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What Made Cinema? Essays on Visual Culture and Early Film

What Made Cinema? Essays on Visual Culture and Early Film

Christie, Ian

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"Immersion" is everywhere in entertainment today. But this promise didn't start with digital media - it was over two hundred years ago that Georgian London became the world centre of such immersive spectacles as the Leicester Square Panorama, the Eidophusikon's magical moving pictures with music, and a hundred years later, cinema itself was born in the capital's giant music halls. No - not in Paris or New York, but first and foremost at the Empire and the Alhambra in Leicester Square.

In essays written across thirty years, Ian Christie explores how these novelties gave London an appetite for media innovation, with the earliest film studios ringed around the city - as their successors are once again. Discover Queen Victoria as a connoisseur of early photography, Fred Karno as the architect of slapstick comedy, and how Ancient Rome was reborn on screen, giving cinema its first box-office hits.

Having written The Last Machine, Terry Gilliam's 1994 series for BBC Television that marked the centenary of moving pictures, and a prize-winning 2019 book about Britain's overlooked film pioneer Robert Paul, Ian Christie adds a fresh account of how early cinema opened new windows onto the 20th-century world, drawing on new digital access to many of its treasures and curiosities.

Ian Christie's unique expertise and his magnificent and unappeasable curiosity lead him again and again to open new vistas from unusual angles. He is a brilliant and innovative chronicler of cinema's development, a supreme archaeologist of proto-cinema's wonder-working machines, a diagnostician of how cinema carries values and shapes society, and an open-eyed prophet of how it continues to model and inspire entertainment. This exciting collection maps a lifetime of remarkable, generous, incisive inquiry into the medium that dominates the collective imaginary. - Marina Warner

An invaluable testament to Ian Christie as a leading historian of early cinema. This collection reveals the amazing range of Christie's interests in exploring so many subjects with fresh eyes. Empire and film, early filmmaking practices and theatre programming. Innovators like Robert Paul and others less known. Popular genres like trick films. Legal controversies and questions of cultural ephemerality and memory. - Richard Abel, University of Michigan

Ian Christie's cabinet of curiosities about early cinema as the last machine' is a wonder of a book. The sparkling, erudite, and entertaining essays are crammed with creators and audiences, technologies, images and ideas that contributed so significantly to the making of our modern world. - John Wyver, University of Westminster

Accessories:
No Accessory
Publisher
INDEPENDENT CAT
Bisac Major Subject
Performing Arts
Bisac Minor Subject
General
Binding Type
Paperback
Country Of Origin
US
Number Of Units
1
Length
8.0 Inches
Barcode Indicator
EAN
Width
5.0 Inches
Publication Date
2025-02-10
Height
0.93 Inches
ISBN 10
1942782845
Weight
1.0 Pounds
Book EAN
9781942782841
Target Audiance
Adults

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