Celluloid Atlantic

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A01=Saverio Giovacchini
Author_Saverio Giovacchini
Category=ATFA
Category=ATFN
Category=ATMB
Category=NHD
Category=NHK
Category=NHTW
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eq_history
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history of Hollywood cinema in the aftermath of WWII
history of Italian and American cinema during the Cold War
John Kitzmiller
postwar American Italian cinema
rise and fall of the Celluloid Atlantic film industry
spaghetti Western origins

Product details

  • ISBN 9798855800579
  • Weight: 544g
  • Dimensions: 152 x 229mm
  • Publication Date: 02 Aug 2025
  • Publisher: State University of New York Press
  • Publication City/Country: US
  • Product Form: Paperback
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Offers a fresh look at American and Italian cinema in the postwar period.

The Celluloid Atlantic changes the way we look at American and Italian cinema in the postwar period. In the thirty years following World War II, American and Italian film industries came to be an integrated, transnational unit rather than two separate, nation-based entities. Written in jargon-free prose and based on previously unexplored archival sources, this book revisits the history of Neorealism, World War II combat cinema, the "Western all'Italiana," and the career of John Kitzmiller, the African American star who made Italy his home and was the first person of color to win the Best Actor Award at the Cannes Film Festival. The Celluloid Atlantic makes the trailblazing argument that culturally hybrid genres like the so-called spaghetti Western were less the exceptions than the norm. Giovacchini argues that the waning of the Celluloid Atlantic in the early 1970s was due to the economic policies of the first Nixon administration, specifically its important, but largely neglected, Revenue Act of 1971, as well as to the ideological debates between Europeans and Americans that intensified during the American intervention in Vietnam.

Saverio Giovacchini is Associate Professor of History at the University of Maryland, College Park. He is the author of Hollywood Modernism, Film and Politics in the Age of the New Deal and the coeditor, with Robert Sklar, of Global Neorealism: The Transnational History of a Film Style.

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