Still in Movement: Shakespeare on ScreenOxford University Press, 1991 - 171 strán (strany) In Still in Movement, Buchman explores the ways in which Shakespeare's plays function as products of cinematic technique and the ways in which the films organize the material of the drama to activate a particular imaginative response. To that end, he focuses on key moments in the films of Laurence Olivier (Henry V, Hamlet, and Richard III), Orson Welles (Macbeth, Othello, and Chimes at Midnight), Grigory Kozintav (Hamlet and King Lear), Roman Polanski (Macbeth) and Peter Brook (King Lear). He examines how these films clarify the process according to spatial and temporal structures of the medium. Buchman's approach is unique in the area of Shakespeare on film; he covers specific topics and addresses questions pertinent to those topics not through individual essays on any one film, play, or filmmaker, but through a comparative treatment of key sequences from a number of different films. |
Vyhľadávanie v obsahu knihy
Výsledky 1 - 3 z 22.
Strana 104
... Gloucester's blindness . As Gloucester begins to speak , Brook shoots a white sky with the sun only intermittently visible behind rapidly moving clouds , an image of occluded light as well as one that suggests a visual and linguistic ...
... Gloucester's blindness . As Gloucester begins to speak , Brook shoots a white sky with the sun only intermittently visible behind rapidly moving clouds , an image of occluded light as well as one that suggests a visual and linguistic ...
Strana 105
... Gloucester demonstrates how the director uses " filmic " space to create the illusion of the men on a cliff . The ... Gloucester- or whatever tension may arise through imagining that Gloucester , and the actor playing the role , creates ...
... Gloucester demonstrates how the director uses " filmic " space to create the illusion of the men on a cliff . The ... Gloucester- or whatever tension may arise through imagining that Gloucester , and the actor playing the role , creates ...
Strana 116
... Gloucester . The Soviet director juxtaposes two major sequences , the stories of Lear and Gloucester , rather than following the original to weave them in a tapestry of individual , short scenes . Using associative montage he could ...
... Gloucester . The Soviet director juxtaposes two major sequences , the stories of Lear and Gloucester , rather than following the original to weave them in a tapestry of individual , short scenes . Using associative montage he could ...
Obsah
Through the Machine | 3 |
Patterns of Viewing in Cinematic Space | 12 |
Dynamics of Miseenscène | 33 |
Autorské práva | |
8 zvyšných častí nezobrazených
Časté výrazy a frázy
activity actor alienation articulate audience aural field battle battle of Shrewsbury Brook camera Cassio castle chaos character Chimes at Midnight cinematic space Claudius Claudius's close-up context Cordelia create dagger Desdemona director drama dynamic elements Elsinore experience face Falstaff figure filmic and theatrical filmic space filmmaker focus Ghost Gloucester Gloucester's Goneril Grigory Kozintsev Hamlet Henry hero hero's human Iago Iago's imaginative inside isolate juxtaposition King Lear Kozintsev lago Laurence Olivier Lear's long shot low-angle shot Macbeth medium mise-en-scène move movement murder Olivier Olivier's Ophelia Orson Orson Welles's Othello Peter Brook Polanski political production relationship Richard Richard III scene screen sense sequence shadow Shakespeare films Shakespeare on Film Shakespeare Our Contemporary Shakespeare's plays simultaneous action soliloquy soundtrack spatial field speaks speare's specific spectator speech stage storm technique temporal tension theater theatrical space tion tragedy University Press viewer visual voice-over witches words York