Through a detailed study of the circulation of European silent film in
Australasia in the early twentieth century, this book challenges the
historical myopia that treats Hollywood films as having always
dominated global film culture.
Before World War I, European silent feature films were ubiquitous in
Australia and New Zealand, teaching Antipodean audiences about
Continental cultures and familiarizing them with glamorous European
stars, from Asta Nielsen to Emil Jannings. After the rise of Hollywood
and then the shift to sound film, this history—and its implications
for cross-cultural exchange—was lost. Julie K. Allen recovers that
history, with its flamboyant participants, transnational currents,
innovative genres, and geopolitical complications, bringing it all
vividly to life.
Making ground-breaking use of digitized Australian and New Zealand
newspapers, the author reconstructs the distribution and exhibition of
European silent films in the Antipodes, along the way incorporating
compelling biographical sketches of the ambitious pioneers of the
Australasian cinema industry. She reveals the complexity and
competitiveness of the early cinema market, in a region with high
consumer demand and low domestic production, and frames the dramatic
shift to almost exclusively American cinema programming during World
War I, contextualizing the rise of the art film in the 1920s in
competition with mainstream Hollywood productions.
Les mer
Transnational Silent Film Before and After the Rise of Hollywood
Produktdetaljer
ISBN
9781905816897
Publisert
2022
Utgave
1. utgave
Utgiver
Vendor
University of Exeter Press
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Digital bok
Forfatter