A Guide to American Crime Films of the Thirties
By (Author) Daniel Finn
By (author) Larry Langman
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Greenwood Press
28th February 1995
United States
General
Non Fiction
Bibliographies, catalogues
016.79143655
Hardback
392
Width 156mm, Height 235mm
765g
Recent crime films such as "Scarface", the "Dirty Harry" series, and "The Godfather" have captured the American imagination, but they owe a large debt to the early crime talkies such as "The Public Enemy", Paul Muni's "Scarface" and "Little Caesar". More than 1000 entries are featured in this reference, with the names of directors, screen writers and major players as well as plot evaluations. For the serious student of crime films, this work provides a comprehensive treatment of the genre. It includes all crime sub-genres (detective, mystery, cops and robbers, and courtroom dramas) in addition to gangster films. The period between the end of the silent (1927) and the general acceptance of the sound film (1929) is often referred to as a transition period. The majority of theatres were not wired for sound, so many films were released in both silent and sound versions. Some added only sound effects or music to the sound track, while others offered only brief segments of sound. The early 1930s marked the end of this transition period and firmly established the sound era. The book pays homage to these early, often crude melodramas. The authors aim to preserve the memories of these films for their own generation and to introduce these works to a new generation.
The authors' present volume continues their excellent 1994 study, A Guide to American Silent Crime Films..., by providing screen credits and plot evaluations for some 1,132 American feature-lenght crime films released from 1928 through 1939. ... This book is recommended for academic and special libraries supporting strong film studies programs, and those institutions already holding the authors' earlier volume on silent crime films.-ARBA
"The authors' present volume continues their excellent 1994 study, A Guide to American Silent Crime Films..., by providing screen credits and plot evaluations for some 1,132 American feature-lenght crime films released from 1928 through 1939. ... This book is recommended for academic and special libraries supporting strong film studies programs, and those institutions already holding the authors' earlier volume on silent crime films."-ARBA
LARRY LANGMAN, a free-lance writer, has taught the art and history of film for many years./e He has written film articles for video magazines and has authored several books dealing with films and film history, including Writers on the American Screen (1986), An Encyclopedia of American Film Comedy (1987), A Guide to Silent Westerns (Greenwood, 1992), and A Guide to American Silent Crime Films (with Daniel Finn, Greenwood, 1994). DANIEL FINN, a free-lance writer, taught English in New York state for more than 25 years./e He specializes in creative writing and article publishing and was an instructor of composition at Syracuse University. He coauthored with Larry Langman A Guide to American Silent Crime Films. Currently he is working on an analysis of American short story writers.