Description
Book SynopsisDelves into the mysteries of screen performance, revealing both the acting techniques and the technical apparatuses that coalesce in an instant of cinematic alchemy to create movie gold. Considering a range of acting styles and films, Murray Pomerance traces the common dynamics that work to structure the complex relationship between the act of cinematic performance and its eventual perception.
Trade Review"The versatile critic and scholar Murray Pomerance analyzes the complexities, casts light on the enigmas, and celebrates the excitements of screen performance with insight, appreciation, and panache." -- David Sterritt * author of The Cinema of Clint Eastwood: Chronicles of America *
"Is acting a cinematic element, inseparable from direction, cinematography, special effects, and design? This book by the prodigious, prolific Pomerance will change how you think about screen acting." -- Dennis Bingham * Indiana University-Purdue University Indianapolis *
"
Moment of Action magnifies every aspect of the art and craft of filmmaking. Murray Pomerance is a scholar and keen observer, whose passion for the subject is very impressive." -- Elliott Gould * Academy Award-nominated actor *
"The versatile critic and scholar Murray Pomerance analyzes the complexities, casts light on the enigmas, and celebrates the excitements of screen performance with insight, appreciation, and panache." -- David Sterritt * author of The Cinema of Clint Eastwood: Chronicles of America *
"Is acting a cinematic element, inseparable from direction, cinematography, special effects, and design? This book by the prodigious, prolific Pomerance will change how you think about screen acting." -- Dennis Bingham * Indiana University-Purdue University Indianapolis *
"
Moment of Action magnifies every aspect of the art and craft of filmmaking. Murray Pomerance is a scholar and keen observer, whose passion for the subject is very impressive." -- Elliott Gould * Academy Award-nominated actor *
Table of ContentsAcknowledgmentsPreamble: Saw the Air Thinking about actors and their allure; Natalie Wood in
Rebel Without a Cause; viewers’ love of acting; momentary performance; acting, action, and activity; acting, evidence, and biography; Linda Darnell; casting and gatekeeping.1 Fantastic PerformanceThinking about acting style and culture; innocent and scientific watching, and “falling in”;
The Edge of Tomorrow;
The Last Laugh;
With Blood on My Hands:
Pusher II; predictive performance and John Wayne; transcendent performance and Katharine Hepburn;
Bringing Up Baby;
Now, Voyager;
El Dorado.2 Beaux Gestes Thinking about language and gesture;
The Disorderly Orderly; Anthony Perkins in
Psycho; Jeff Goldblum in
Le Weekend;
Touch of Evil; the flower of the gest; Ralph Richardson and Christophe Lambert in
Greystoke: The Legend of Tarzan,
Lord of the Apes; effects gesture;
Life of Pi and keyframing; animated performance and puppetry;
Blithe Spirit; Robert Walker in
My Son John;
The Stepford Wives; The Musée Grévin; Jacques de Vaucanson’s duck;
The Thief of Bagdad; Charlton Heston and Gary Cooper in
The Wreck of the Mary Deare; cinematic gesture and
The King of Comedy;
The Thin Man;
Cool Hand Luke;
The Red Shoes; hands and handfulness; actors under direction; John Frankenheimer, Burt Lancaster, and
The Train;
Antony and Cleopatra; Hitchcock, gesture, and “cattle”; Kim Novak,
Vertigo, and vertiginous gesture.3 Curtains Thinking about the actor’s multiple selves; Vivian Sobchack and the actor’s four bodies; performance amplification; Alec Guinness and preparation; rehearsal and “downkeying”; curtain calls;
Whose Life Is It Anyway?;
Murder on the Orient Express;
Citizen Kane;
The Magnificent Ambersons;
The Bad Seed; “behind-the-scenes” musicals; theatrical exhibition spaces; credit-roll “goofing”; Peter O’Toole and Winona Ryder offscreen;
Birdman; fans and fan logic; actor-in-the-street stories; acting audiences; the Academy Awards.4 “It’s Not a Man, It’s a Place!” Thinking about setting and the actor’s labor; workplaces under capitalism and factory design; the sound stage environment;
Rope; acting and make-up; Technicolor;
My Dinner with André; Ian Carmichael; Ingrid Bergman and
Under Capricorn;
The Wizard of Oz; Grey Gardens; Simon Callow and
A Room with a View; Charles Laughton in
The Hunchback of Notre Dame; Boris Karloff;
2001: A Space Odyssey; Haruo Nakajima, Godzilla, and body division;
Billion Dollar Brain;
The French Lieutenant’s Woman;
Chinatown; Fred Astaire dancing with Ginger Rogers; the sound boom; the “caffeination schedule”; acting, editing, and lighting; predetermined focus;
Suddenly, Last Summer;
The Hands of Orlac;
The Man Who Shot Liberty Valance; “Instructions for John Howell”; panoptical setting; Laurence Olivier in
Sleuth; setting and characters; Bette Davis in
The Letter; the character “at home” in
Marnie; “hypothetical” performance, Sandra Bullock, and
Gravity; Andy Serkis; the actor’s mirror; animation vocalizing;
The Member of the Wedding.5 Acting Intimate Thinking about actors’ trade secrecy; Philip Seymour Hoffman in
Boogie Nights; Anthony Hopkins and Hannibal Lecter; Colin Farrell and truth-telling; Joaquin Phoenix in
The Master; zombie performance; George Herbert Mead;
Hud;
Bob & Carol & Ted & Alice; onscreen urination and bleeding; Leonardo DiCaprio in
Django Unchained; the actor’s voice; acting and musculature; the actor’s touch; interpersonal contact and audience exclusion;
The Bourne Identity; anxious interiors; Peter Lorre in
Casablanca,
The Maltese Falcon, and
Hotel Berlin; Richard Burton in
The Spy Who Came In from the Cold; the “Doctrine of Natural Expression”; anti-intellectualism, the portrayal of genius, and Jesse Eisenberg; acting the “amnesiac”; forgotten moralities and cathartic awakening.NotesWorks Cited and ConsultedIndex