The woman’s picture, the male trauma narrative, and mind-game films—three ways that American cinema tests the limits: of what victims can suffer, what the body can bear, and what the mind can understand. Usually considered both marginal and excessive, these genres, modes, or tendencies in contemporary Hollywood have more in common than might at first appear. They tell us much about the way America engages in dialogue with its own divided nature and nation, demonstrated across its most cherished and characteristic of art forms: the movies.
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Melodrama, Trauma, Mind-games: Affect and Memory in Contemporary American Cinema
$5,625 -
Ava Gardner: A Life in Movies
$1,050 -
An Introduction to European Horror Cinema
$1,575 -
America Through a British Lens: Cinematic Portrayals 1930–2010
$1,798 -
Universal Terrors, 1951–1955: Eight Classic Horror and Science Fiction Films
$2,248 -
I Fought the Sex Ray: An Innocent Jock’s Journey to Planet Porno
$978 -
The Horror of It All: One Moviegoer’s Love Affair With Masked Maniacs, Frightened Virgins, and the Living Dead
$665 -
Studying British Cinema: The 1970’s
$1,350 -
1939: Hollywood’s Greatest Year
$2,025 -
Joss Whedon FAQ: All That’s Left to Know About the Mind Behind Buffy, Firefly, and the Avengers
$875 -
The Encyclopedia of B Westerns
$3,825 -
Producer to Producer: A Step-by-Step Guide to Low-Budget Independent Film Producing
$1,468 -
Studying Italian Cinema
$4,050 -
The Cinema of Catherine Breillat
$5,040 -
Cinema And Sexuality
$1,753 -
European Cinema and Continental Philosophy: Film As Thought Experiment
$5,400 -
Splice 7.3: The Science Fiction Issue
$900 -
Naked Under a Waterfall: The Craft of Production Sound Mixing for Film
$1,188 -
In the Scene: Ang Lee
$1,033 -
Confessional Cinema: Religion, Film, and Modernity in Spain’s Development Years, 1960-1975
$3,150

