Free Your Mind!: Giovanni 'Tinto' Brass, 'Swinging London' and the 60s Pop Culture Scene
By (Author) Simon Matthews
Foreword by Franco Nero
Oldcastle Books Ltd
Oldcastle Books Ltd
1st August 2023
18th May 2023
United Kingdom
General
Non Fiction
Popular culture
Social and cultural history
791.430233092
Paperback
288
Width 129mm, Height 198mm
Between 1967 and 1970 Italian auteur Giovanni 'Tinto' Brass directed four feature films in London, each starring a woman as the main character.
Exploring the political, cultural and sexual ideas of their time, often in a deliberate pop-art style, they contain much priceless footage of now forgotten neighbourhoods, galleries, clubs and events as well as an abundance of contemporary music.
Free Your Mind! describes the films, their stars, how they were made, and their influence on the social history, pop culture, cinema, music and TV of the time.
Addresses everything with a thoroughness and eye for detail that's hugely impressive' - Irish News
'Psychedelic Celluloid covers the swinging sixties in minute detail, noting the influence of pop on hundreds of productions' - Independent
'Matthews clearly knows his stuff' - Fortean Times
PRAISE FOR SIMON MATTHEWS
'Addresses everything with a thoroughness and eye for detail that's hugely impressive' - Irish News
'Psychedelic Celluloid covers the swinging sixties in minute detail, noting the influence of pop on hundreds of productions' - Independent
'Matthews clearly knows his stuff' - Fortean Times
'Simon Matthews's comprehensive and enjoyable overview... excels as a gazetteer of film genres as varied as black cinema, dystopian futures, the rise and fall of punk rock, 1980s agitprop, and the big-screen careers of Joan Collins and David Bowie' - Spectator
'Impressively comprehensive... jam-packed full of trivia and amusing anecdotes' - We Are Cult
'A must-purchase for fans of British films and pop music' - Goldmine
'An informative account... fascinating' - Starburst Magazine
Simon Matthews has had a varied career including a spell running the British Transport Films documentary film library and several years singing in semi-professional rock groups. He has contributed articles on music, film and cultural history to Record Collector, Shindig! and Lobster magazines. Psychedelic Celluloid, his illustrated history of UK music, film and TV between 1965 and 1974 was published by Oldcastle Books in 2016.