Description

Book Synopsis
Explores the problems of creativity in the Arab and African world, focusing on Moroccan cinema and one of its key figures, filmmaker M A Tazi. This book centers on a series of interviews conducted with Tazi, whose career provides a rich commentary on the world of Moroccan cinema and on Moroccan cinema in the world.

Trade Review

A specialist on the Middle East and North Africa, particularly Morocco, Dwyer (social anthropology, American Univ., Cairo) set himself the task of investigating the complexities of creative activity in a Third World context by focusing on the Moroccan national cinema and, more specifically, on the life and career of the country's best known film director, Muhammad Abderrahman Tazi. Dwyer devotes a great deal of space and analysis to Tazi's most profitable film, À (A) la recherche du mari de ma femme (Looking for My Wife's Husband), to date the most commercially successful movie ever shown in Morocco. The analysis of this 1994 film makes it sound like a delightful Islamic romantic comedy; the plot could only occur in a Muslim context, hinging on polygamy and the three-repudiation divorce. Dwyer's treatment of Tazi's career is both detailed and contextualized. His interviews with the filmmaker sometimes seem trivial, perhaps even nit-picking, but his estimations of the general position of Third World filmmaking in world cinema, especially in competition with Hollywood, are extremely well documented. The book has copious notes and a useful bibliography. Summing Up: Recommended. Collections supporting study of world cinema at the upper-division undergraduate level and above.July 2005

-- R. D. Sears * Berea College *

Table of Contents

Acknowledgments
Introduction: Third World, Many Worlds
1. The Most Successful Moroccan Film Ever
Interlude: Film's Power and Function
2. Building the National Cinema, Building a Career
Interlude: A First Feature-The Big Trip (1981)
3. Huston, Wise, Coppola, Camus and Pasolini, Scorsese and Some Others
4. Badis (1989)
Interlude: How to Tell a Story-Narrative and Symbols
5. The Other Side of the Wind, Almost
Interlude: Lalla Hobby-The Film
6. Reflections and Projections
Conclusion: Future Flights of the Bumblebee
Notes
Bibliography
Chronology
Index

Beyond Casablanca

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    A Paperback / softback by Kevin Dwyer

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      Publisher: Indiana University Press
      Publication Date: 25/11/2004
      ISBN13: 9780253217196, 978-0253217196
      ISBN10: 0253217199

      Description

      Book Synopsis
      Explores the problems of creativity in the Arab and African world, focusing on Moroccan cinema and one of its key figures, filmmaker M A Tazi. This book centers on a series of interviews conducted with Tazi, whose career provides a rich commentary on the world of Moroccan cinema and on Moroccan cinema in the world.

      Trade Review

      A specialist on the Middle East and North Africa, particularly Morocco, Dwyer (social anthropology, American Univ., Cairo) set himself the task of investigating the complexities of creative activity in a Third World context by focusing on the Moroccan national cinema and, more specifically, on the life and career of the country's best known film director, Muhammad Abderrahman Tazi. Dwyer devotes a great deal of space and analysis to Tazi's most profitable film, À (A) la recherche du mari de ma femme (Looking for My Wife's Husband), to date the most commercially successful movie ever shown in Morocco. The analysis of this 1994 film makes it sound like a delightful Islamic romantic comedy; the plot could only occur in a Muslim context, hinging on polygamy and the three-repudiation divorce. Dwyer's treatment of Tazi's career is both detailed and contextualized. His interviews with the filmmaker sometimes seem trivial, perhaps even nit-picking, but his estimations of the general position of Third World filmmaking in world cinema, especially in competition with Hollywood, are extremely well documented. The book has copious notes and a useful bibliography. Summing Up: Recommended. Collections supporting study of world cinema at the upper-division undergraduate level and above.July 2005

      -- R. D. Sears * Berea College *

      Table of Contents

      Acknowledgments
      Introduction: Third World, Many Worlds
      1. The Most Successful Moroccan Film Ever
      Interlude: Film's Power and Function
      2. Building the National Cinema, Building a Career
      Interlude: A First Feature-The Big Trip (1981)
      3. Huston, Wise, Coppola, Camus and Pasolini, Scorsese and Some Others
      4. Badis (1989)
      Interlude: How to Tell a Story-Narrative and Symbols
      5. The Other Side of the Wind, Almost
      Interlude: Lalla Hobby-The Film
      6. Reflections and Projections
      Conclusion: Future Flights of the Bumblebee
      Notes
      Bibliography
      Chronology
      Index

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