" -- The dialogics of adaptation -- "to prevent the prevalent type of book" Censorship and adaptation in Hollywood, 1924-1934 -- Dickens, the Depression and MGM's David Copperfield -- Landscape and fiction: A day in the country -- Welles/Shakespeare/film an overview -- high and low: Art cinema and pulp fiction in Yokohama -- The politics of adaptation: how tasty was my little frenchman -- Two forms of adaptation: housekeeping and naked lunch -- Emma in Los Angeles: remaking the book and the city -- annotated bibliography -- contributors -- index --ID2: 291
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Film adaptation and its discontents : from Gone with the wind to The Passion of the Christ / by Thomas Leitch Baltimore MD: John Hopkins University Press, 2007.
Call No: 753 LEIAuthor: Leitch, Thomas Edition: John Hopkins paperback edition, 2009Source: USPlace: Baltimore MDPublisher: John Hopkins University PressPubDate: 2007PhysDes: xi, 354 p. ; 24 cmSubject: ADAPTATIONS ; ADAPTATIONS. AUSTEN, JANE ; ADAPTATIONS. DOYLE, ARTHUR CONAN ; ADAPTATIONS. SHAKESPEARE, WILLIAM ; ADAPTATIONS. DICKENS, CHARLES ; AUTEUR THEORY ; AUTHORSHIP ; LITERATURE AND THE CINEMA ; STONE, OLIVER ; GONE WITH THE WIND (US, Victor Fleming, 1939) ; PASSION OF THE CHRIST, THE (US, Mel Gibson, 2004) ; PRIDE AND PREJUDICE [TV] (UK/US, Simon Langton, 1995) Summary: "Most books on film adaptation - the relation between films and their literary sources - focus on a series of close one-to-one comparisons between specific films and canonical novels. This volume identifies and investigates a far wider array of problems posed by the process of adaptation.
Thomas Leitch considers how the creators of short silent films attempted to give them the weight of literature, what sorts of fidelity are possible in an adaptation of sacred scripture, what it means for an adaptation to pose as an introduction to, rather than a transcription of, a literary classic, and why and how some films have sought impossibly close fidelity to their sources. Leitch's analysis moves beyond literary sources to consider why a small number of adaptors have risen to the status of auteurs and how illustrated books, comic strips, video games, and true stories have been adaptated to the screen." -- BOOK BLURBNotes: Formerly CIP; Includes bibliographical references (p. [325]-338) and indexISBN: 9780801892714Contents: -- acknowledgments -- 1: Literature versus literacy -- 2: One-reel epics -- 3: The word made film -- 4: Entry-level Dickens -- 5: Between adaptation and allusion -- 6: Exceptional fidelity -- 7: Traditions of quality -- 8: Streaming pictures -- 9: The hero with a hundred faces -- 10: The adapter as auteur -- 11: Postliterary adaptation -- 12: Based on a true story -- notes -- bibliography -- index --
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Film & literature : an introduction / Morris Beja New York: Longman, 1979.
Author: Beja, Morris Source: USPlace: New YorkPublisher: LongmanPubDate: 1979PhysDes: 335 p. ; 23 cmSubject: ADAPTATIONS ; LITERATURE AND THE CINEMA ; ADAPTATIONS. DICKENS, CHARLES ; ADAPTATIONS. GREENE, GRAHAM ; ADAPTATIONS. JAMES, HENRY ; ADAPTATIONS. MANN, THOMAS ; ADAPTATIONS. SHAKESPEARE, WILLIAM ; ADAPTATIONS. STEINBECK, JOHN ; ADAPTATIONS. WILLIAMS, TENNESSEE ; GRAPES OF WRATH, THE (US, John Ford, 1940) ; CABINET DES DR. CALIGARI, DAS (G, Robert Weine, 1920) ; BRONENOSETS POTEMKIN [BATTLESHIP POTEMKIN] (UR, Sergei Eisenstein, 1925) ; CITIZEN KANE (US, Orson Welles, 1941) ; MALTESE FALCON, THE (US, John Huston, 1941) ; HENRY V (UK, Laurence Olivier, 1944) ; GREAT EXPECTATIONS (UK, David Lean, 1946) ; HAMLET (UK, Laurence Olivier, 1948) ; THIRD MAN, THE (UK, Carol Reed, 1949) ; RASHOMON (JA, Akira Kurosawa, 1950) ; SMULTRONSTALLET (SW, Ingmar Bergman, 1957) ; CAT ON A HOT TIN ROOF (US, Richard Brooks, 1958) ; PSYCHO (US, Alfred Hitchcock, 1960) ; INNOCENTS, THE (UK, Jack Clayton, 1962) ; ANNÉE DERNIÈRE À MARIENBAD, L' (FR, Alain Resnais, 1961) ; JULES ET JIM (FR, Francois Truffaut, 1962) ; LOLITA (US, Stanley Kubrick, 1962) ; PROCES, LE (FR/IT/GW, Orson Welles, 1962) ; PAWNBROKER, THE (US, Sidney Lumet, 1964) ; BLOWUP (UK/IT, Michelangelo Antonioni, 1966) ; 2001: A SPACE ODYSSEY (US, Stanley Kubrick, 1968) ; CLOCKWORK ORANGE, A (UK, Stanley Kubrick, 1971) ; MORTE A VENEZIA (IT/FR, Luchino Visconti, 1971) ; [OTTO E MEZZO]8 1/2 (IT, Federico Fellini, 1963) ; TREASURE OF THE SIERRA MADRE, THE (US, John Huston, 1948) Summary: This book discusses the relationship between film and literature, looking specifically at the adaptation of novels into films. It concentrates mainly on the narrative aspects of film and literature and how they translate between the two mediums. The first half of the book looks at the concepts relating to narrative, literature and film in a general sense; the second half of the book analyses specific films.Notes: Includes glossary, list of film distributors, bibliographic references and index; Collection holds two copies of this itemISBN: 058228094XDonation: donated by the family of Wayne Levy, 2006
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Film & literature, an introduction / Morris Beja New York: Longman, 1979.
Call No: 753 BEJCopy Management: Copy 1; Copy 2Author: Beja, Morris Source: USPlace: New YorkPublisher: LongmanPubDate: 1979PhysDes: xv, 335 p. : ill. ; 24 cmSubject: ADAPTATIONS ; ADAPTATIONS. DICKENS, CHARLES ; ADAPTATIONS. GREENE, GRAHAM ; ADAPTATIONS. JAMES, HENRY ; ADAPTATIONS. MANN, THOMAS ; ADAPTATIONS. SHAKESPEARE, WILLIAM ; ADAPTATIONS. STEINBECK, JOHN ; ADAPTATIONS. WILLIAMS, TENNESSEE ; LITERATURE AND THE CINEMA ; GRAPES OF WRATH, THE (US, John Ford, 1940) ; CABINET DES DR. CALIGARI, DAS (G, Robert Wiene, 1920) ; BRONENOSETS POTEMKIN [BATTLESHIP POTEMKIN] (UR, Sergei Eisenstein, 1925) ; CITIZEN KANE (US, Orson Welles, 1941) ; MALTESE FALCON, THE (US, John Huston, 1941) ; HENRY V (UK, Laurence Olivier, 1944) ; GREAT EXPECTATIONS (UK, David Lean, 1946) ; HAMLET (UK, Laurence Olivier, 1948) ; THIRD MAN, THE (UK, Carol Reed, 1949) ; RASHOMON (JA, Akira Kurosawa, 1950) ; SMULTRONSTALLET (SW, Ingmar Bergman, 1957) ; CAT ON A HOT TIN ROOF (US, Richard Brooks, 1958) ; PSYCHO (US, Alfred Hitchcock, 1960) ; INNOCENTS, THE (UK, Jack Clayton, 1962) ; ANNEE DERNIERE A MARIENBAD, L' (FR, Alain Resnais, 1961) ; JULES ET JIM (FR, Francois Truffaut, 1962) ; LOLITA (US, Stanley Kubrick, 1962) ; PROCES, LE (FR/IT/GW, Orson Welles, 1962) ; PAWNBROKER, THE (US, Sidney Lumet, 1964) ; BLOWUP (UK/IT, Michelangelo Antonioni, 1966) ; [TWO THOUSAND AND ONE] 2001: A SPACE ODYSSEY (UK, Stanley Kubrick, 1968) ; CLOCKWORK ORANGE, A (UK, Stanley Kubrick, 1971) ; MORTE A VENEZIA (IT/FR, Luchino Visconti, 1971) ; [OTTO E MEZZO]8 1/2 (IT, Federico Fellini, 1963) ; TREASURE OF THE SIERRA MADRE, THE (US, John Huston, 1948) Summary: This book discusses the relationship between film and literature, looking specifically at the adaptation of novels into films. It concentrates mainly on the narrative aspects of film and literature and how they translate between the two mediums. The first half of the book looks at the concepts relating to narrative, literature and film in a general sense; the second half of the book analyses specific films.Notes: Includes index; Bibliography: p. 319-327; Collection holds two copies of this itemISBN: 058228094XOrder Received: 2000Order Type: DonationLON: 78026167; 1314099
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Film/literature/heritage : a sight and sound reader / edited by Ginette Vincendeau London: British Film Institute, 2001.
Call No: 753 FILAuthor: Vincendeau, Ginette, 1948 CorpAuthor: British Film InstitutePlace: LondonPublisher: British Film InstitutePubDate: 2001PhysDes: 284p. : ill. ; 24 cmSubject: ADAPTATIONS ; ADAPTATIONS. DICKENS, CHARLES ; ADAPTATIONS. JAMES, HENRY ; ADAPTATIONS. LEONARD, ELMORE ; ADAPTATIONS. SHAKESPEARE, WILLIAM ; ADAPTATIONS. THOMPSON, JIM ; HISTORICAL FILMS ; LITERATURE AND THE CINEMA ; ARMSTRONG, GILLIAN ; BASS, RON ; TARANTINO, QUENTIN ; AGE OF INNOCENCE, THE (US, Martin Scorsese, 1993) ; AMERICAN PSYCHO (US, Mary Harron, 1999) ; BEACH, THE (US, Danny Boyle, 1999) ; BELLE EPOQUE (SP/PO, Fernando Trueba, 1992) ; BOSSU, LE (FR, Philippe De Broca, 1997) ; BRAM STOKER'S DRACULA (US, Francis Ford Coppola, 1992) ; CARRINGTON (UK/FR, Christopher Hampton, 1995) ; COMO AGUA PARA CHOCOLATE (MX, Alfonso Arau, 1992) ; CRASH (CN, David Cronenberg, 1996) ; CYRANO DE BERGERAC (FR, Jean-Paul Rappeneau, 1990) ; DEAD AGAIN (US, Kenneth Branagh, 1991) ; EDWARD II (UK, Derek Jarman, 1991) ; ELIZABETH (UK, Shekhar Kapur, 1998) ; END OF THE AFFAIR, THE (UK, Neil Jordan, 1999) ; GERMINAL (FR, Claude Berri, 1993) ; GRIFTERS, THE (US, Stephen Frears, 1990) ; HOWARDS END (UK, James Ivory, 1992) ; HUSSARD SUR LE TOIT, LE (FR, Jean-Paul Rappeneau, 1995) ; JACKIE BROWN (US, Quentin Tarantino, 1997) ; INTERVIEW WITH THE VAMPIRE (US, Neil Jordan, 1994) ; L.A. CONFIDENTIAL (US, Curtis Hanson, 1997) ; LITTLE WOMEN (US, Gillian Armstrong, 1994) ; LOLITA (US, Adrian Lyne, 1997) ; MADAME BOVARY (FR, Claude Chabrol, 1991) ; MADNESS OF KING GEORGE, THE (US, Nicholas Hytner, 1994) ; MAESTRO DE ESGRIMA, EL (SP, Pedro Olea, 1992) ; MANSFIELD PARK (UK/US, Patricia Rozema, 1999) ; MARY SHELLEY'S FRANKENSTEIN (US, Kenneth Branagh, 1994) ; MASK OF ZORRO (US, Martin Campbell, 1998) ; MISERABLES, LES (FR, Claude Lelouch, 1995) ; MRS. BROWN (UK, John Madden, 1997) ; MRS. DALLOWAY (US, Marleen Gorris, 1997) ; NAKED LUNCH (CN/UK, David Cronenberg, 1991) ; ORLANDO (UK/RU/FR/NE, Sally Potter, 1992) ; OUT OF SIGHT (US, Steven Soderbergh, 1998) ; PORTRAIT OF A LADY, THE (UK/US, Jane Campion, 1996) ; PROSPERO'S BOOKS (UK/FR, Peter Greenaway, 1991) ; REINE MARGOT, LA (FR/GG/IT, Patrice Chereau, 1994) ; REMAINS OF THE DAY, THE (UK/US, James Ivory, 1993) ; RIDICULE (FR, Patrice Leconte, 1996) ; SECRET GARDEN, THE (US, Agnieszka Holland, 1993) ; SENSE AND SENSIBILITY (US, Ang Lee, 1995) ; SHAKESPEARE IN LOVE (UK, John Madden, 1998) ; SHORT CUTS (US, Robert Altman, 1993) ; TALENTED MR. RIPLEY, THE (US, Anthony Minghella, 1999) ; TEA WITH MUSSOLINI (IT, Franco Zeffirelli, 1997) ; THIS WORLD, THEN THE FIREWORKS (US, Michael Oblowitz, 1997) ; THREE MUSKETEERS, THE (US, Stephen Herek, 1993) ; TITUS (US, Julie Taymor, 1999) ; TRAINSPOTTING (UK, Danny Boyle, 1996) ; WILDE (UK/US/JA/GG, Brian Gilbert, 1997) ; WILLIAM SHAKESPEARE'S ROMEO + JULIET (US, Baz Luhrmann, 1996) Summary: "Period costume dramas are major box office commodities, exploiting the lucrative gap between the blockbuster and art film with their mixture of rich visuals, popular sensibility and literary association. But 'heritage cinema' is all too often discussed from literary (not cinematic) perspectives, and criticism of the films has long been overshadowed by the question of a film's fidelity to the original text. This volume of essays, reviews, and interviews seeks to redress this imbalance, by examining the often antagonistic relationship between literature and film - presenting both sides of the argument about whether heritage cinema's elaborate aesthetics owe more to nostalgia than to historical accuracy. In her challenging introduction to the volume, Ginette Vincendeau sketches the terms of the debate, arguing that the genre is an important, but often critically neglected, form of popular cinema. Film/Literature/Heritage, the latest in a series of 'Sight and Sound Readers', embraces a wide range of literary adaptation, from William Shakespeare to William Burroughs, covering films from Orlando to LA Confidential, and directors from Martin Scorcese to Peter Greenaway." - BOOK BLURBISBN: 0851708420; 0851708412(pbk.) : ¦13.99LON: 22285912
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Learning the liveliest art : a film and TV course for senior students / W. H. Perkins Hobart: Fullers Bookshop, 1968.
Call No: F53 PERAuthor: Perkins, W. H. Source: AustraliaPlace: HobartPublisher: Fullers BookshopPubDate: 1968PhysDes: 320 p. ; 18 cmSubject: COURSES, FILM. AUSTRALIA ; ADAPTATIONS. DICKENS, CHARLES ; ADAPTATIONS. SHAKESPEARE, WILLIAM ; WESTERNS ; LAW IN FILMS ; TRIALS IN FILMS ; DOCUMENTARIES ; DOCUMENTARY FILMS ; OLIVER TWIST (UK, David Lean, 1948) ; GREAT EXPECTATIONS (UK, David Lean, 1946) ; HENRY V (UK, Laurence Olivier, 1944) ; TWELVE ANGRY MEN (US, Sidney Lumet, 1957) ; 3.10 TO YUMA (US, Delmer Daves, 1957) ; BACK OF BEYOND, THE (AT, John Heyer, 1953)
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Literature and film / Robert Richardson Bloomington: Indiana University Press, c1969.
Call No: 753 RICAuthor: Richardson, Robert D., 1934 Source: USPlace: BloomingtonPublisher: Indiana University PressPubDate: c1969PhysDes: ix, 149 p. 22 cmSubject: ADAPTATIONS ; ADAPTATIONS. DICKENS, CHARLES ; ADAPTATIONS. SHAKESPEARE, WILLIAM ; LITERATURE AND THE CINEMA ; POETRY AND THE CINEMA ; AGEE, JAMES ; EISENSTEIN, SERGEI M. ; FELLINI, FEDERICO ; GRIFFITH, DAVID WARK Summary: "Beginning with the simple but possibly crucial observation that, in general, literature and film are storytelling arts, Mr. Richardson presents a lucid and straightforward analysis arguing that film and literature are not the entirely different, antithetical disciplines that they are widely held to be. He shows clearly the relationship of film to literature, outlining differences as well as similarities, and common goals as well as divergent aims appropriate to the two arts, demonstrating how each form and its associated criticism is frequently able to illuminate and enliven the other. A film's consciousness sharpens the reader's alertness to the visual and aural qualities that mark much great writing, and literary training, in turn, adds depth and perspective to appreciation of film. Mr. Richardson goes on to present some of the literary influences, such as the writings Dickens and Flaubert, that have significantly affected film since the era of D.W. Griffith, and he discusses film's major influences on modern literature. The author concludes with an extended exploration of the relationship of film to poetry, suggesting that while the two forms have been concerned with similar thematic material and make use of similar techniques, film has dealt more significantly with the question of how to find a humane, noncoercive order in life.Notes: Bibliography: p. 133-142ISBN: 0253148456LON: 72085098; 589352
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Roman Polanski / James Morrison Urbana, Ill ; Chicago: University of Illinois Press, 2007.
Call No: 81POL MORAuthor: Morrison, James Source: USPlace: Urbana, Ill ; ChicagoPublisher: University of Illinois PressPubDate: 2007PhysDes: xi, 191 p. ; 22 cmSeries: Contemporary Film DirectorsSubject: ART CINEMA ; ADAPTATIONS. DICKENS, CHARLES ; ADAPTATIONS. SHAKESPEARE, WILLIAM ; ADAPTATIONS. HARDY, THOMAS ; ADAPTATIONS ; MODERNISM AND THE CINEMA ; AESTHETICS ; IMAGE ANALYSIS ; POLANSKI, ROMAN ; BORDWELL, DAVID ; REPULSION (UK, Roman Polanski, 1965) ; CUL-DE-SAC (UK, Roman Polanski, 1966) ; ROSEMARY'S BABY (US, Roman Polanski, 1968) ; MACBETH (UK, Roman Polanski, 1971) ; CHINATOWN (US, Roman Polanski, 1974) ; LOCATAIRE, LE (FR, Roman Polanski, 1976) ; TESS (FR/UK, Roman Polanski, 1979) ; BITTER MOON (FR/UK, Roman Polanski, 1992) ; PIANIST, THE (UK/GG/FR/PL, Roman Polanski, 2002) ; OLIVER TWIST (FR/UK/CZ, Roman Polanski, 2005) ISBN: 9780252074462Contents: Captive minds: Polanski and modernity. -- Comedy, melodrama, and gentrification in Polanski's films -- Cul-de-Sac and the 1960's art cinema -- Polanski in the new Hollywood -- Polanski and the art film's second wave -- Rendering classics: Macbeth and Tess -- Discovering the Figural in Polanski's films -- Interviews with Roman Polanski -- filmography, bibliography, index
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Screen adaptations : Charles Dickens' Great Expectations : the relationship between text and film / by Brian McFarlane and edited by Imelda Whelehan London: Methuen Drama: A & C Black Publishers, 2008.
Call No: 79GRE MCFAuthor: McFarlane, Brian Source: UKPlace: LondonPublisher: Methuen Drama: A & C Black PublishersPubDate: 2008PhysDes: xx, 186 p. ; 20 cmSubject: ADAPTATIONS ; ADAPTATIONS. DICKENS, CHARLES ; CRITICISM ; DICKENS, CHARLES ; GREAT EXPECTATIONS (UK, David Lean, 1946) ; GREAT EXPECTATIONS (UK, Joseph Hardy, 1975) ; GREAT EXPECTATIONS (US, Alfonso Cuaron, 1998) Summary: " Dickens has been immensely popular with filmmakers and Great Expectations has an unusual hold on the popular imagination. This book addresses in detail numerous adaptations with particular emphasis on the two television serials and four film versions including David Lean's celebrated 1946 classic and a modern re-working starring Gwyneth Paltrow. A fascinating study that is accessibly written from both a literature and film perspective. " -- BOOK BLURBNotes: Includes bibliographical references (p. [174]-179) and indexISBN: 9780713679090Contents: -- introduction and acknowledgements -- filmography and credits for key films -- part one: literary contexts -- an enduringly popular novel -- part two: from text to screen -- adaptations and extrapolations across the media -- Great Expectations on television -- Great Expectations(1934) : a Hollywood studio romance -- Great Expectations(1975): a musical sans songs -- Great Expectations(1998): from estuary to gulf, to Manhattan and back -- Great Expectations(1946): something like a classic -- part three: the afterlife of Lean's film -- a film of its time - and for other times -- bibliography -- index --
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