Nancy Meyers is acknowledged as the most commercially successful woman
filmmaker of all time, described by Daphne Merkin in _The New York
Times_ on the release of _It's Complicated_ as "a singular figure in
Hollywood – [she] may, in fact, be the most powerful female
writer-director-producer currently working". Yet Meyers remains a
director who, alongside being widely dismissed by critics, has been
largely absent in scholarly accounts both of contemporary Hollywood
cinema, and of feminism and film. Despite Meyers' impressive track
record for turning a profit (including the biggest box-office return
ever achieved by a woman filmmaker at that timefor _What Women Want_
in 2000), and a multifaceted career as a writer/producer/director
dating back to her co-writing _Private Benjamin_ in 1980, Meyers has
been oddly neglected by Film Studies to date.
Including Nancy Meyers in the Bloomsbury Companions to Contemporary
Filmmakers rectifies this omission, giving her the kind of detailed
consideration and recognition she warrants and exploring how,
notwithstanding the challenges authorship holds for feminist film
studies, Meyers can be situated as a skilled 'auteur'. This book
proposes that Meyers' box-office success, the consistency of style and
theme across her films, and the breadth of her body of work as a
writer/producer/director across more than three decades at the
forefront of Hollywood, (thus importantly bridging the second/third
waves of feminism) make her a key contemporary US filmmaker.
Structured to meet the needs of both the student and scholar, Jermyn's
volume situates Meyers within this historical and critical context,
exploring the distinctive qualities of her body of work, the reasons
behind the pervasive resistance to it and new ways of understanding
her films.
Les mer
Produktdetaljer
ISBN
9781628921755
Publisert
2020
Utgave
1. utgave
Utgiver
Bloomsbury USA
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Digital bok
Forfatter