Description

Book Synopsis
This book takes a close look at a film that has heretofore been significantly undervalued by film scholars: Ernst Lubitsch's The Student Prince in Old Heidelberg. In so doing, it not only advocates for the elevation of the film within the canon of Lubitsch's films but also for an appreciation of the certain kind of filmmaking that it representsone favored in the classical era of Hollywood which is characterized by aesthetics, meticulous structure, and delicate understatement over explicit content or social relevance. This book argues that The Student Prince in Old Heidelberg has perhaps been neglected because of the tendency in contemporary film criticism to devalue films that are not overtly serious in their subject matter. The Student Prince in Old Heidelberg represents a master class in classical Hollywood technique, a kind of filmmaking that is characterized by charm, beauty, and elegant form and which chooses not to express its ideas explicitly but to encase them in the substance,

Trade Review
‘Lubitsch can’t wait!’ clamor fans and scholars of this consummate and delicate director as they ask for renewed appreciation of his resonant art. John Fawell answers their clarion call with an analysis that is eloquent and elegant, ever so attuned to the soft and subtle quietudes of Lubitsch’s art as exhibited in the key film The Student Prince in Old Heidelberg. This is a lovely and loving study that well shows Lubitsch’s pride of place in Hollywood silent cinema. -- Dana Polan, New York University, author of Julia Child's The French Chef
A lovingly detailed celebration of a neglected silent film that is also a ringing defense of the marriage between Ernst Lubitsch’s unerringly delicate touch and the much-maligned MGM studio style—and, more generally, of a whole approach to filmmaking and filmgoing that has largely fallen out of favor, one that treasures simplicity, romance, sincerity, elegance, grace, sentiment, and apparently artless art. Can a revival of The Student Prince in Old Heidelberg, and indeed of all these virtues, be far behind? -- Thomas M. Leitch, University of Delaware
There is no more generous or insightful a guide to the mystery and artistry of Hollywood than John W. Fawell. His previous work has explored how Hollywood’s broad-stroke storytelling authorized an elaboration of sentiment and style into realms of true seriousness, even in films typically understood as frivolous. In this study of Ernst Lubitsch’s The Student Prince in Old Heidelberg, Fawell offers further evidence on Hollywood’s behalf by showing, in careful and illuminating detail, how Lubitsch treated an already well-known story, on the risky but rewarding premise that a ‘silent’ film better illustrates the ‘musical’ aesthetic of Hollywood than subsequent ‘talkies.’ Lubitsch scholars will be grateful for Fawell’s animated reading of The Student Prince, but his repeated allusions to other films and filmmakers—Capra, Chaplin, Dryer, Eisenstein, Ford, Godard, Hawks, Hitchcock, Sturges, Tati, Welles, Wilder—will make this book attractive to a broad readership. -- Leland Poague, Iowa State University
John Fawell's criticism is comprehensive and refreshingly reader-friendly. While considering various angles, his work presents a unified analysis that appeals to experts and newcomers. With Lubitsch’s The Student Prince in Old Heidelberg, Fawell delivers the definitive reading of a rediscovered classic, as probing as it is heartfelt. -- Matthew Sorrento, Rutgers University, Camden

Table of Contents
Introduction Chapter 1: Why the Neglect? Chapter 2: The Rewards of Simplicity Chapter 3: A Classical Sense of Balance Chapter 4: A Larger Sense of Balance Chapter 5: Matches Chapter 6: Motifs Chapter 7: The Art of Condensation Chapter 8: Lubitsch’s Use of Off-screen Space Chapter 9: A Measured Expressiveness Chapter 10: Lubitsch and Actors Chapter 11: Lubitsch, Shearer and Kathi Chapter 12: What Shearer Brings to the Equation Chapter 13: The Film’s “Ideas” Chapter 14: Chaplin and Lubitsch Chapter 15: Carl Davis’ Orchestral Accompaniments Bibliography Index About the Author

Ernst Lubitschs The Student Prince in Old

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    A Hardback by John W. Fawell

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      Publisher: Lexington Books
      Publication Date: 1/15/2018 12:06:00 AM
      ISBN13: 9781498578042, 978-1498578042
      ISBN10: 1498578047

      Description

      Book Synopsis
      This book takes a close look at a film that has heretofore been significantly undervalued by film scholars: Ernst Lubitsch's The Student Prince in Old Heidelberg. In so doing, it not only advocates for the elevation of the film within the canon of Lubitsch's films but also for an appreciation of the certain kind of filmmaking that it representsone favored in the classical era of Hollywood which is characterized by aesthetics, meticulous structure, and delicate understatement over explicit content or social relevance. This book argues that The Student Prince in Old Heidelberg has perhaps been neglected because of the tendency in contemporary film criticism to devalue films that are not overtly serious in their subject matter. The Student Prince in Old Heidelberg represents a master class in classical Hollywood technique, a kind of filmmaking that is characterized by charm, beauty, and elegant form and which chooses not to express its ideas explicitly but to encase them in the substance,

      Trade Review
      ‘Lubitsch can’t wait!’ clamor fans and scholars of this consummate and delicate director as they ask for renewed appreciation of his resonant art. John Fawell answers their clarion call with an analysis that is eloquent and elegant, ever so attuned to the soft and subtle quietudes of Lubitsch’s art as exhibited in the key film The Student Prince in Old Heidelberg. This is a lovely and loving study that well shows Lubitsch’s pride of place in Hollywood silent cinema. -- Dana Polan, New York University, author of Julia Child's The French Chef
      A lovingly detailed celebration of a neglected silent film that is also a ringing defense of the marriage between Ernst Lubitsch’s unerringly delicate touch and the much-maligned MGM studio style—and, more generally, of a whole approach to filmmaking and filmgoing that has largely fallen out of favor, one that treasures simplicity, romance, sincerity, elegance, grace, sentiment, and apparently artless art. Can a revival of The Student Prince in Old Heidelberg, and indeed of all these virtues, be far behind? -- Thomas M. Leitch, University of Delaware
      There is no more generous or insightful a guide to the mystery and artistry of Hollywood than John W. Fawell. His previous work has explored how Hollywood’s broad-stroke storytelling authorized an elaboration of sentiment and style into realms of true seriousness, even in films typically understood as frivolous. In this study of Ernst Lubitsch’s The Student Prince in Old Heidelberg, Fawell offers further evidence on Hollywood’s behalf by showing, in careful and illuminating detail, how Lubitsch treated an already well-known story, on the risky but rewarding premise that a ‘silent’ film better illustrates the ‘musical’ aesthetic of Hollywood than subsequent ‘talkies.’ Lubitsch scholars will be grateful for Fawell’s animated reading of The Student Prince, but his repeated allusions to other films and filmmakers—Capra, Chaplin, Dryer, Eisenstein, Ford, Godard, Hawks, Hitchcock, Sturges, Tati, Welles, Wilder—will make this book attractive to a broad readership. -- Leland Poague, Iowa State University
      John Fawell's criticism is comprehensive and refreshingly reader-friendly. While considering various angles, his work presents a unified analysis that appeals to experts and newcomers. With Lubitsch’s The Student Prince in Old Heidelberg, Fawell delivers the definitive reading of a rediscovered classic, as probing as it is heartfelt. -- Matthew Sorrento, Rutgers University, Camden

      Table of Contents
      Introduction Chapter 1: Why the Neglect? Chapter 2: The Rewards of Simplicity Chapter 3: A Classical Sense of Balance Chapter 4: A Larger Sense of Balance Chapter 5: Matches Chapter 6: Motifs Chapter 7: The Art of Condensation Chapter 8: Lubitsch’s Use of Off-screen Space Chapter 9: A Measured Expressiveness Chapter 10: Lubitsch and Actors Chapter 11: Lubitsch, Shearer and Kathi Chapter 12: What Shearer Brings to the Equation Chapter 13: The Film’s “Ideas” Chapter 14: Chaplin and Lubitsch Chapter 15: Carl Davis’ Orchestral Accompaniments Bibliography Index About the Author

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