Contemporary Argentine Cinema

David William Foster author

Format:Hardback

Publisher:University of Missouri Press

Published:31st Jan '92

Currently unavailable, and unfortunately no date known when it will be back

Contemporary Argentine Cinema cover

Argentina's return to constitutional democracy in 1983 initiated a cultural renaissance as the new government instituted a widespread collective effort to recover from a decade of military dictatorship. For a five-year period, until severe financial emergencies forced the cancellation of subsidies, film-making flourished. Cinematographers took the opportunity to articulate their pent-up frustrations regarding the suppression of political dissent as well as to address social attitudes towards violence, Nazism, homosexuality and incest. In this book, David Foster discusses 10 major films of this time and examines the transformation of social topics into motion pictures and the relationship between commercial film-making strategies and Argentine redemocratisation. Foster analyses internationally recognised films such as ""Kiss of the Spider Woman"", ""The Offical Story"" and ""Man Facing Southeast"" as structural features - how action is framed, the transition between scenes, the relationships among characters, the use of highlighting and foregrounding - as a key to ech film's interpretation of Argentine social topics. General readers, students of film theory and Latin American scholars should welcome Foster's analysis of the most important films made during Argentina's period of cultural renewal.

ISBN: 9780826208606

Dimensions: 234mm x 162mm x 19mm

Weight: 493g

208 pages