Skip to product information
1 of 1

The Cinema of Michael Winterbottom

Regular price $28.00
Regular price $28.00 Sale price $28.00
Sold out
Explores the thematic, stylistic, and intellectual consistencies running through Michael Winterbottom's eclectic and controversial body of work.
  • 26 November 2013
View Product Details
This comprehensive study of prolific British filmmaker Michael Winterbottom explores the thematic, stylistic, and intellectual consistencies running through his eclectic and controversial body of work. This volume undertakes a close analysis of a TV series directed by Winterbottom and sixteen of his films ranging from television dramas to transnational co-productions featuring Hollywood stars, and from documentaries to costume films. The critique is centered on Winterbottom's collaborative working practices, political and cultural contexts, and critical reception. Arguing that his work delineates a 'cinema of borders', this study examines Winterbottom's treatment of sexuality, class, ethnicity, and national and international politics, as well as his quest to adequately narrate inequality, injustice, and violence.
files/i.png Icon
Price: $28.00
Pages: 224
Publisher: Columbia University Press
Imprint: WallFlower Press
Series: Directors' Cuts
Publication Date: 26 November 2013
Trim Size: 9.21 X 6.14 in
ISBN: 9780231167376
Format: Paperback
BISACs: PERFORMING ARTS / Film / History & Criticism, PERFORMING ARTS / Film / Guides & Reviews
REVIEWS Icon
In The Cinema of Michael Winterbottom, Bruce Bennett offers a tour de force examination of the regimes of visibility and invisibility in the British director's rich and heterogeneous body of work, exploring the ways in which these films traverse and question the political, institutional, and aesthetic boundaries of the nation. Seducing his readers with eloquence and methodological rigor, Bennett analyzes the complexity of Winterbottom's cinema through a careful look at the interrelated themes of borderlands, abject border zones, ideologies of race and violence, intimacy, the politics of mobility, and the War on Terror. This is a brilliant, highly readable book that offers an insightful commentary on the intricacies of the political climate we live in.
Bruce Bennett is Director of Film Studies at Lancaster University. He is coeditor of Cinema and Technology: Cultures, Theories, Practices (2008). Other publications include articles on celebrity culture, photography, Georges Bataille, the cinema of James Cameron and the Hollywood blockbuster, and the war on terror in film and television.

Acknowledgements
Introduction
1. Welcome to Sarajevo: Television, 'Documentary Fiction' and Border-Crossing
2. Intimacy
3. Nation and Genre
4. Borders and Terror
Conclusion
Filmography
Bibliography
Index