Looking at Movies: An Introduction to Film, Second Edition (with DVD and Writing about Movies Booklet) |  | Author: Richard Barsam Publisher: W. W. Norton Category: Book
List Price: $69.38 Buy New: $45.18 You Save: $24.20 (35%)
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Avg. Customer Rating: 5 reviews Sales Rank: 444518
Media: Paperback Edition: 2 Number Of Items: 1 Pages: 450 Shipping Weight (lbs): 2.6 Dimensions (in): 9.9 x 7.8 x 1.3
ISBN: 0393171302 Dewey Decimal Number: 791 EAN: 9780393171303 ASIN: 0393171302
Publication Date: November 19, 2006 Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days Shipping: Expedited shipping available Shipping: International shipping available Condition: Brand new Book, ALL days Low Price !
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Product Description Looking at Movies, Second Edition, offers students everything they need to understand and appreciate film: a visually dynamic presentation, more help with film analysis than any other text, and a sophisticated and integrated media package featuring nearly four hours of moving-image content. The text, DVDs, website, and writing guide package costs less than competing texts alone, making Looking at Movies an outstanding value for your students. Includes two DVDs, access to the student website, and a supplementary Writing About Movies guide.
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Looking at Movies: An Introduction to Film, Second Edition (with DVD and Writing about Movies Booklet) February 28, 2008 The book is interesting for people who would like to learn about a film. Look at the CD-they are very well made, helping to study about the making of.
Quality basics October 10, 2007 This book is a good introduction into film analysis, in terms of giving definitions and following with commonly known examples from popular film culture. It was easy to learn from.
ontime and in good shape January 9, 2007 0 out of 3 found this review helpful
It was in good shape, and I received it ontime.
Easily worth a look January 2, 2004 13 out of 13 found this review helpful
Barsam's is a welcome addition to the field of introductory film texts, superior in many respects to similar entries (Giannatti, Phillips, etc.). The style is reader-friendly but in no way condescending; the examples are generous and representative of classic as well as current developments; the coverage is comprehensive. Indeed, with the accompanying CD-Rom and Website, the text is a virtual encyclopedia of information about the cinema, thereby justifying its slightly higher price. Moreover, this is the first text that begins to realize many of the media-specific qualities of the subject it attempts to illuminate.This is a first edition, and understandably there are problems, some admittedly attributable to individual preferences. A few things I've noticed: 1. The website can be "buggy," at least to a Macintosh operating system. Numerous "Java Script" messages are appearing along with failures to play visual and audio files. Even with the misfires, the website is the most impressive I've ever used in conjunction with a text. Because of it, an instructor need have no apologies about using a text that includes discussions of numerous films unknown to students and impossible to screen in class. 2. The accompanying VCD contains valuable film examples but unfortunately doesn't include any clips from "Citizen Kane." I would hope that a future edition includes a DVD with Kane and other useful illustrative and instructive materials. Website information and quizzes often have too many technical glitches to make them effective time-savers for a teacher, who now must solve each student's difficulties with the website (the required 8-digit password doesn't help). 3. Barsam uses much personal and arbitrary descriptive language that subsequently becomes "reified" in the quizzes about the components of film. As a result, the quiz becomes as much about remembering the specific language of the author and textbook as about the properties of a filmic element (equally true of the book's competitors). 4. The order of topics will not appeal to every instructor. For example, the most basic element of film--the shot--isn't addressed until the discussion of photography in Chapter 4. Also, the attention to previously marginalized films and filmmakers can be quite uneven. African-American issues receive considerable space in several chapters in the book and on the website whereas feminist issues receive a couple of paragraphs. Moreover, there is very little consideration of "auteurism," the enabling and prevailing approach of academic cinema studies. 5. The author's lack of experience with literary and composition issues is frequently apparent, though to the book's credit ample space is given to student writing. Still, the treatment of point of view in cinema becomes problematic, especially when the author refers to the camera's perspective as "omniscient." Also, the inclusion of an exemplary student essay, while extremely welcome, represents an unfortunate choice, in my opinion, since the essay is somewhat sophomoric, exhibits clumsy writing and omits a thesis(!). All in all, a promising production by Barsam and Norton. I look forward to giving it a test drive.
a very good and comprehensive introductory book September 18, 2003 1 out of 2 found this review helpful
Just got this book and found it to be very well structured, with a comprehensive yet easy to understand language that made the material very compelling. It comes with a cd rom with film clips and it also offers website interactivity that supports and expands on the material covered by the book. The layout is very sleek and although a bit pricey ($ 70), this is what college textbooks go for now, so even at this price this book compares more than favorably to what's out there.
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