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Menschenskinder!: Fuuml;r die; die anders fuuml;hlen (German Edition)

[DOC] Menschenskinder!: Fuuml;r die; die anders fuuml;hlen (German Edition) by Rita Bittner in Arts-Photography

Description

Commedia teatrale in tre atti; fu portata in scena per la prima volta a Londra nellinverno del 1895. Il titolo italiano non rende lidea dellarguzia e della capacitagrave; di Wilde di giocare con i significati delle parole: nelloriginale The importance of being Ernest cegrave; un doppio significato nella parola Ernest (che egrave; nome proprio ma; anche; earnest; onesto; che si pronuncia allo stesso modo). Egrave; il modo che un autore geniale trova per mettere in risalto la cura che lalta societagrave; vittoriana riservava al proprio modo di apparire. Allepoca questopera non fu compresa per intero; ma con il tempo e il successo in tutti i teatri del mondo ha ottenuto il riconoscimento di pietra miliare nel teatro dellassurdo; del quale precorre in maniera sorprendente i tempi. Egrave; in effetti un geniale e spassoso nonsense; ricco di spensieratezza e felicitagrave;; con un Wilde al massimo della propria vena produttiva subito prima di andare incontro alla propria rovina. Un capolavoro arricchito dallo stile suadente di una maestro della letteratura britannica.


2015-05-26 2015-05-26File Name: B00YBXW6SG


Review
20 of 21 people found the following review helpful. Imagining RealityBy John DarlingMacdonald; Kevin and Cousins; Mark; Imagining Reality: The Faber Book of Documentary; Faber and Faber; 1996."Imagining Reality" is a book of short; sharp readings by filmmakers and critics about documentary film from its beginnings with Edison and Lumiegrave;re; to the feature documentary "Crumb" (1995). After years of seeming neglect through the middle of this century; documentary film is again undergoing a wholesome reassessment by a new plethora of practitioners; commentators and academic scrutineers. We can hope that this will contribute to the long-standing integrity and innovation in this form of film; which founded the beginnings of cinema. It all began in 1895 with Lumiegrave;res patrons diving under their seats as a locomotive rushed towards them on the screen. The fiction film then took over in 1903; coincidentally; with the intervention of film editing techniques.The literature about documentary of recent years is preoccupied by the questions of where to now; the imminent death of the documentary and how close to the "truth" is this film genre? After this questioning and the continual pushing of the boundaries of form; style and means of expression the documentary is still very; very alive. Heated debate continues for definitions of the very essence and nature of the genre. Many of the innovations introduced over the years by documentarists have been quickly adapted into mainstream television and feature films.Recent titles of books about documentary film express this lively debate: "Representing Reality"; "Blurred Boundaries"; "Claiming the Real"; "Theorizing Documentary"; "Fields of Vision"; "The Art of Record"; "Documentary Dilemmas"; "Framer Framed"; "Innovation in Ethnographic Film"; "New Challenges for Documentary" and the book that is the subject of this review "Imagining Reality: The Faber Book of Documentary". If "Imagining Reality" had been published before the debates raised in the recent books mentioned above; it could well have been titled Imaging Reality.The editors of "Imagining Reality"; Kevin Macdonald and Mark Cousins from the UK have made a careful; considered and very readable compendium from which to consider the major issues concerning documentary. It is a book that should interest all; especially documentary aficionados. It will also become a valuable resource for teaching about documentary film. However; from an Australian point of view their book seriously underestimates our contribution to this exciting film genre. There is no mention of any Australian films or filmmakers throughout the book. It is a serious failing. Another area found wanting is a consideration of the impact over the last forty years of films by women that provide a unique perspective on the human condition.Although they acknowledge it in the preface; the editors have excluded the now controversial area of ethnographic film and the issues of "representation"; "rights" and "reflexivity" relevant to all forms of documentary. The current debate on "reflexivity"; the open positioning and acknowledging of the filmmakers views (and sometimes themselves; e.g. Broomfield; Mike Rubbo; or Alby Mangels) in the body of the film. In this way further layers of "truth" are manipulated by the filmmakers; as they provide the viewer with information concerning who they are and why they are making a film. The very humorous piece in this book on the British filmmaker; Nick Broomfield broaches the issue; but we miss a follow-through.Opinion is now leaning towards the view that documentary film is as much a fiction as any other fiction. Yet practitioners of the documentary are generally well aware that from idea to final mix; their film is the product of the process of many thousands of selective decisions. These many decisions will; they hope; create a realistic re-creation and representation of the mood; atmosphere and meaning of the actual events that they are shooting and then editing into their final product.The new development of small hand carried camcorders in the Hi-8 and digital format has allowed both non-professional and professional film-makers to make low-budget; credible and often unusually intimate stories such as the "Video Diaries" series that were produced and broadcast recently by the BBC and SBS-TV. I would have enjoyed a more detailed investigation here.Despite these limitations "Imagining Reality" remains a fascinating read as many of the selections chosen have not been published in such an accessible form before. There are incisive and new insights into the greats of documentary such as Flaherty; Ivens; Balaacute;zs; Vertog; Grierson; Wright; John Huston; Reifenthahl; Jennings; Warhol; Welles; Ophuuml;ls; Malle; Marker; Leacock; Rouch; the Maysles brothers; Wiseman; De Antonio; Morris; Loach and Pennebaker. What a roll call; and what fascinating reading they provide! Documentary; we realize; can be all things to all.As the Canadian turned French filmmaker Chris Marker comments; near the end of this book; we are in a technological age during which "rarely has Reality needed so much to be imagined".John Darling Documentary filmmaker and Lecturer in Media Studies; Murdoch University; 19976 of 7 people found the following review helpful. Imagining Reality: The Faber Book of DocumentaryBy NoraThis anthology includes the following essays:"Filming Death" By Beacute;la Balaacute;zs"Lowell Thomas and Lawrence of Arabia" By Kevin Brownlow"Grass: A Nations Battle for Life" By Merian C. Cooper"The Failings of Berlin" By Siegfried Kracauer"Making Rain" By Joris Ivens"Jean Painleveacute;" By Raymond Durgnat"First Principles of Documentary" By John Grierson"Leni Riefenstahl; Art and Propaganda" By Manohla Dargis"Worlds of Command" By Tom Waugh"Iwaskai and the Occupied Screen" By Erik Barnouw"Nuit et Brouillard" By Annette Insdorff"Warhols Sleep" By Jonas Mekas"Orson Welless F for Fake" By Richard Combs"Phantom India" By Louis Malle"Chris Marker and Sans Soleil" By Terrence Rafferty"Narration Can be a Killer" By Robert Drew"Gimme Shelter" By Pauline Kael"Editing as a Four-Way Conversation" By Frederick Wiseman"Filming Torture Victims" By Haskell Wexler"Roger Me" By Roger Ebert"Death of a Nation" By Ken Loach"The Unique Role of Documentaries" By Krzysztof Kieslowski"Werner Herzogs New Directions" By J. Hoberman"The Unpredictable Revelations of Nicolas Philibert" By Howard Feinstein"Clearing the Fog: Errol Morris Answers for His Film" By Livia Bloom"L.A. Confidential" By Amy Taubin"By No Half-Measure" By Kevin Macdonald"True Confessions; Sort Of" By Paul Arthur"Siamese Spin" By Chuck Stephens"The Egos Have Landed" By Jon Ronson"Paradocumentary in Iran" By Mark Cousins

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