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Kubrick and Control - (Stanley Kubrick Studies) by Jeremy Carr (Hardcover)
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Highlights
- Kubrick and Control is an examination of authority, order, and independence in the films directed by Stanley Kubrick, as well as in his personal life and working habits.
- About the Author: Jeremy Carr teaches film studies at Arizona State University and has written for publications such as Film International, Cineaste, Senses of Cinema, MUBI/Notebook, Cinema Retro, Vague Visages, The Retro Set, The Moving Image and Diabolique Magazine.
- 248 Pages
- Performing Arts, Film
- Series Name: Stanley Kubrick Studies
Description
About the Book
Kubrick and Control is a critical and biographical examination of related topics concerning authority, order, and independence in every motion picture directed by Stanley Kubrick - through repeated themes, narratives, and formal constructs - as well as in his personal life and working habits.Book Synopsis
Kubrick and Control is an examination of authority, order, and independence in the films directed by Stanley Kubrick, as well as in his personal life and working habits. This study explores the ways in which these central preoccupations develop and reformulate through the course of Kubrick's career, as he moved from genre to genre and shifted stories, locations, time periods, scope, and technical facilities. Separating the productions in accordance to their wider filmic classifications, the individual chapters examine a variety of productions, allowing for a categorical as well as a developmental approach to the works. In addition, following concurrently with each individual film discussed, details about Kubrick's life and evolving directorial practice are recounted in relation to these same concerns. In studying the stylistic and narrative features of his work, examples illustrate how Kubrick took these themes and applied them consistently yet with significant variation, manifest in relation to mise-en-scène construction (how Kubrick composed his images); characterization (individuals establishing, exerting, seeking, and/or abusing their authority); narrative (stories about characters and situations dependent upon order and control); and the actual filmmaking processes of the director (Kubrick was both praised and damned for his authorial management and obsession with order and perfection).
About the Author
Jeremy Carr teaches film studies at Arizona State University and has written for publications such as Film International, Cineaste, Senses of Cinema, MUBI/Notebook, Cinema Retro, Vague Visages, The Retro Set, The Moving Image and Diabolique Magazine. He is also a contributor to the collections ReFocus: The Films of Elaine May, from Edinburgh University Press, and the forthcoming David Fincher's Zodiac: Cinema of Investigation and (Mis)Interpretation, from Fairleigh Dickinson University Press, and Hard to Get: The Women and Films of Howard Hawks, from McFarland & Company, Inc.