The Cinema of Christopher Nolan

The Cinema of Christopher Nolan

Imagining the Impossible

  • Auteur: Furby, Jacqueline; Joy, Stuart
  • Éditeur: Columbia University Press
  • Collection: Directors' Cuts
  • ISBN: 9780231173964
  • eISBN Pdf: 9780231850766
  • Lieu de publication:  New York , United States
  • Année de publication électronique: 2015
  • Mois : Août
  • Langue: Anglais
Over the past fifteen years, writer, producer and director Christopher Nolan has emerged from the margins of independent British cinema to become one of the most commercially successful directors in Hollywood. From Following (1998) to Interstellar (2014), Christopher Nolan's films explore philosophical concerns by experimenting with nonlinear storytelling while also working within classical Hollywood narrative and genre frameworks. Contextualizing and closely reading each of his films, this collection examines the director's play with memory, time, trauma, masculinity, and identity, and considers the function of music and video games and the effect of IMAX on his work.
  • Table of Contents
  • Acknowledgements
  • Notes on Contributors
  • Foreword: Are You Watching Closely?, by Will Brooker
  • Introduction: Dreaming a Little Bigger, Darling, by Stuart Joy
  • 1. Developing an Auteur Through Reviews: The Critical Surround of Christopher Nolan, by Erin Hill-Parks
  • 2. Cinephilia Writ Large: IMAX in Christopher Nolan’s The Dark Knight and The Dark Knight Rises, by Allison Whitney
  • 3. Nolan’s Immersive Allegories of Filmmaking in Inception and The Prestige, by Jonathan Olson
  • 4. Saints, Sinners and Terrorists: The Women of Christopher Nolan’s Gotham, by Tosha Taylor
  • 5. Memento’s Postmodern Noir Fantasy: Place, Domesticity and Gender Identity, by Margaret A. Toth
  • 6. Men in Crisis: Christopher Nolan, Un-truths and Fictionalising Masculinity, by Peter Deakin
  • 7. Representing Trauma: Grief, Amnesia and Traumatic Memory in Nolan’s New Millennial Films, by Fran Pheasant-Kelly
  • 8. ‘The dream has become their reality’: Infinite Regression in Christopher Nolan’s Memento and Inception, by Lisa K. Perdigao
  • 9. Revisiting the Scene of the Crime: Insomnia and the Return of the Repressed, by Stuart Joy
  • 10. ‘You keep telling yourself what you know, but what do you believe?’: Cultural Spin, Puzzle Films and Mind Games in the Cinema of Christopher Nolan, by Sorcha Ní Fhlainn
  • 11. Stumbling Over the Superhero: Christopher Nolan’s Victories and Compromises, by Todd McGowan
  • 12. Inception’s Singular Lack of Unity Among Christopher Nolan’s Puzzle Films, by Andrew Kania
  • 13. Inception’s Video Game Logic, by Warren Buckland
  • 14. On the Work of the Double in Christopher Nolan’s The Prestige, by Kwasu David Tembo
  • 15. No End in Sight: The Existential Temporality of Following, by Erin Kealey
  • 16. Hearing Music in Dreams: Towards the Semiotic Role of Music in Nolan’s Inception, by Felix Engel and Janina Wildfeuer
  • 17. About Time Too: From Interstellar to Following, Christopher Nolan’s Continuing Preoccupation with Time-Travel, by Jacqueline Furby
  • Index

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