With the rise of review sites and social media, films today, as soon
as they are shown, immediately become the topic of debates on their
merits not only as entertainment, but also as serious forms of
artistic expression. Philosopher Robert B. Pippin, however, wants us
to consider a more radical proposition: film as thought, as a
reflective form. Pippin explores this idea through a series of
perceptive analyses of cinematic masterpieces, revealing how films can
illuminate, in a concrete manner, core features and problems of shared
human life. Filmed Thought examines questions of morality in
Almodóvar’s Talk to Her, goodness and naïveté in Hitchcock’s
Shadow of a Doubt, love and fantasy in Sirk’s All That Heaven
Allows, politics and society in Polanski’s Chinatown and Malick’s
The Thin Red Line, and self-understanding and understanding others in
Nicholas Ray’s In a Lonely Place and in the Dardennes
brothers' oeuvre. In each reading, Pippin pays close attention to
what makes these films exceptional as technical works of art (paying
special attention to the role of cinematic irony) and as intellectual
and philosophical achievements. Throughout, he shows how films offer a
view of basic problems of human agency from the inside and allow
viewers to think with and through them. Captivating and insightful,
Filmed Thought shows us what it means to take cinema seriously not
just as art, but as thought, and how this medium provides a singular
form of reflection on what it is to be human.
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Cinema as Reflective Form
Produktdetaljer
ISBN
9780226672144
Publisert
2019
Utgiver
University of Chicago Press
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Digital bok
Forfatter