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Alien zone II : the spaces of science-fiction cinema / edited by Annette Kuhn London New York: Verso, 1999.
Call No: 735.1 KUHAuthor: Kuhn, Annette Place: London New YorkPublisher: VersoPubDate: 1999PhysDes: 308 p. : ill. ; 20 cmSubject: SCIENCE-FICTION FILMS ; CITIES IN FILMS ; BODY IN FILMS ; DIGITAL TECHNOLOGY ; UTOPIA IN FILMS ; FANS ; INTERNET AND THE CINEMA ; MASCULINITY IN FILMS ; POSTMODERNISM AND THE CINEMA ; RACE AND THE CINEMA ; SPECTATORSHIP ; ADAPTATIONS. WELLS, H.G. ; VAN DAMME, JEAN-CLAUDE ; SCHWARZENEGGER, ARNOLD ; CREED, BARBARA ; TRUMBULL, DOUGLAS ; JOHNNY MNEMONIC (US, Robert Longo, 1995) ; THINGS TO COME (UK, William Cameron Menzies, 1936) ; STAR WARS [...] (US, 1977-99) ; BLADE RUNNER (US, Ridley Scott, 1982) ; ALIEN [...] (UK/US, 1979-92) ; ALIEN (UK, Ridley Scott, 1979) ; ALIENS (US, James Cameron, 1986) ; ALIEN RESURRECTION (US, Jean-Pierre Jeunet, 1997) ; BRAZIL (UK, Terry Gilliam, 1985) ; DEMOLITION MAN (US, Marco Brambilla, 1993) ; MAX HEADROOM [TV] (US, 1987-89) ; METROPOLIS (G, Fritz Lang, 1926) ; TOTAL RECALL (US, Paul Verhoeven, 1990) ; [TWO THOUSAND AND ONE] 2001: A SPACE ODYSSEY (UK, Stanley Kubrick, 1968) Notes: Filmography: p. [276]-284; Includes bibliographical references (p. [285]-298) and indexISBN: 1859842593 (paper); 1859847463 (cloth)LON: 20466609
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Being connected : the studio in the networked age : The Australian Film Commission's Multimedia Conference, 9-11 July 1998. Program and abstracts [Sydney]: Australian Film Commission, 1998.
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Beyond the multiplex : cinema, new technologies, and the home / Barbara Klinger Berkeley: University of California Press, 2006.
Call No: 386.5 KLIAuthor: Klinger, Barbara Source: USPlace: BerkeleyPublisher: University of California PressPubDate: 2006PhysDes: xii, 310 pages : illustrations ; 24 cmSubject: CABLE TV ; DVD, FILMS ON ; HOME EXHIBITION ; INTERNET AND THE CINEMA ; PRIVATE CINEMAS ; TECHNOLOGICAL DEVELOPMENTS Summary: "Since the mid-1980s, more audiences have been watching Hollywood movies at home than at movie theatersm yet little is known about just how viewers experience film outside of the multiplex. This is the first full-length study of how contemporary entertainment technologies and media - from cable television and VHS to DVD and the Internet - shape our encounters with the movies and affect the aesthetic, cultural, and ideological definitions of cinema. Barbara Klinger explores topics such as home theater, film collecting, classic Hollywood movie reruns, repeat viewings, and Internet film parodies, providing a multifaceted view of the presentation and reception of films in U.S. households. Balancing industry history with theoretical and cultural analysis, she finds that today's cinema's powerful social presence cannot be fully grasped without considering its prolific recycling in post-theatrical venues - especially the home."--BOOK BLURBNotes: Formerly CIP.; Includes bibliographical references (p. 281-287) and indexISBN: 9780520245860Contents: The new media aristocrats: home theater and the film experience -- The contemporary cinephile: film collecting after the VCR -- Remembrance of films past: cable television and classic Hollywood cinema -- Once is not enough: the functions and pleasures of repeat viewings -- To infinity and beyond: the Web short, parody, and remediation -- Conclusion: of fortresses and film cultures
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The Blair witch project in If magazine (Dec 1999-Jan 2000) iss.20 p.28-30
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Cinema and cultural modernity / Gill Branston Philadelphia: Open University Press, 2000.
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Convergence culture : where old and new media collide / by Henry Jenkins New York, NY: NYU Press, 2006.
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Copyright, technology and transaction costs in Lumina (Summer 2010) iss.2 p.216-267
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Copyright & the Internet : a discussion paper / [Libby Baulch] Redfern, N.S.W.: Australian Copyright Council, 1997.
Call No: 432.4(94) ACCAuthor: Baulch, Libby CorpAuthor: Australian Copyright CouncilPlace: Redfern, N.S.W.Publisher: Australian Copyright CouncilPubDate: 1997PhysDes: vi, 54 p. ; 30 cmSubject: COPYRIGHT. AUSTRALIA ; INTERNET AND THE CINEMA. AUSTRALIA Notes: "April 1997"; Also available in an electronic version on the Internet at: http://www.copyright.org.au; Includes bibliographical references; Copyright and the InternetISBN: 1875833455LON: 13234418
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Digital disruption : Cinema moves on-line / Edited by Dina Iordanova and Stuart Cunningham St Andrews, Scotland: St Andrews Film Studies, 2012.
Call No: 301(-5) IOREdition: 2012Place: St Andrews, ScotlandPublisher: St Andrews Film StudiesPubDate: 2012PhysDes: viii, 223 p. ; 23 cmSubject: DIGITAL DISTRIBUTION ; INTERNET AND THE CINEMA ; DISTRIBUTION ; COPYRIGHT ; YOUTUBE Summary: ‘Nobody knows anything’, said William Goldman of studio filmmaking. The rule is ever more apt as we survey the radical changes that digital distribution, along with the digitisation of production and exhibition, is wreaking on global film circulation.
Digital Disruption: Cinema Moves On-line helps to make sense of what has happened in the short but turbulent history of on-line distribution. It provides a realistic assessment of the genuine and not-so-promising methods that have been tried to address the disruptions that moving from ‘analogue dollars’ to ‘digital cents’ has provoked in the film industry. Paying close attention to how the Majors have dealt with the challenges – often unsuccessfully – it focuses as much attention on innovations and practices outside the mainstream. Throughout, it is alive to, and showcases, important entrepreneurial innovations such as Mubi, Jaman, Withoutabox and IMDb.
Written by leading academic commentators that have followed the fortunes of world cinema closely and passionately, as well as experienced hands close to the fluctuating fortunes of the industry, Digital Disruption: Cinema Moves On-line is an indispensable guide to great changes in film and its audiences. -- publisher's web siteISBN: 9780956373076Donation: donated by Senses of Cinema, 2014Contents: Digital Disruption: Technological Innovation and Global Film Circulation / Dina Iordanova -- On-line Film Distribution: Its History and Global Complexion / Stuart Cunningham and Jon Silver -- Digital Revolution: Active Audiences and Fragmented Consumption / Michael Gubbins -- Internet-enabled Dissemination: Managing Uncertainty in the Film Value Chain / Michael Franklin -- Convergence, Digitisation and the Future of Film Festivals / Marijke De Valck -- Mission Unreachable: How Jaman Is Shaping the Future of On-line Distribution / Jon Silver, Stuart Cunningham, Mark David Ryan -- ‘IMDb Helps Me Sleep at Night’: How a Simple Database Changed the World of Film / Alex Fischer -- ‘The Fully Clickable Submission’: How Withoutabox Captured the Hearts and Minds of Film Festivals Everywhere / Alex Fischer -- Spotlight on MUBI: Two Interviews with Efe Cakarel, Founder and CEO of MUBI / Paul Fileri and Ruby Cheung -- ‘What Do You Do with What You See?’: Patterns and Uses of Cinéphilia, Then and Now / Ben Slater -- Appendix 1: Timeline – On-line Distribution of Feature Films / Stuart Cunningham and Jon Silver -- Appendix 2: A Selection of / Mostly Legal) VOD and On-line Content Providers / Stuart Cunningham and Jon Silver -- Appendix 3: Comparative Internet Rankings: 40 International On-line Movies-on-demand Sites / Stuart Cunningham and Jon Silver -- Appendix 4: Comparative Deal Terms in 2009 / Stuart Cunningham and Jon Silver -- Appendix 5: Related Websites / Alexander Marlow-Mann
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The documentary film book / edited by Brian Winston London: Palgrave Macmillan, 2013.
Call No: 761 DOCAuthor: Winston, Brian CorpAuthor: British Film InstituteSource: UKPlace: LondonPublisher: Palgrave MacmillanPubDate: 2013PhysDes: 416 pages ; 25 cmSubject: AFRICA ; ART CINEMA ; ANTHROPOLOGY AND THE CINEMA ; BLACK CINEMA ; BRAZIL ; CINEMA-DIRECT ; CINEMA VERITE ; DOCUMENTARIES ; DOCUMENTARY FILMS ; DOCUMENTARY DRAMAS ; ETHICS AND THE CINEMA ; ETHNOGRAPHIC FILMS ; HISTORY ON TV ; HOMOSEXUALITY AND THE CINEMA ; ISRAEL ; INTERNET AND THE CINEMA ; LATIN AMERICAN COUNTRIES ; PALESTINE ; POLITICAL FILMS ; RACE AND THE CINEMA ; REVOLUTIONARY THEMES IN FILMS ; MOVEMENTS IN FILM HISTORY ; REALITY TV ; GRIERSON, JOHN ; MOORE, MICHAEL ; VERTOV, DZIGA ; AFRICA RISING (US, Paula Heredia, 2009) ; AILEEN: LIFE AND DEATH OF A SERIAL KILLER (UK, Nick Bloomfield & Joan Churchill, 2003) ; CHRONIQUE D' UN ETE (FR, Jean Rouch/Edgar Morin, 1961) ; CELOVEK S KINOAPPARATOM (UR, Dziga Vertov, 1929) ; MAN WITH A MOVIE CAMERA (UR, Dziga Vertov, 1929) ; NANOOK OF THE NORTH (US, Robert Flaherty, 1922) Summary: Powerfully posing questions of ethics, ideology, authorship and form, documentary film has never been more popular than it is today. Edited by one of the leading British authorities in the field, The Documentary Film Book is an essential guide to current thinking on documentary film.
In a series of fascinating essays, key international experts discuss the theory of documentary, outline current understandings of its history (from pre-Flaherty to the post-Griersonian world of digital 'i-Docs'), survey documentary production (from Africa to Europe, and from the Americas to Asia), consider documentaries by marginalised minority communities, and assess its contribution to other disciplines and arts. Brought together here in one volume, these scholars offer compelling evidence as to why, over the last few decades, documentary has come to the centre of screen studies. -- BOOK BLURBISBN: 9781844573417Contents: Acknowledgments -- Notes on Contributors -- Foreword: Why Documentaries Matter -- Introduction: The Filmed Documentary --; PART I: DOCUMENTARY VALUES -- The Question of Evidence, the Power of Rhetoric and Documentary Film: Bill Nichols -- 'I'll Believe It When I Trust the Source': Documentary Images and Visual Evidence: Carl Plantinga -- 'The Performance Documentary': The Performing Film-Maker, the Acting Subject: Stella Bruzzi -- On Truth, Objectivity and Partisanship: The Case of Michael Moore: Douglas Kellner -- CGI and the End of Photography as Evidence: Taylor Downing -- Drawn From Life: The Animated Documentary: Andy Glynne -- Dramadoc? Docudrama? The Limits and Protocols of a Televisual Form: Derek Paget -- Ambiguous Audiences: Annette Hill -- Life As Narrativised: Brian Winston -- The Dance of Documentary Ethics: Pratap Rughani -- Deaths, Transfigurations and the Future: John Corner --; PART II: DOCUMENTARY PARADIGMS -- Problems in Historiography: The Documentary Tradition Before Nanook of the North: Charles Musser -- John Grierson and the Documentary Film Movement: Ian Aitken -- Challenges For Change: Canada's National Film Board: Thomas Waugh and Ezra Winton -- Grierson's Legacies: Australia and New Zealand: Deane Williams -- New Deal Documentary and the North Atlantic Welfare State: Zoe Druick and Jonathan Kahana -- The Triumph of Observationalism: Direct Cinema in the USA: Dave Saunders -- Russian and Soviet Documentary: From Vertov to Sokurov: Ian Christie -- The Radical Tradition in Documentary Film-making, 1920s–50s: Bert Hogenkamp -- Le Groupe des trente: The Poetic Tradition: Elena Von Kassel Siambani -- Cinéma Vérité: Vertov Revisited: Genevieve Van Cauwenberge -- Beyond Sobriety: Documentary Diversions: Craig Hight --; PART III: DOCUMENTARY HORIZONS -- Eastwards: Abe Mark Nornes -- Africa N.: Frank Ukadike -- Images From the South: Contemporary Documentary in Argentina and Brazil: Ana Amado and Maria Dora Mourao -- 'Roadblock' Films, 'Children's Resistance' Films and 'Blood Relations' Films: Israeli and Palestinian Documentary Post-Intifada: Il Raya Morag -- Sacred, Mundane and Absurd Revelations of the Everyday – Poetic Vérité in the Eastern European Tradition; Susanna Helke --; PART IV: DOCUMENTARY VOICES -- First-Person Political: Alisa Lebow -- Feminist Documentaries: Finding, Seeing and Using Them: Julia Lesage -- Pioneers of Black Documentary Film: Pearl Bowser -- LGTBs' Documentary Identity: Christopher Pullen -- Docusoaps: The Ordinary Voice as Popular Entertainment: Richard Kilborn -- Reality TV: A Sign of the Times?: Anita Biressi and Heather Nunn --; PART V: DOCUMENTARY DISCIPLINES -- Anthropology: The Evolution of Ethnographic Film: Paul Henley -- Science, Society and Documentary: Tim Boon -- History Documentaries for Television: Ann Gray -- Music, Documentary, Music Documentary: Michael Chanan -- Art, Documentary as Art; Michael Renov --; PART VI: DOCUMENTARY FUTURES -- Documentary as Open Space: Helen de Michiel and Patricia R. Zimmermann -- 'This Great Mapping of Ourselves': New Documentary Forms Online: John Dovey and Mandy Rose -- New Platforms for 'Docmedia': 'Varient of a Manifesto': Peter Wintonick --; Afterword: The Unchanging Question: Brian Winston -- Index
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Dot.com special Cannes 2000.
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End of the affair in Sydney Morning Herald [Computers] (08/12/2001) p.8
Call No: DVD RESEARCH FOLDER; DVD RESEARCH FOLDERAuthor: Moses, Alexa Subject: ADVERTISING FOR FILMS ; INTERNET AND THE CINEMA Summary: The author laments the old websites that hang around whilst the films they promote have long gone.Notes: accessed from: Factiva. Dow Jones Reuters Business Interactive LLC. RMIT University Library. (14 May 2007). Quotations: Jim Noonan - Snr VPres and Gen Mgr Warner Bros. Online - "Noonan says the web monuments of old and, often, flop films have a lot to do with promoting video rentals and DVD sales, as well as luring television networks who are looking for content. "There's a natural evolution there and an ongoing interest for us to continue to market them online," he says.
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Entropy looks to web for sell-through in Encore (Apr 2000) vol.18 iss.3 p.20
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Ephemeral media : Transitory screen culture from television to YouTube / Paul Grainge Houndsmill, Basingstoke, Hampshire ; New York: Palgrave Macmillan, 2011.
Call No: 77 EPHAuthor: Grainge, Paul, 1972 - Place: Houndsmill, Basingstoke, Hampshire ; New YorkPublisher: Palgrave MacmillanPubDate: 2011PhysDes: viii, 236 pages : illustrations ; 24 cm.Subject: CONVERGENCE ; INTERNET AND THE CINEMA ; INTERNET AND TV ; SOCIAL MEDIA AND THE CINEMA ; ONLINE VIDEO PROGRAMMING ; COMPUTERIZED ANIMATION AND SPECIAL EFFECTS ; COMPUTERS AND THE CINEMA ; YOUTUBE ; ADVERTISING Summary: "From the television interstitials that appear between programmes to the brief clips and videos that proliferate on YouTube, contemporary screen culture is populated by short-forms that make claims for our attention. Ephemeral Media provides a unique focus on these fleeting but increasingly ubiquitous texts. Through case studies in television and web entertainment, this original book looks at the production of media at the edges, within the junctions, and that surround the output of networks and studios. Analyzing promos and idents, emergent forms of online TV and web drama, and the burgeoning world of worker- and user-generated content, this new collection also examines screen forms that circulate "between," "beyond" and "below" the TV programs and films traditionally privileged within screen studies. With essays by leading international scholars in television, film and new media studies, as well as interviews with key industry figures, Ephemeral Media explores the practices, strategies and textual forms helping producers (and viewers) negotiate a fast-paced mediascape. Examining dynamics of brevity and evanescence in the television and new media environment, Ephemeral Media provides a new perspective on the transitory, and transitional, nature of screen culture in the early 21st century"-- BlurbNotes: Formerly CIP.
Includes bibliographical references and indexISBN: 9781844574346Donation: Adrian MilesContents: Introduction: Ephemeral media, Paul Grainge -- I Media transition and transitory media -- 1. The recurrent, the recombinatory, and the ephemeral: William Uricchio -- 2. Television, abridged: ephemeral texts, monumental seriality and TV-Digital media convergence, Max Dawson -- II Between: interstitials and idents -- 3. Interstitials: how the 'bits in between' define the programmes, John Ellis -- 4. 'Music is Half the Picture': the soundworld of television idents, Mark Brownrigg and Peter Meech -- 5. TV promotion and broadcast design: An interview with Charlie Mawer, Red Bee Media -- III Beyond: online TV and web drama -- 6. The evolving media ecosystem: An interview with Victoria Jaye, BBC, Elizabeth Jane Evans -- 7. Beyond the broadcast text: new economies and temporalities of online TV, JP Kelly -- 8. Time slice: web drama and the attention economy, Jon Dovey -- 9. 'Carnaby Street, 10am': KateModern and the ephemeral dynamics of online drama, Elizabeth Jane Evans -- IV Below: worker- and user-generated content -- 10. Corporate and worker ephemera: the industrial promotional surround, paratexts and worker blowback, John T. Caldwell -- 11. Reenactment: fans performing movie scenes from the stage to YouTube, Barbara Klinger -- 12. Digital intimacies: aesthetic and affective strategies in the production and use of online video, Rosamund Davies.
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Film marketing into the twenty-first century / by Nolwenn Mingant, Cecilia Tirtaine, Joel Augros London: BFI book published by Palgrave, 2015.
Call No: 33 MINAuthor: Mingant, Nolwenn ; Tirtaine, Cecilia ; Augros, Joel Source: UKPlace: LondonPublisher: BFI book published by PalgravePubDate: 2015PhysDes: xii, 200 pages : illustrations ; 24 cmSubject: ADVERTISING FOR FILMS ; ADVERTISING ; DIGITAL TECHNOLOGY ; TRANSNATIONAL CINEMA ; DISTRIBUTION ; INTERNET AND THE CINEMA ; COMPUTERS AND THE CINEMA ; MY BIG FAT GREEK WEDDING (US, Joel Zwick, 2002) ; MY LIFE IN RUINS (US, Donald Petrie, 2009) ; ICE AGE (US, Chris Wedge & Carlos Saldanha, 2002) ; ICE AGE: CONTINENTAL DRIFT (US, Steve Martino/Michael Thurmeier, 2012) ; HOBBIT, THE: AN UNEXPECTED JOURNEY (US/NZ, Peter Jackson, 2012) ; HOBBIT, THE: THE DESOLATION OF SMAUG (US/NZ, Peter Jackson, 2013) ; HOBBIT, THE: THE BATTLE OF THE FIVE ARMIES (US/NZ, Peter Jackson, 2014) ; BAIT (AT, Kimble Rendall, 2012) ; AVATAR (US, James Cameron, 2009) Summary: "How do you sell English humour to a French audience? Could piracy actually be good for the film business? Why are the revolutionary technologies used in the making of The Hobbit not mentioned in some adverts? Exploring these questions and many more, Film Marketing into the Twenty-First Century draws on insights from renowned film scholars and leading industry professionals to chart the evolution of modern film marketing.
The first part of the book focuses on geographical considerations, showing how marketers have to adapt their strategies locally as films travel across borders. The second covers new marketing possibilities offered by the Internet, as Vine, Facebook and other participative websites open new venues for big distributors and independents alike. Straddling practical and theoretical concerns and including case studies that take us from Nollywood to Peru, this book provides an accessible introduction to the key issues at stake for film marketing in a global era." -- BOOK BLURBNotes: Includes bibliographical references and indexISBN: 9781844578382Contents: -- acknowledgments -- notes on contributors -- foreword / Janet Wasko -- 1: introduction / Nolwenn Mingant, Cecilia Tirtaine and Joel Augros -- `My job is to find the right signals at the right moment for the right people' an interview with Benoit Mely / Laurent Creton and Nolwenn Mingant -- I.MARKETING AND FILM CULTURE -- `There simply Isn't one-shape-fits-all for film' an interview with Michael Williams-Jones / Nolwenn Mingant -- And Tom Cruise Climbed the Burj Khalifa, or How Marketing Shapes Hollywood Film Production / Nolwenn Mingant -- `My Big Fat Life in Ruins' Marketing Greekness and the Contemporary US Independent Film / Yannis Tzioumakis and Lydia Papadimitriou -- Carry On Laughing Selling English Humour in France / Cecilia Tirtaine and Joel Augros -- Hearing Voices Dubbing and Marketing in the Ice Age Series A case study / Nolwenn Mingant -- Hollywood in China Continuities and Disjunctures in Film Marketing / Michael Curtin, Wesley Jacks and Yongli Li -- Film Marketing in Nollywood A case study / Alessandro Jedlowski -- Marketing High Frame Rate in The Hobbit Trilogy A Spectacular Case of Promoting and Un-promoting New Cinema Technology / Miriam Ross -- Niche Marketing in Peru An Interview / Nolwenn Mingant -- II.MARKETING FOR AND BY THE CONSUMER -- Leaked Information and Rumours The Buzz Effect A case study / Joel Augros -- Brave New Films, Brave New Ways The Internet and the Future of Low- to No Budget Film Distribution and Marketing / Hayley Trowbridge -- Between Storytelling and Marketing, the SocialSamba Model An Interview with Aaron Williams / Nolwenn Mingant -- Promoting in Six Seconds New Advertising Strategies Using the Video Social Network Vine in Spain A case study / Javier Lozano Delmar and Jose Antonio Muniz-Velazquez -- Piracy and Promotion Understanding the Double-edged Power of Crowds / Ramon Lobato -- Marketing Bait (2012) Using SMART Data to Identify e-guanxi Among China's `Internet Aborigines' / Brian Yecies, Jie Yang, Matthew Berryman and Kai Soh -- From Marketing to Performing the Market The Emerging Role of Digital Data in the Independent Film Business / Michael Franklin, Dimitrinka Stoyanova Russell and Barbara Townley -- POSTSCRIPT: THE INVISIBLE SIDE OF BUSINESS: B-TO-B MARKETING -- marketing the `Avatar Revolution', or How to Sell Digital Technology to Exhibitors / Kira Kitsopanidou -- `It's Africa. It's Arizona. It's Antarctica. It's Afghanistan. Actually, it's Alberta' Marketing Locations to Film Producers / Ben Goldsmith -- select bibliography -- index --
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Film & video on the Internet : the top 500 sites / by Bert Deivert & Dan Harries Studio City, CA: M.W. Publications, 1996.
Call No: 398 DEI REFAuthor: Deivert, Bert, 1950 ; Harries, Dan, 1963 Place: Studio City, CAPublisher: M.W. PublicationsPubDate: 1996PhysDes: vii, 252 p. ; 21 cmSubject: INTERNET AND THE CINEMA Notes: Videography: p. 245; Includes bibliographical references (p. 245) and index; Film and video on the InternetISBN: 094118854XLON: 12224298
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Filmtvbiz.com.au on-line in Movie Trader (Apr 2000) p.15
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Hollywood's copyright wars : from Edison to the internet / Peter Decherney New York: Columbia University Press, 2013.
Call No: 432.4 DECAuthor: Decherney, Peter Source: USPlace: New YorkPublisher: Columbia University PressPubDate: 2013PhysDes: xii, 287 pages : illustrations ; 23 cmSubject: AUTHORSHIP ; COPYRIGHT ; COPYRIGHT. USA ; HISTORY OF CINEMA ; HOLLYWOOD ; HOME VIDEO ; INTERNET ; INTERNET AND THE CINEMA ; LAW AND THE CINEMA ; LAW AND TV ; PARODY ; PIRACY ; PLAGIARISM ; CHAPLIN, CHARLES ; EDISON, THOMAS ALVA ; LUCAS, GEORGE ; MOTION PICTURE ASSOCIATION OF AMERICA ; YOUTUBE Summary: "Beginning with Thomas Edison's aggressive copyright disputes and concluding with recent lawsuits against YouTube, Hollywood's Copyright Wars follows the struggle of the film, television, and digital media industries to influence and adapt to copyright law. Though much of Hollywood's engagement with the law occurs offstage, in the larger theater of copyright, many of Hollywood's valued treasures - from Modern Times (1936) to Star Wars (1977) - cannot be fully understood without appreciating their legal controversies. Peter Decherney shows that the history of intellectual property in Hollywood has not always mirrored the evolution of the law and recounts these extralegal solutions and their impact on American media and culture." - BOOK BLURBNotes: Contains list of illustrations and indexISBN: 9780231159470
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Home runs on a winner as net widens bit by bit in The Age (13/08/2005) p.6
Call No: DVD RESEARCH FOLDER; DVD RESEARCH FOLDERAuthor: Ziffer, Daniel Subject: PIRACY ; PIRACY. AUSTRALIA ; INTERNET AND THE CINEMA. AUSTRALIA ; INTERNET AND TV. AUSTRALIA Summary: Downloading of television shows and films over the internet using peer-to-peer software (BitTorrent). Difficult to quantify how this service effects DVD sales. Though author thinks that the move by some to start shooting films to go straight to 'video' has been impacted by the smaller gap between film release and it's appearance on DVD.Notes: accessed from: Factiva. Dow Jones Reuters Business Interactive LLC. RMIT University Library. (put date - 14 May 2007). ; -- article written with Guardian, TelegraphQuotations: -- "The average wait for a film to be released on DVD is only four months - down from 12 months just 10 years ago."
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INTERNET AND THE CINEMA
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INTERNET AND THE CINEMA. AUSTRALIA Digital clippings file available
Call No: SUBJECT CLIPPINGS FILE; DIGITAL CLIPPINGS FILEPhysDes: ClippingsSubject: INTERNET AND THE CINEMA. AUSTRALIA URL status: URL: 'http://file://Q:/S/INTERNET_AND_THE_CINEMA._AUSTRALIA.zip'
Checked: 31/08/2021 1:17:00 PM
Status: Error
Details: Failed to send HTTP request (WinHttpSendRequest)
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Investigation into the content of on-line services : issues paper : Sydney, December 1995 / Australian Broadcasting Authority Sydney: Australian Broadcasting Authority, 1995.
Call No: 30(94) ABASource: ATPlace: SydneyPublisher: Australian Broadcasting AuthorityPubDate: 1995PhysDes: 45 p. ; 30 cmSubject: INTERNET AND THE CINEMA. AUSTRALIA ; INTERNET AND TV. AUSTRALIA ; INTERNET. AUSTRALIA Summary: "An issues paper intended to provide a basis for interested parties to make submissions to the ABA's investigation into on-line services. The paper identifies a range of on-line services that are available now and expected in the forseeable future. The paper considers developments in the on-line industry and identifies options for dealing with content issues in a manner which reflects community standards, industry needs and accommodates technological advances and service trends" - taken from introduction
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The language of interactivity : [conference abstracts of] the Australian Film Commission's Multimedia Conference, 11-13 April 1996 [Sydney?]: Australian Film Commission, 1996.
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The language of new media / Lev Manovich Cambridge, Mass. London: MIT Press, c2001.
Call No: 775 MANAuthor: Manovich, Lev Source: USPlace: Cambridge, Mass. LondonPublisher: MIT PressPubDate: c2001PhysDes: xxxix, 354 p. : ill. ; 24 cmSeries: LeonardoSubject: DIGITAL BROADCASTING ; DIGITAL TECHNOLOGY ; MEDIA ; INTERACTIVE CINEMA ; INTERNET AND THE CINEMA ; INTERNET AND TV ; COMPUTER GRAPHICS ; COMPUTER GAMES ; COMPUTERIZED ANIMATION AND SPECIAL EFFECTS ; COMPUTERS AND THE CINEMA ; ANIMATION ; VIRTUAL REALITY ; LOOP FILMS ; NARRATIVE IN FILMS ; BARTHES, ROLAND ; BENJAMIN, WALTER ; COMOLLI, JEAN-LOUIS ; MELIES, GEORGES ; CELOVEK S KINOAPPARATOM (UR, Dziga Vertov, 1929) ; JURASSIC PARK (US, Steven Spielberg,, 1993) Notes: Includes bibliographical references and indexISBN: 0262133741 : No priceLON: 21628309
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Media matrix : sexing the new reality / Barbara Creed Crows Nest, NSW: Allen and Unwin, 2003.
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Media streaming and broadband in Australia : report to the Australian Broadcasting Authority / prepared by the Centre for Telecommunications Information Networking Sydney: Australian Broadcasting Authority, 2002.
Call No: 30(94) MEDSource: ATPlace: SydneyPublisher: Australian Broadcasting AuthorityPubDate: 2002PhysDes: 80 pages : illustration ; 30 cmSubject: DIGITAL TECHNOLOGY. AUSTRALIA ; INTERNET AND THE CINEMA. AUSTRALIA ; INTERNET AND TV. AUSTRALIA ; MOBILE AND ONLINE MEDIA ; MOBILE ONLINE MEDIA. AUSTRALIA ; VIDEO ON DEMAND Summary: A study on the potential uses of streaming technology and how this compares with other viewing technological advances that will become available mainly due to broadband technologyContents: About CTIN -- Executive summary -- 1. Introduction -- 2. The techologies of streaming and broadband -- 3. Estimates of streaming demand in Australia -- 4. The potential impact of corporate strateigs on streaming in Australia -- 5. Regulatory presssure points -- 6. Appendix 1: Packet versus circuit networks -- Appendix 2: identitites and links among existing corporations -- Bibliography -- Glossary
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Mediawatch '99 March 1999.
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The Oxford handbook of new audiovisual aesthetics / edited by John Richardson, Claudia Gorbman, Carol Vernallis New York: Oxford University Press, c2013.
Call No: 220 OXFAuthor: Richardson, John ; Gorbman, Claudia ; Vernallis, Carol Source: USPlace: New YorkPublisher: Oxford University PressPubDate: c2013PhysDes: Oxford University PressSubject: TECHNOLOGY AND THE CINEMA ; TECHNOLOGICAL DEVELOPMENTS ; TECHNICAL DEVELOPMENTS ; TECHNOLOGY AND TV ; INTERNET ; INTERNET AND THE CINEMA ; INTERNET AND TV ; YOUTUBE ; AESTHETICS ; ANIMATION ; MULTIMEDIA ; SOUND REPRODUCTION ; MEDIA ; SOUND Summary: This book offers new ways to read the audiovisual. In the media landscapes of today, conglomerates jockey for primacy and the internet increasingly places media in the hands of individuals - producing the range of phenomena from movie blockbuster to YouTube aesthetics. Media forms and genres are proliferating and interpenetrating, from movies, music and other entertainments streaming on computers and iPods to video games and wireless phones. The audiovisual environment of everyday life, too - from street to stadium to classroom - would at times be hardly recognizable to the mid-twentieth-century subject. This book provides a definitive cross-section of current ways of thinking about sound and image. Its authors - leading scholars and promising younger ones, audiovisual practitioners and non-academic writers (both mainstream and independent) - open the discussion on audiovisual aesthetics in new directions. Our contributors come from fields including film, visual arts, new media, cultural theory, and sound and music studies, and they draw variously from economic, political, institutional, psychoanalytic, genre-based, auteurist, internationalist, reception-focused, technological, and cultural approaches to questions concerning today's sound and image.Notes: Includes bibliographical references and index.ISBN: 9780199733866Contents: Introduction / John Richardson and Claudia Gorbman -- Theoretical pressure points -- Classical music for the posthuman condition / Lawrence Kramer -- Beyond music: mashup, multimedia mentality, and intellectual property / Nicholas Cook -- The audio-logo-visual and the sound of languages in recent film / Michel Chion -- The end of diegesis as we know it? / Anahid Kassabian -- Sounding out film / Steven Connor -- Narrative, genre, meaning: changing times, changing practices -- Audio-visual space in an era of technological convergence / Robynn J. Stilwell -- Title Sequences for contemporary television serials / Annette Davison -- No country for old music / Carter Burwell -- Cue the big theme? the sound of the superhero / Janet K. Halfyard -- Video speech in Latin America / Michael Chanan -- Animated sounds -- Pixar and the animated soundtrack / Daniel Goldmark -- Notes on sound design in contemporary animated films / Randy Thom -- Zig Zag: re-animating Len Lye as improvised theatrical performance and immersive visual music / Lisa Perrott -- Musical moments and transformations -- The mutating musical and The sound of music / Caryl Flinn -- Chinese rock 'n ' roll film and Cui Jian on screen / Ying Xiao -- The neosurrealist metamusical: Tsai's The wayward cloud / John Richardson -- Parties in your head: from the acoustic to the psycho-acoustic / Philip Brophy -- Expanded soundtracks -- Sensory aspects of contemporary cinema / Michel Chion -- The sound of intensified continuity / Jeff Smith -- Extending film aesthetics: audio beyond visuals / K.J. Donnelly -- The audiovisual construction of transgender identity in Transamerica / Susanna Va¨lima¨ki -- Soundscapes of Istanbul in Turkish film soundtracks / Meri Kyto¨ -- Audiovisual objects, multisensory people and the intensified ordinary in Hong Kong action films / Charles Kronengold -- Emerging audiovisual forms: music video and beyond -- Music video's second aesthetic / Carol Vernallis -- Aesthetics and hyperembodiment in pop videos: Rihanna's "Umbrella" / Stan Hawkins -- The emancipation of music video: YouTube and the cultural politics of supply and demand / Paula Hearsum & Ian Inglis -- Music video transformed / Mathias Bonde Korsgaard -- Video, film, and installation art -- "Betwixt and between" worlds: spatial and temporal liminality in video / Holly Rogers -- Sound events: innovation in projection and installation / Maureen Turim and Michael Walsh -- Gaming -- Contextualizing game audio aesthetics / Rob Bridget -- Implications of interactivity: What does it mean for sound to be "Interactive"? / Karen Collins -- Multi-channel gaming aesthetics of interactive surround / Mark Kerins -- Audiovisuality in performance and daily life -- Sound and vision: the audio/visual economy of musical performance / Philip Auslander -- Foreground flatland / Joseph Lanza -- Remaking the urban: the audio-visual aesthetics of ipod use / Michael Bull -- On soundscape methods and audiovisual sensibility / Helmi Ja¨rviluoma and Noora Vikman -- Leaving something to the imagination: "seeing" new places through a musical lens / Mariko Hara and Tia Denora
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journal article
The politics of digital distribution : exclusionary structures in online cinema in Studies in Australasian cinema (2009) vol.3 iss.2 p.167-178
Author: Lobato, Ramon PhysDes: ArticleSubject: INTERNET AND THE CINEMA. AUSTRALIA ; INTERNET AND THE CINEMA ; DIGITAL DISTRIBUTION ; DISTRIBUTION. AUSTRALIA Summary: The hype around digital film distribution is now at fiver pitch, with promises of a brave new world of instant delivery, unfettered consumer choice and new revenue streams for film-makers. Surveying the current array of commercial online video-on-demand (VOD) services, this article offers some critical reflections on these emerging circulatory models. The focus is on power relations within the online VOI industry and on issues of audience access and equity. The article argues that distribution should be a key concern for contemporary film researchers, given the power of distributors to determine the range of films available to viewers and the conditions under which they are accessible. While the ‘democratizing’ potential of online distribution may be appealing, it is important to recognize that digital delivery infrastructures may not result in any real diversification of film culture, that much of the Australian audience will be excluded from their reach and that the vast majority of online film consumption will continue to take place in the extralegal realm. -- AbstractNotes: Part of a special issue on digital cinema in Australia and New Zealand
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Small screen aesthetics : from TV to the Internet / Glen Creeber London: Palgrave Macmillan, 2013.
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Social media entertainment : The new intersection of Hollywood and Silicon Valley / Stuart Cunningham ; David Craig New York: New York University Press, 2019.
Call No: 229.5(73) CUNAuthor: Cunningham, Stuart ; Craig, David Source: USPlace: New YorkPublisher: New York University PressPubDate: 2019PhysDes: x, 353 pages : figures, illustrations, tables ; 23 cmSubject: AUDIENCES ; INTERNET AND THE CINEMA ; SOCIAL MEDIA AND THE CINEMA ; AUDIENCE RESEARCH Summary: "How the transformation of social media platforms and user-experience have redefined the entertainment industry
In a little over a decade, competing social media platforms, including YouTube, Facebook, Twitter, Instagram, and Snapchat, have given rise to a new creative industry: social media entertainment. Operating at the intersection of the entertainment and interactivity, communication and content industries, social media entertainment creators have harnessed these platforms to generate new kinds of content separate from the century-long model of intellectual property control in the traditional entertainment industry.
Social media entertainment has expanded rapidly and the traditional entertainment industry has been forced to cede significant power and influence to content creators, their fans, and subscribers. Digital platforms have created a natural market for embedded advertising, changing the worlds of marketing and communication in their wake. Combined, these factors have produced new, radically shifting demands on the entertainment industry, posing new challenges for screen regimes, media scholars, industry professionals, content creators, and audiences alike.
Stuart Cunningham and David Craig chronicle the rise of social media entertainment and its impact on media consumption and production. A massive, industry-defining study with insight from over 100 industry insiders, Social Media Entertainment explores the latest transformations in the entertainment industry in this time of digital disruption." -- book blurbNotes: Includes bibliography, index, notesISBN: 9781479846894Contents: 1. Introduction -- 2. Platform strategy -- 3. Creator labor -- 4. Social media entertainment intermediaries -- 5. Authenticity, community, and brand culture -- 6. Cultural politics of social media entertainment -- 7. Globalizing social media entertainment -- 8. Conclusion
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Useful web sites for screen studies in Metro Education (1999) iss.19 p.33-34
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