Description

From the very beginning of cinema, there have been amateur filmmakers at work. It wasn't until Kodak introduced 16mm film in 1923, however, that amateur moviemaking became a widespread reality, and by the 1950s, over a million Americans had amateur movie cameras. In Amateur Cinema, Charles Tepperman explores the meaning of the amateur in film history and modern visual culture. In the middle decades of the twentieth century the period that saw Hollywood's rise to dominance in the global film industry a movement of amateur filmmakers created an alternative world of small-scale movie production and circulation. Organized amateur moviemaking was a significant phenomenon that gave rise to dozens of clubs and thousands of participants producing experimental, nonfiction, or short-subject narratives. Rooted in an examination of surviving films, this book traces the contexts of advanced" amateur cinema and articulates the broad aesthetic and stylistic tendencies of amateur films.

Amateur Cinema: The Rise of North American Moviemaking, 1923-1960

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Hardback by Charles Tepperman

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From the very beginning of cinema, there have been amateur filmmakers at work. It wasn't until Kodak introduced 16mm film... Read more

    Publisher: University of California Press
    Publication Date: 24/12/2014
    ISBN13: 9780520279858, 978-0520279858
    ISBN10: 0520279859

    Number of Pages: 376

    Non Fiction , Art & Photography

    Description

    From the very beginning of cinema, there have been amateur filmmakers at work. It wasn't until Kodak introduced 16mm film in 1923, however, that amateur moviemaking became a widespread reality, and by the 1950s, over a million Americans had amateur movie cameras. In Amateur Cinema, Charles Tepperman explores the meaning of the amateur in film history and modern visual culture. In the middle decades of the twentieth century the period that saw Hollywood's rise to dominance in the global film industry a movement of amateur filmmakers created an alternative world of small-scale movie production and circulation. Organized amateur moviemaking was a significant phenomenon that gave rise to dozens of clubs and thousands of participants producing experimental, nonfiction, or short-subject narratives. Rooted in an examination of surviving films, this book traces the contexts of advanced" amateur cinema and articulates the broad aesthetic and stylistic tendencies of amateur films.

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