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At the Movies, Film Reviewing, and Screenwriting: Selective Affinities Cultural Mediation

At the Movies, Film Reviewing, and Screenwriting: Selective Affinities Cultural Mediation in Grande Prairie, AB

Current price: $97.69
Original price: $122.08
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At the Movies, Film Reviewing, and Screenwriting: Selective Affinities Cultural Mediation

Coles

At the Movies, Film Reviewing, and Screenwriting: Selective Affinities Cultural Mediation in Grande Prairie, AB

Current price: $97.69
Original price: $122.08
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Size: Kobo eBook

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Unpacking a decade of Australia’s most famous TV reviewing program to reveal how film reviewing mediates cultural taste and cinematic storytelling. At the Movies, Film Reviewing, and Screenwriting discusses the interplay between film criticism and screenwriting, providing a different view on how reviewers engage with story and dialogue. Steven Maras draws on Pierre Bourdieu’s theories of cultural taste to examine film reviewing as a key site of cultural production, analyzing ten years of television scripts from At the Movies (2004–2014). Hosted by Australia’s most influential film critics Margaret Pomeranz and David Stratton, this long-running program shaped public discourse on cinema and left an indelible mark on Australian screen culture. Studying the program’s broadcast scripts, this book addresses how film reviewing operates as both critique and storytelling. Of particular interest to media scholars, screenwriting researchers, and cinephiles alike, it provides fresh insights into the evolving role of criticism in contemporary screen culture. Engaging and deeply researched, this work rightfully emphasizes the cultural significance of movie criticism in film culture in Australia and beyond.
Unpacking a decade of Australia’s most famous TV reviewing program to reveal how film reviewing mediates cultural taste and cinematic storytelling. At the Movies, Film Reviewing, and Screenwriting discusses the interplay between film criticism and screenwriting, providing a different view on how reviewers engage with story and dialogue. Steven Maras draws on Pierre Bourdieu’s theories of cultural taste to examine film reviewing as a key site of cultural production, analyzing ten years of television scripts from At the Movies (2004–2014). Hosted by Australia’s most influential film critics Margaret Pomeranz and David Stratton, this long-running program shaped public discourse on cinema and left an indelible mark on Australian screen culture. Studying the program’s broadcast scripts, this book addresses how film reviewing operates as both critique and storytelling. Of particular interest to media scholars, screenwriting researchers, and cinephiles alike, it provides fresh insights into the evolving role of criticism in contemporary screen culture. Engaging and deeply researched, this work rightfully emphasizes the cultural significance of movie criticism in film culture in Australia and beyond.

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