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Roman Polanski

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Roman Polanski Synopsis

A new take on an eclectic and controversial directorJames Morrison's critical study offers a comprehensive and critically engaged treatment on Roman Polanski's immense body of work. Tracing the filmmaker's remarkably diverse career from its beginnings to 2007, the book provides commentary on all of Polanski's major films in their historical, cultural, social, and artistic contexts. Morrison locates Polanski's work within the genres of comedy and melodrama, arguing that he is not merely obsessed with the theme of repression, but that his true interest is in the concrete—what is out in the open—and why we so rarely see it.  The range of Polanski's filmmaking challenges traditional divisions between high and low culture. For example, The Ninth Gate is a brash pastiche of the horror genre, while The Pianist is an Academy Award-winner about the Holocaust. Dubbing Polanski a relentless critic of modernity, Morrison concludes that his career is representative of the fissures, victories, and rehabilitations of the last fifty years of international cinema. A volume in the series Contemporary Film Directors, edited by James Naremore

About This Edition

ISBN: 9780252074462
Publication date: 2nd July 2007
Author: James Morrison
Publisher: University of Illinois Press
Format: Paperback
Pagination: 208 pages
Series: Contemporary Film Directors
Genres: Performing arts
Film history, theory or criticism
Filmmaking and production: technical and background skills
Biography: arts and entertainment