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Pierre Batcheff and Stardom in 1920s French Cinema
Pierre Batcheff and Stardom in 1920s French Cinema
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A01=Eric Rebillard
A01=Phil Powrie
Author_Eric Rebillard
Author_Phil Powrie
Category=ATC
Category=ATF
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eq_bestseller
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eq_non-fiction
Film
Media & Cultural Studies
Product details
- ISBN 9780748621972
- Weight: 614g
- Dimensions: 156 x 234mm
- Publication Date: 19 Jan 2009
- Publisher: Edinburgh University Press
- Publication City/Country: GB
- Product Form: Hardback
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This book is the first major study of a French silent cinema star. It focuses on Pierre Batcheff, a prominent popular cinema star in the 1920s, the French Valentino, best-known to modern audiences for his role as the protagonist of the avant-garde film classic Un chien andalou. Unlike other stars, he was linked to intellectual circles, especially the Surrealists. The book places Batcheff in the context of 1920s popular cinema, with specific reference to male stars of the period. It analyses the tensions he exemplifies between the ‘popular’ and the ‘intellectual’ during the 1920s, as cinema - the subject of intense intellectual interest across Europe - was racked between commercialism and ‘art’. A number of the major films are studied in detail: Le Double amour (Epstein, 1925), Feu Mathias Pascal (L'Herbier, 1925), Éducation de prince (Diamant-Berger, 1927), Le Joueur d'échecs (Bernard, 1927), La Sirène des tropiques (Etiévant and Nalpas, 1927), Les Deux timides (Clair, 1928), Un chien andalou (Buñuel, 1929), Monte-Cristo (Fescourt, 1929), and Baroud (Ingram, 1932).Key features:*The first major study of a French silent cinema star.*Provides an in-depth analysis of star performance.*Includes extensive appendices of documents from popular cinema magazines of the period.
Phil Powrie is Dean of the Faculty of Arts and Human Sciences at the University of Surrey. Éric Rebillard is a member of the Association Française de Recherche sur l'Histoire du Cinéma.
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