Results for 'Horror films History and criticism.'

971 found
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  1.  22
    Horror film and otherness.Adam Lowenstein - 2022 - New York: Columbia University Press.
    What do horror films reveal about social difference in the everyday world? Criticism of the genre often relies on a dichotomy between monstrosity and normality, in which unearthly creatures and deranged killers are metaphors for society's fear of the "others" that threaten the "normal." The monstrous other might represent women, Jews, or Blacks, as well as Indigenous, queer, poor, elderly, or disabled people. The horror film's depiction of such minorities can be sympathetic to their exclusion or complicit (...)
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  2.  30
    The ethics of horror: spectral alterity in twenty-first-century horror film.Michael Joseph Burke - 2024 - Lanham: Lexington Books.
    This book examines spectral haunting through the philosophies of Levinas and Derrida. Arguing that moral obligation can appear terrifying to the complacent self, the text interrogates ethical responsibility in contemporary horror genres.
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  3.  8
    Japanese horror cinema and Deleuze: interrogating and reconceptualizing dominant modes of thought.Rachel Elizabeth Barraclough - 2022 - New York: Bloomsbury Academic.
    An analysis of Japanese horror films from the 1990s and 2000s using Deleuzian concepts.
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  4.  36
    Terrors of the flesh: the philosophy of body horror in film.David Huckvale - 2020 - Jefferson, North Carolina: McFarland & Company, Inc., Publishers.
    The horror and psychological denial of our mortality, along with the corruptibility of our flesh, are persistent themes in drama. Body horror films have intensified these themes in increasingly graphic terms. The aesthetic of body horror has its origins in the ideas of the Marquis de Sade and the existential philosophies of Arthur Schopenhauer and Friedrich Nietzsche, all of whom demonstrated that we have just cause to be anxious about our physical reality and its existence in (...)
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  5.  3
    Monsters vs. patriarchy: toxic imagination in global horror cinema.Patricia Saldarriaga - 2025 - New Brunswick, NJ: Rutgers University Press. Edited by Emy Manini.
    Across the globe, the violent effects of patriarchy are manifest. Women, trans people, gender non-conforming people, and the racialized Other are regularly subjected to physical danger, beginning with the denial of vitally important health care, and, in its most horrific form, rape, trafficking, and murder. Monsters vs. Patriarchy links these real-world horrors to the monstrification and dehumanization of people as expressed in contemporary global cinema. This monstrification has been achieved through a toxic imagination attributed to women, a trait which historically (...)
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  6. The philosophy of horror.Thomas Richard Fahy (ed.) - 2010 - Lexington, Ky.: University Press of Kentucky.
    Inviting readers to ponder this genre's various manifestations since the late 1700s, this collection of probing essays allows fans and philosophy buffs alike to ...
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  7. Dark thoughts: philosophic reflections on cinematic horror.Steven Jay Schneider & Daniel Shaw (eds.) - 2003 - Lanham, Md.: Scarecrow Press.
    This is a collection of highly engaging and provocative essays by top scholars in the increasingly interrelated fields of Philosophy, Film Studies, and Communication Arts that deal with the epistemology, aesthetics, ethics, metaphysics, and ...
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  8.  20
    Denken des Horrors, Horror des Denkens: Unheimliches, Erschreckendes und Monströses aus philosophischer Perspektive.Eike Brock & Thorsten Lerchner (eds.) - 2019 - Würzburg: Königshausen & Neumann.
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  9.  5
    Vampires from another world: the cinematic progeny of H.G. Wells' The war of the worlds and Bram Stoker's Dracula.Simon Bacon - 2021 - Jefferson, North Carolina: McFarland & Company, Inc., Publishers.
    This book begins at the intersection of Dracula and War of the Worlds, both published in 1897 London, and describes the settings of Transylvania, Mars, and London as worlds linked by the body of the vampire. It explores the "vampire from another world" in all its various forms, as a manifestation of not just our anxieties around alien others, but also our alien selves. Unsurprisingly, many of the tropes these novels generated and particularly the themes they have in common have (...)
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  10.  11
    The philosophy of war films.David LaRocca (ed.) - 2014 - Lexington: University Press of Kentucky.
    Wars have played a momentous role in shaping the course of human history. The ever-present specter of conflict has made it an enduring topic of interest in popular culture, and many movies, from Hollywood blockbusters to independent films, have sought to show the complexities and horrors of war on-screen. In The Philosophy of War Films, David LaRocca compiles a series of essays by prominent scholars that examine the impact of representing war in film and the influence that (...)
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  11.  10
    Il male quotidiano: incursioni filosofiche nell'horror.Selena Pastorino & Davide Navarria (eds.) - 2022 - Roma: Rogas edizioni.
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  12.  8
    A viewer's guide to film theory and criticism.Robert T. Eberwein - 1979 - Metuchen, N.J.: Scarecrow Press.
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  13.  45
    The Lost Audience: Methodology, Cinema History and Feminist Film Criticism'.Jackie Stacey - 1995 - In Beverley Skeggs (ed.), Feminist cultural theory: process and production. New York: Distributed exclusively in the USA and Canada by St. Martin's Press. pp. 97.
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  14.  45
    Being in a Horror Movie.Pete Falconer - 2023 - Journal of Aesthetics and Art Criticism 81 (3):293-305.
    This article takes as its starting point a recurring complaint in the popular reception of horror movies: that the characters in them behave foolishly. I argue that such complaints fail to recognize that the horror genre exploits a fundamental tension in fiction, between the perspective on a fictional world offered to its audience and that available to its characters. This distinction is highlighted in horror, which often depicts characters with everyday expectations facing extraordinary threats. Horror characters (...)
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  15.  24
    Mysteries of cinema: reflections on film theory, history and culture.Adrian Martin - 2020 - Crawley, Western Australia: UWA Publishing.
    The major essays of the distinguished and prolific Australian-born film critic Adrian Martin have long been difficult to access, so this anthology, which collects highlights of his work in one volume, will be welcomed throughout film studies. Martin offers in-depth analysis of many genres of films while providing a broad understanding of the history of cinema and the history of film criticism and culture. These vibrant, highly personal essays, written between 1982 and 2016, balance breadth across cinema (...)
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  16.  58
    Film, Freud, and Paranoia: Dali and the Representation of Male Desire in An Andalusian Dog.Ignacio Javier Lopez - 2001 - Diacritics 31 (2):35-48.
    In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:Diacritics 31.2 (2001) 35-48 [Access article in PDF] Film, Freud, and ParanoiaDalí and the Representation of Male Desire in An Andalusian Dog Ignacio Javier López An Andalusian Dog, one of the most universally acclaimed films in cinema history, is frequently mentioned by critics as a privileged point of reference for the Surrealist rebellion. The film remains enigmatic to this day. Criticism has concentrated on the validity and (...)
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  17.  72
    ‘I’ing Cinema: Rothman's Readings of Cinematographic Visions and Visionaries: On William Rothman, The ‘I’ of the Camera: Essays in Film Criticism, History, and Aesthetics.David Sullivan - 1998 - Film-Philosophy 2 (1).
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  18. Projecting illusion: film spectatorship and the impression of reality.Richard Allen - 1995 - New York: Cambridge University Press.
    Projecting Illusion offers a systematic analysis of the impression of reality in the cinema and the pleasure it gives to the film spectator. Film provides a compelling experience that can be considered as a form of illusion akin to the experience of day-dream and dream. Examining the concept of illusion and its relationship to fantasy in the experience of visual representation, Richard Allen situates his explanation within the context of an analytical criticism of contemporary film and critical theory. He argues (...)
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  19.  3
    Films that spill: beyond the cinema of transgression.Marie Sophie Beckmann - 2025 - New Brunswick, Camden, and Newark, New Jersey: Rutgers University Press.
    Films That Spill is a comprehensive study of the Cinema of Transgression, a hitherto under-examined moment in US underground film culture. Reconsidering the concept of transgressive cinema not only as a description of the intentionally provocative content of the films, but rather as a feature of a cross-disciplinary practice, the book explores how filmmaking in the context of the vibrant and intermingling art, music, performance, and film scenes in 1980s Lower Manhattan spilled over the boundaries of artistic disciplines, (...)
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  20.  19
    About documentary: anthropology on film: a philosophy of people and art.Robert Edmonds - 1974 - Dayton, Ohio: Pflaum.
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  21.  2
    Uncovering memory: filming in South Africa, Germany, Poland and Bosnia/Herzegovina.Tanja Sakota - 2023 - Johannesburg, South Africa: Wits University Press.
    The book is an interdisciplinary work shaped around films made by different workshop participants using film to access personal interpretations of space and place. It is focused on interacting and engaging with remembering through different memory sites.Travelling along a timeline of memory Tanja Sakota takes us on a journey through South Africa Germany Poland and Bosnia/Herzegovina. Using a camera and short film format Sakota hosts several workshops in different countries focused on interacting and engaging with remembering through different memory (...)
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  22.  6
    Unwatchable.Nicholas Baer, Maggie Hennefeld, Laura Horak & Gunnar Iversen (eds.) - 2019 - New Brunswick: Rutgers University Press.
    We all have images that we find unwatchable, whether for ethical, political, or sensory-affective reasons. From news coverage of terror attacks to viral videos of police brutality, and from graphic horror films to incendiary artworks that provoke mass boycotts, many of the images in our media culture strike as beyond the pale of consumption. Yet what does it mean to proclaim a media object "unwatchable": disturbing, revolting, poor, tedious, or literally inaccessible? Appealing to a broad academic and general (...)
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  23.  2
    Sport, film, and the modern world: aesthetics, ethics, environments.Neil Archer - 2024 - NewYork: Peter Lang.
    This book rethinks the discussion of sport as a cinematic subject. Arguing for the vitality of the sports film as distinctively 'modern' genre, the book looks at its innovative potential to capture twentieth- and twenty-first-century sport in all its complexity. Written in an accessible style and illustrated throughout, the book integrates work and ideas from film studies with thinking from sports psychology, philosophy, data theory and ecocriticism. In its detailed analyses of a wide-ranging group of films, the book shows (...)
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  24.  12
    Screening history.Gore Vidal - 1992 - Cambridge: Harvard University Press.
    Vidal intertwines fond recollections of films savored in the movie palaces of his Washington, D.C., boyhood with strands of autobiography and trenchant observations about American politics. Never before has the renowned author revealed so much about his own life or written with such immediacy about the forces shaping America. 26 halftones.
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  25.  17
    Cosmos and Camus: science fiction film and the absurd.Shy Tubali - 2020 - New York: Peter Lang.
    Over the last two decades, many philosophers have been increasingly inclined to consider science fiction films as philosophical exercises that center on the nature of human consciousness and existence. Albert Camus' philosophy of the absurd, however, has almost never been employed as a constructive perspective that can illumine unexplored aspects of these films. This is surprising, since science fiction films seem to be packed with visions and dialogues that echo the Sisyphean universe. Cosmos and Camus endeavors to (...)
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  26.  8
    The dark interval: film noir, iconography, and affect.Padraic Killeen - 2022 - New York: Bloomsbury Academic.
    Invoking key concepts from the philosophical writings of Gilles Deleuze and Giorgio Agamben, The Dark Interval examines an iconography of radical passivity and temporal rupture that recurs in film noir, while examining the emergence of a specific cinematic figure - the 'intervallic' noir protagonist exposed to the redemptive force of his or her own passion.
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  27.  40
    Speaking Truths with Film: Evidence, Ethics, Politics in Documentary.Bill Nichols - 2016 - Oakland: University of California Press.
    How do issues of form and content shape the documentary film? What role does visual evidence play in relation to a documentary’s arguments about the world we live in? In what ways do documentaries abide by or subvert ethical expectations? Are mockumentaries a form of subversion? Can the documentary be an aesthetic experience and at the same time have political or social impact? And how can such impacts be empirically measured? Pioneering film scholar Bill Nichols investigates the ways documentaries strive (...)
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  28.  59
    Deleuze and cinema: the film concepts.Felicity Colman - 2011 - New York: Berg.
    Gilles Deleuze published two radical books on film: Cinema 1: The Movement-Image and Cinema 2: The Time-Image. Engaging with a wide range of film styles, histories and theories, Deleuze's writings treat film as a new form of philosophy. This ciné-philosophy offers a startling new way of understanding the complexities of the moving image, its technical concerns and constraints as well as its psychological and political outcomes. Deleuze and Cinema presents a step-by-step guide to the key concepts behind Deleuze's revolutionary theory (...)
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  29.  13
    The slapstick camera: Hollywood and the comedy of self-reference.Burke Hilsabeck - 2020 - Albany: SUNY Press.
    Demonstrates that slapstick film comedies display a canny and sometimes profound understanding of their medium. Slapstick film comedy may be grounded in idiocy and failure, but the genre is far more sophisticated than it initially appears. In this book, Burke Hilsabeck suggests that slapstick is often animated by a philosophical impulse to understand the cinema. He looks closely at movies and gags that represent the conditions and conventions of cinema production and demonstrates that film comedians display a canny and sometimes (...)
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  30.  20
    “The Hum of the Conversing Audience”: Ordinary Criticism and Film Culture in American Early Film Theory.Marthe Statius - 2023 - Open Philosophy 6 (1):408.
    This article seeks to explore the early stages of American film theory, wherecinephiliabecame a site of aesthetic interest and criticism thanks to the theorization of cinema as a conversational medium. Following Stanley Cavell’s analysis of a distinct form of moviegoing in America, based on the casual conversation about movies, I argue that a reinterpretation of Emerson’s ordinary aesthetics has been at the core of early film theory, especially in Vachel Lindsay’s writings. In order to illustrate the relation between the defence (...)
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  31.  15
    Wahrheit und Wirklichkeit im Film: Philosophie des Dokumentarfilms.Klaus Arriens - 1999 - Würzburg: Königshausen & Neumann.
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  32.  55
    Phenomenology and the future of film: rethinking subjectivity beyond French cinema.Jenny Chamarette - 2012 - New York: Palgrave-Macmillan.
    Introduction -- Time and matter: temporality, embodied subjectivity and film phenomenology -- Knowing and nothing: Chris Marker, subjective temporalities and vocalic bodies in the future tense -- Agnès Varda's Trinket box: subjective relationality, affect and temporalised space -- Burlesque gestures and bodily attention: phenomenologies of the ephemeral in Chantal Akerman -- Threatened corporealities: thinking with the films of Philippe Grandrieux -- Conclusion: rethinking cinematic subjectivity and beyond.
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  33. Hybrid documentary and non-binary cinema.Luke W. Moody - 2025 - New York, NY: Routledge.
    Hybrid Documentary and Non-Binary Cinema offers an expansive exploration of the contemporary documentary cinema form, aesthetics, and ethics. Beginning with a brief history of early seminal examples of magical realism, and constructed realities in documentary and ethnographic film the book will focus on recent and present-day examples of work that blur the lines between fiction and non-fiction. The book will also take a series of case studies to question the vision and motives of filmmakers working between documentary and fictional (...)
     
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  34.  43
    Opera, ideology, and film.Jeremy Tambling - 1987 - New York: St. Martin's Press.
    INTRODUCTION Opera and film. Though these two cultural forms are not often thought of together, they have actually existed in an interesting symbiosis, ...
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  35.  51
    Theorizing Bruce Lee: Film-Fantasy-Fighting-Philosophy.Paul Bowman - 2010 - Rodopi.
    ' Armoured with his philosophical nunchakus, Bowman goes to battle with anyone who may doubt Lee's ongoing importance, and this book will undoubtedly become ...
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  36.  22
    Taking Spectacle Seriously: Wildlife Film and the Legacy of Natural History Display.Eleanor Louson - 2018 - Science in Context 31 (1):15-38.
    ArgumentI argue through an analysis of spectacle that the relationship between wildlife documentary films’ entertainment and educational mandates is complex and co-constitutive. Accuracy-based criticism of wildlife films reveals assumptions of a deficit model of science communication and positions spectacle as an external commercial pressure influencing the genre. Using thePlanet Earth(2006) series as a case study, I describe spectacle's prominence within the recent blue-chip renaissance in wildlife film, resulting from technological innovations and twenty-first-century consumer and broadcast market contexts. I (...)
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  37.  9
    Night Passages: Philosophy, Literature, and Film.David Brenner (ed.) - 2013 - New York: Cambridge University Press.
    In the beginning was the night. All light, shapes, language, and subjective consciousness, as well as the world and art depicting them, emerged from this formless chaos. In fantasy, we seek to return to this original darkness. Particularly in literature, visual representations, and film, the night resiliently resurfaces from the margins of the knowable, acting as a stage and state of mind in which exceptional perceptions, discoveries, and decisions play out. Elisabeth Bronfen investigates the nocturnal spaces in which extraordinary events (...)
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  38.  10
    American avant-garde cinema's philosophy of the in-between.Rebecca Sheehan - 2020 - New York: Oxford University Press.
    Can films philosophize rather than simply represent philosophical ideas developed outside of the cinematic medium? Taking up this question crucial to the emergent field of film philosophy, this book argues that the films of the American avant-garde do "do" philosophy and illuminates the ethical and political stakes of their aesthetic interventions. The book traces the avant-garde's philosophy by developing a history and theory of its investment in dimensional, conceptual, and material in-betweens, clarifying how this cinema's reflections on (...)
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  39.  27
    The othering of women in silent film: cultural, historical, and literary contexts.Barbara Tepa Lupack - 2023 - Lanham: Lexington Books/Fortress Academic.
    In The Othering of Women in Silent Film: Cultural, Historical, and Literary Contexts, Barbara Tepa Lupack explores the rampant racial and gender stereotyping in early cinema and demonstrates how that imagery helped shape American attitudes and practices.
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  40.  2
    Film Theory and Criticism: Introductory Readings.Leo Braudy & Marshall Cohen (eds.) - 2009 - Oxford University Press.
    "Building upon the wide range of selections and the extensive historical coverage that marked previous editions, this new compilation stretches from the earliest attempts to define the cinema to the most recent efforts to place film in the contexts of psychology, sociology, and philosophy, and to explore issues of gender and race. Reorganized into eight sections - each comprising the major fields of critical controversy and analysis - this new edition features reformulated introductions and biographical headnotes that contextualize the readings, (...)
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  41.  25
    Films Studies, the Moving Image, and Noel Carroll.Edward Sankowski - 2006 - Journal of Aesthetic Education 40 (1):104-110.
    In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:The Journal of Aesthetic Education 40.1 (2006) 104-110 [Access article in PDF] Film Studies, the Moving Image, and Noël Carroll Edward Sankowski Department of Philosophy University of Oklahoma Engaging the Moving Image, by Noël Carroll. New Haven, CT: Yale University Press, 2003, 420 pp., $45.00 hardcover. Noël Carroll is the leading writer today about philosophy and film studies among those with an Anglo-American analytic philosophy emphasis. He needs to (...)
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  42.  14
    Night Passages: Philosophy, Literature, and Film.Elisabeth Bronfen - 2013 - New York: Columbia University Press.
    In the beginning was the night. All light, shapes, language, and subjective consciousness, as well as the world and art depicting them, emerged from this formless chaos. In fantasy, we seek to return to this original darkness. Particularly in literature, visual representations, and film, the night resiliently resurfaces from the margins of the knowable, acting as a stage and state of mind in which exceptional perceptions, discoveries, and decisions play out. Elisabeth Bronfen investigates the nocturnal spaces in which extraordinary events (...)
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  43. Horror Films and the Argument from Reactive Attitudes.Scott Woodcock - 2013 - Ethical Theory and Moral Practice 16 (2):309-324.
    Are horror films immoral? Gianluca Di Muzio argues that horror films of a certain kind are immoral because they undermine the reactive attitudes that are responsible for human agents being disposed to respond compassionately to instances of victimization. I begin with this argument as one instance of what I call the Argument from Reactive Attitudes (ARA), and I argue that Di Muzio’s attempt to identify what is morally suspect about horror films must be revised (...)
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  44.  68
    Critical theory and film: rethinking ideology in cinema.Fabio Vighi - 2012 - New York: Continuum.
    Introduction -- The dialectic's narrow margin: film noir between Adorno and Hegel -- On critical theory's dialectical dilemma -- a configuration pregnant with tension: Fritz Lang for critical theory -- Coda: the enjoyment of film in theory.
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  45.  54
    Selfless cinema?: ethics and French documentary.Sarah Cooper - 2006 - London, U.K.: Legenda.
    In Selfless Cinema?, Sarah Cooper maps out the power relations of making, and viewing, documentaries in ethical terms. The ethics of filmmaking are often examined in largely legalistic terms, dominated by issues of consent, responsibility, and participantse(tm) or film-makerse(tm) rights, but Cooper approaches four representative French film-makers e" Jean Rouch, Chris Marker, Raymond Depardon, and Agns Varda e" in a far less juridical way, drawing on the ethical philosophy of Emmanuel Levinas. She argues that, in spite of Levinase(tm)s iconoclastic, anti-ocular (...)
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  46.  37
    The Godfather and Philosophy: An Argument You Can't Refute.Joshua Heter (ed.) - 2023 - Chicago: Open Universe.
    The Godfather and Philosophy is comprised of twenty-eight chapters by philosophers, who reflect upon the ethical and metaphysical issues raised in The Godfather novels and movies, beginning with the 1969 novel by Mario Puzo and the 1972 movie by Francis Ford Coppola. The Godfather saga has had a profound impact on American cinema, storytelling, thinking about crime, and popular culture. Aimed at thoughtful fans of The Godfather franchise, among the questions tackled in these provocative philosophical chapters are the immigrant experience (...)
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  47.  1
    Cinematic encounters with disaster: realisms for the Anthropocene.Simon R. Troon - 2024 - New York: Bloomsbury Academic.
    This book takes Hollywood's disaster movies and their codified versions of natural disaster, post-apocalyptic survival, and extra-terrestrial threat as the starting point for an analytical trajectory toward new understandings of how cinema shapes and informs our conceptions of disaster and catastrophe. This book examines a range of films from distinct regional and industrial contexts: Hollywood, indie movies, different kinds of documentaries, and auteurist-realist cinema. Moving across and beyond critical and industrial categories that inform thinking about cinema, it contends that (...)
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  48.  21
    Film Essays and Criticism.Rudolf Arnheim - 1998 - Journal of Aesthetics and Art Criticism 56 (4):415-417.
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  49.  8
    Falsafah-ʼi film: barʹrasī-i taḥlīlī va intiqādī-i naẓarīyahʹhā-yi film-i dawrān-i kilāsīk = Philosophy of film.Aḥmad Riz̤ā Muʻtamidī - 2016 - Tihrān: Pizhūhishgāh-i Farhang va Andīshah-i Islāmī. Edited by Riz̤ā Dāvarī, M. R. Rikhtegran & Aḥmad Z̤ābiṭī Jahrumī.
    Motion pictures - Philosophy ; Motion pictures -- History and criticism ; Motion picture plays -- History and criticism.
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  50.  10
    Planet of the Apes and Philosophy: Great Apes Think Alike.John Huss (ed.) - 2013 - Chicago, Illinois: Open Court Chicago.
    This edited volume of essays provides an interdisciplinary philosophical analysis of the Planet of the Apes franchise, addressing themes of intelligence, language, time travel, research ethics, and the evolving status of CGI characters. Through a range of essays, the volume examines how the apes’ society mirrors human civilization, challenging assumptions about intelligence, moral worth, and speciesism. Key themes include language as a criterion for intelligence, the ethics of experimentation, and the treatment of sentient beings.
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