Research Catalog

New Hollywood : der amerikanische Film nach 1968 = the American film after 1968 / Renate Hehr.

Title
New Hollywood : der amerikanische Film nach 1968 = the American film after 1968 / Renate Hehr.
Author
Hehr, Renate.
Publication
Stuttgart : Edition Axel Menges, c2003.

Items in the Library & Off-site

Filter by

1 Item

StatusFormatAccessCall NumberItem Location
TextRequest in advance PN1993.5.U65 H44 2003xOff-site

Holdings

Details

Description
112 p. : ill.; 29 cm.
Summary
"The surprising success of Bonnie and Clyde, The Graduate and Easy Rider in the late sixties marks a turning-point in the history of the American cinema, as these are films that differ in their style fundamentally from the traditional Hollywood films. They revised the traditional genre formulae and overturned the rules of classical narrative structure, but they were also aimed at a young audience influenced by alternative culture, a group that the big studios had ignored until then. The American film industry, which was in financial crisis and in a phase of artistic stagnation in the sixties because it had tried to meet increasing competition from television by producing blockbusters, started to think again, and became more receptive to new ideas. A period of artistic renewal began, of a kind that had never been possible before in America on such a radical scale." "The first wave of New Hollywood was starting to die down in 1971, as the films were often too experimental, too self-referential and too alien for a mass audience, and the market for the limited target group of a young audience interested in culture was quickly saturated. But important stimuli emerged, and made it possible for a series of filmmakers like Robert Altman, Arthur Penn, Mike Nichols, Alan Pakula, Sydney Pollack, Stanley Kubrick, Sam Peckinpah, Paul Mazursky, Hal Ashby and ultimately an exceptional figure like Woody Allen to establish themselves permanently. They were joined in the seventies by the younger generation of so-called film prodigies like Francis Ford Coppola, Peter Bogdanovich, William Friedkin, Martin Scorsese, Steven Spielberg, Brian De Palma, Paul Schrader or George Lucas. They all represented the liberation of the director from the dictates of the studio, the acquisition of a right to have individual artistic handwriting and the era of the director as superstar."--BOOK JACKET.
Subject
  • Motion picture industry > Los Angeles
  • Motion pictures > Los Angeles
Bibliography (note)
  • Includes bibliographical references (p. 110) and index.
Processing Action (note)
  • committed to retain
ISBN
3930698943
Owning Institutions
Harvard Library