American
Cinema of the 1980s
Price: $24.95
Subtitle: Themes and Variations
Editor: Stephen Prince
Subject: Film / American Studies
Paper ISBN 0-8135-4034-8
Cloth ISBN 0-8135-4033-X
Pages: 288 pages. 33 b&w
illustrations
Publication Date: July 2007
Series: The
Screen Decades
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Description:
During the 1980s, American cinema underwent enormous
transformations. Blockbusters like Raiders of the Lost Ark, E.T.,
and The Empire Strikes Back grabbed huge revenues for the
studios. At the same time, the growth of home video led to new and
creative opportunities for independent film production, resulting in
many of the decade's best films.
Both large- and small-scale filmmakers responded to the social,
political, and cultural conditions of the time. The two-term presidency
of Ronald Reagan spawned a new Cold War with the Soviet Union, which
Hollywood film both embraced and critiqued. Also during this time,
Hollywood launched a long-awaited cycle of films about the Vietnam War,
exploring its impact both at home and abroad. But science fiction
remained the era's most popular genre, ranging from upbeat fantasies to
dark, dystopic visions.
Bringing together original essays by ten respected scholars in the
field, American Cinema of the 1980s examines the films that
marked the decade, including Ordinary People, Body Heat, Blade
Runner, Zelig, Platoon, Top Gun, Aliens, Blue Velvet, Robocop, Fatal
Attraction, Die Hard, Batman, and sex, lies & videotape .
About the Author:
Stephen Prince is a professor of communication at
Virginia Polytechnic Institute in the Department of Theatre & Cinema.
A volume in the Screen Decades: American Culture/American
Cinema series, edited by Lester D. Friedman and Murray Pomerance
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Price: $24.95
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