Waving the flag
constructing a national cinema in Britain
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Word Count
80,500 words, Guess
Page Count
322 pages
Identifiers
- Open LibraryOL1105437M
- ISBN-100198123698
- OCLC Control Number30894711
- OCLC Control Numberwavingflagconstr0000higs
- Library of Congress Control Number94030577
and 1 more
- Goodreads1052316
Classifications
- DDC791.43/0941
- LCCPN1993.5.G7 H54 1995
Description
What does it mean to speak of a 'national' cinema? To what extent can British cinema, dominated for so many years by Hollywood, be considered a national cinema? Waving the Flag investigates these questions from a historical point of view, and challenges many of the received wisdoms of British cinema history. Drawing some revealing conclusions about the extent to which the many rich traditions of British film-making share the same distinctive stylistic and ideological characteristics, what emerges is a sometimes surprising picture of a specifically national cinema. Andrew Higson investigates theories of national cinema, and surveys the development of the British film industry and film culture. Three case studies combine histories of production and reception with textual analysis of key films from the 1920s, 1930s, and 1940s. Focusing on Cecil Hepworth's Comin' Thro' The Rye, the first of these looks at the evolution of an art cinema in the early 1920s. Two popular musical comedies of 1934, Sing As We Go and Evergreen, are then contrasted as the products of two quite distinct industrial strategies for coping with the overwhelming presence of Hollywood. Finally, the author reexamines the status of the documentary idea in British national cinema and looks at its influence on two Second World War films, Millions Like Us and This Happy Breed.
Subjects
Other Editions
- Waving the flag: constructing a national cinema in Britain
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