Cinema has had a hugely influential role on global culture in the 20th century at multiple levels: social, political, and educational. The part of British cinema in this has been controversial - often derided as a whole, but also vigorously celebrated, especially in terms of specific films and film-makers.
In this
Very Short Introduction, Charles Barr considers films and filmmakers, and studios and sponsorship, against the wider view of changing artistic, socio-political, and industrial climates over the decades of the 20th Century. Considering British cinema in the wake of one of the most familiar of cinematic reference points - Alfred Hitchcock - Barr traces how British cinema has developed its own unique path, and has since been celebrated for its innovative approaches and distinctive artistic language.
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Author: Charles Barr
Binding Type: Paperback
Publisher: Oxford University Press, USA
Published: 01/26/2023
Series: Very Short Introductions
Pages: 168
Weight: 0.28lbs
Size: 6.91h x 4.43w x 0.32d
ISBN: 9780199688333
About the AuthorCharles Barr worked for many years at the University of East Anglia, helping to develop one of the first UK programmes in Film Studies at graduate and undergraduate level. He has since taught in St Louis, Galway and Dublin, and St Mary's University, Twickenham, and is currently Emeritus Professor at the University of East Anglia. Much of his published work has been on British Cinema, including books on
Ealing Studios (1977) and
English Hitchcock (1999), and he was co-writer, with director Stephen Frears, of
Typically British, part of the centenary history of cinema broadcast on Channel 4 in 1995. He has continued writing on Hitchcock, with a study of
Vertigo in the BFI Classics series (new edition, 2012) and
Hitchcock: Lost and Found, co-authored with the Parisian scholar Alain Kerzoncuf.