About the Author Elisa Pezzotta is Cultrice della Materia of Cinema at the University of Bergamo, Italy. She has participated at and co-organized several international conferences. She is the author of Stanley Kubrick: Adapting the Sublime, and of articles published on Cinergie, Elephant & Castle, Adaptation, Offscreen, Journal of Adaptation in Film & Performance, and Wide Screen. She co-edited special issues on Cinergie, Historical Journal of Film, Radio and Television,and Elephant & Castle. Her main interests are Kubrick Studies, Adaptation Studies and time in films. Product Description We are imprisoned in circadian rhythms, as well as in our life reviews that follow chronological and causal links. For the majority of us our lives are vectors directed toward aims that we strive to reach and delimited by our birth and death. Nevertheless, we can still experience fleeting moments during which we forget the past and the future, as well as the very flow of time. During these intense emotions, we burst out laughing or crying, or we scream with pleasure, or we are mesmerized by a work of art or just by eyes staring at us.Similarly, when we watch a film, the screening time has a well defined beginning and end, and screening and diegetic time and their relations, together with narrative and stylistic techniques, determine a time within the time of our life with its own rules and exceptions. Through the close analysis of Stanley Kubrick's, Adrian Lyne's, Michael Bay's and Quentin Tarantino's oeuvres, this book discusses the overall 'dominating' time of their films and the moments during which this 'ruling' time is disrupted and we momentarily forget the run toward the diegetic future – suspense – or the past – curiosity and surprise. It is in these very moments, as well as in our own lives, that the prison of time, through which the film is constructed and that is constructed by the film itself, crumbles displaying our role as spectators, our deepest relations with the film. Review “A captivating journey into the ways in which contemporary cinema constructs a sense of rhythm that encourages spectators to free themselves from the prison of time in everyday life. Not the measurable time of the clock, nor just the time constructed by the narrative, but the value of a temporality lived in terms of emotional intensity. A rethinking of both the classic narratological and cognitivist approaches – an alternative yet integrative perspective to the much-debated theories on complex storytelling and impossible puzzle films.” ―Adriano D'Aloia, Associate Professor of Film & Media, University of Bergamo, Italy“Rarely have scholars compared and contrasted various cinematic treatments of time in a unifying and interdisciplinary fashion. In her new book The Prison of Time, Elisa Pezzotta fills this void by providing a thorough and thoughtful analysis of the creation of time in the works of 4 distinctive directors. Firmly grounded in state-of-the-art theory and research, it offers the reader a worthy lens through which to understand not only the fundamental embodied rules by which films exert their temporal effects, but also the unique stylistic and narrative ways in which such processes have been put into filmic practice.” ―Maarten Coëgnarts, Visiting Professor, University of Antwerp, Belgium, and author of Film as Embodied Art: Bodily Meaning in the Cinema of Stanley Kubrick (2019)“Something intriguing happens when one enters the cinema. The room darkens, the curtains open, and one surrenders, a willing hostage, to someone else's sense of time. This is the fascinating experience that Elisa Pezzotta unpacks in her close analysis of the oeuvres of four key auteurs. For those new to the study of time in cinema, her book brings philosophical clarity and rigor. For those familiar with the work of Kubrick, Lyne, Bay and Tarantino, it brings fresh insights. It sharpens our understanding of one of the cinema's most enduring qualitie
show more...Just click on START button on Telegram Bot