Engages Deleuze's philosophy with a range of popular films and explores the degree to which a film's popularity impacts upon its ability to 'think' (in the manner that Deleuze described in relation to examples of the art of film in his Cinema books), and the global diversity of this cinematic 'thinking' in popular international film.
Über den Autor
David Martin-Jones is Professor of Film Studies at the University of Glasgow
William Brown is a Senior Lecturer in Film at the University of Roehampton, London. He is the author of various books, including Non-Cinema: Global Digital Filmmaking and the Multitude (Bloomsbury, 2018) and Supercinema: Film-Philosophy for the Digital Age (Berghahn, 2013). He is also a maker of micro-budget films, including En Attendant Godard (2009), Selfie (2014) and This is Cinema (2019).
Inhaltsverzeichnis
Acknowledgements; Introduction: Deleuze's World Tour of Cinema, David Martin-Jones and William Brown; 1. An Imprint of Godzilla: Deleuze, the Action-Image and Universal History, David Deamer; 2. Philosophy, Politics and Homage in Tears of the Black Tiger, Damian Sutton; 3. Time-Images in Traces of Love: Repackaging South Korea's Traumatic National History for Tourism, David Martin-Jones; 4. The Rebirth of the World: Cinema According to Baz Luhrmann, Richard Rushton; 5. 'There as many paths to the time-image as there are films in the world': Deleuze and The Lizard, William Brown; 6. In Search of Lost Reality: Waltzing with Bashir, Markos Hadjioannou; 7. The Schizoanalysis of European Surveillance Films, Serazer Pekerman; 8. Fictions of the Imagination: Habit, Genre and the Powers of the False, Amy Herzog; 9. Feminine Energies, or the Outside of Noir, Elena del Río; 10. The Daemons of Unplumbed Space: Mixing the Planes in Hellboy, Anna Powell; 11. Digitalising Deleuze: The Curious Case of the Digital Human Assemblage, or What Can a Digital Body Do?, David H. Fleming; 12. The Surface of the Object: Quasi-Interfaces and Immanent Virtuality, Seung-hoon Jeong; Notes on Contributors; Index.
Klappentext
AUTHOR APPROVEDn"Deleuze and Film presents a rich collection of essays that takes Deleuze's work on cinema out of its dominant Eurocentric corpus. Taking us on an inspiring world tour of film analysis and creative conceptual thinking, this book testifies to the continuing productive generosity of Deleuze's film-philosophy, and includes a dynamic range and depth of film scholarship."nPatricia Pisters, Professor of Media and Film Studies, University of Amsterdamn"This book testifies to the continuing vitality of Gilles Deleuze's Cinema volumes: they still offer resources to film scholars and theorists today even when they are working on the sorts of films that Deleuze himself never commented on."nSteven Shaviro, DeRoy Professor of English, Wayne State Universityn
A wide-ranging collection of essays on the film-philosophy of Gilles Deleuze
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Deleuze and Film explores how different films from around the world 'think' about a range of topics, including history, national identity, geopolitics, ethics, gender, genre, affect, religion, surveillance culture, digital aesthetics and the body. Mapping the global diversity of such cinematic thinking, this book greatly expands upon the range of films discussed in Deleuze's Cinema books.
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Includes
- analysis of several Asian films: Japan's most famous monster movie Godzilla, the colourful Thai western Tears of the Black Tiger, the South Korean road movie Traces of Love, and the Iranian comedy The Lizard
- discussion of American film noir, recent European art films such as Red Road and The Lives of Others, and focused studies of directors as diverse as Rainer Werner Fassbinder and Baz Luhrmann
- a dedicated chapter on the animated documentary Waltz with Bashir
- Hollywood CGI Blockbusters including Hellboy and The Curious Case of Benjamin Button
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David Martin-Jones is Senior Lectur