CinemaTexas Notes
The Early Days of Austin Film Culture
Louis Black editor Collins Swords editor
Format:Paperback
Publisher:University of Texas Press
Published:21st Feb '18
Currently unavailable, and unfortunately no date known when it will be back
This paperback is available in another edition too:
- Hardback£74.00(9781477315439)
Austin’s thriving film culture, renowned for international events such as SXSW and the Austin Film Festival, extends back to the early 1970s when students in the Department of Radio-Television-Film at the University of Texas at Austin ran a film programming unit that screened movies for students and the public. Dubbed CinemaTexas, the program offered viewers a wide variety of films—old and new, mainstream, classic, and cult—at a time when finding and watching films after their first run was very difficult and prohibitively expensive. For each film, RTF graduate students wrote program notes that included production details, a sampling of critical reactions, and an original essay that placed the film and its director within context and explained the movie’s historical significance. Over time, CinemaTexas Program Notes became more ambitious and were distributed around the world, including to luminaries such as film critic Pauline Kael.
This anthology gathers a sampling of CinemaTexas Program Notes, organized into four sections: “USA Film History,” “Hollywood Auteurs,” “Cinema-Fist: Renegade Talents,” and “America’s Shadow Cinema.” Many of the note writers have become prominent film studies scholars, as well as leading figures in the film, TV, music, and video game industries. As a collection, CinemaTexas Notes strongly contradicts the notion of an effortlessly formed American film canon, showing instead how local film cultures—whether in Austin, New York, or Europe—have forwarded the development of film studies as a discipline.
Austin is known as a film-watching city, but that reputation doesn't come from nowhere. Its seeds were planted in CinemaTexas, the film programming unit of UT's Department of Radio-Television-Film... [the CinemaTexas Program Notes] were Rotten Tomatoes, IMDb, and Cahiers du Cinéma melded into zine form. * Austin Chronicle *
In the early 1970s film scholarship was still in its (relative) infancy, hampered by the difficulty of gaining access to the films themselves. At the University of Texas, Austin, a group of ambitious graduate students took on the challenge of writing program notes for a wide-ranging film series, based on fresh viewings of the movies. . . [There is] a nostalgia for the time and place these essays evoke, before the emergence of home video and streaming. Contributor Charles Ramirez Berg accurately describes them as “love letters to the cinema” and they are well worth reading. -- Leonard Maltin * leonardmaltin.com *
Put this on your Austin shelf next to Alison Macor's essential history, Chainsaws, Slackers, and Spy Kids, and Mike Blizzard's documentary film Also Starring Austin. ...Along with a bit of history, we are lucky enough to read in this book the incredibly well-researched--especially for the pre-internet days—program notes from CinemaTexas days. * austin360 *
ISBN: 9781477315446
Dimensions: 229mm x 152mm x 38mm
Weight: 567g
416 pages