The Hidden Art of Hollywood: In Defense of the Studio Era Film
By (Author) John Fawell
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Praeger Publishers Inc
30th October 2008
United States
General
Non Fiction
791.430979494
Hardback
240
Width 156mm, Height 235mm
510g
Although we tend to accord our highest praise to films with strong messages, Hollywood is resolutely unserious in its goals, and closer perhaps to music than to literature in this regard. Thus, in order to appreciate Hollywood's classic movies, we have to understand them as the result of a style of filmmaking that justifies itself through the grace and beauty of its form. This beauty, when seen, challenges our notion of film as the poorer cousin of the high arts, or as worthwhile only when it serves a social purpose. The Hidden Art of Hollywood draws from a huge fund of recorded interviews with the directors, writers, cinematographers, set designers, producers, and actors who were a part of the studio process, in order to give the filmmakers themselves the chance to explain a very elusive phenomenon: the glancing beauty of the Hollywood film. While the greatness of the classic Hollywood film is, for many of us, settled business, there are also a great number who have difficulty understanding why these filmswhich can often seem dated and unrealistic compared to modern fareare taken as seriously as they are. Although we tend to accord our highest praise to films with strong and often didactic messages, Hollywood is resolutely unserious in its goals, and closer perhaps to music than to literature in this regard. Thus, in order to appreciate classic American movies, we have to understand them as the result of a style of filmmaking that justifies itself not through ideas or social relevance, but through the grace and beauty of its form. The beauty of the Hollywood film challenges our notion of film as the poorer cousin of the high arts, or as worthwhile only when it serves a social purpose. In his effort to answer the many questions that classic American cinema suggests, author John Fawell considers previous criticism of Hollywood, but also draws from a huge fund of recorded interviews with the directors, writers, cinematographers, set designers, producers, and actors who were a part of the studio process, in order to give the filmmakers themselves the chance to explain a very elusive phenomenon: the glancing beauty of the Hollywood film. The films of certain great auteurs, including Charlie Chaplin, Ernst Lubitsch, Preston Sturges, Alfred Hitchcock, Billy Wilder, John Ford, and Orson Welles, receive particular attention here, but this book is organized by ideas rather than films or artists, and it draws from a wide array of Hollywood films, both successes and failures, to make its points.
Discusses aesthetic, thematic, and other aspects of classic Hollywood filmmaking. * The Chronicle Review *
Written in seamless prose and displaying a mild disdain for contemporary Hollywood, this book is part textbook, part criticism, supported by an adequate bibliography, endnotes, and black-and-white reproductions. Recommended. Lower-and upper-division undergraduates, graduate students, general readers. * Choice *
. . . a well-grounded look at some of the most recognized films of the period. * Catholic Library World *
John Fawell is associate professor at Boston University.