
Joseph I. Donohoe, Jr.
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Essays on Quebec Cinema
Joseph I. Donohoe, Jr.
Emerging in the Sixties with the rest of Quebec society from the
dark
ages of "la survivance," Quebec cinema soon began to incite and
reflect a decade of sweeping changes now known as the "Quiet
Revolution." Yet where cinema was concerned there was more to
overcome than the inertia and limiting perspectives of a now
moribund
tradition. Squarely in the path of continued development and a
heightened desire for authentically quebecois films, lay a
formidable
movie-making apparatus that had long since addicted spectators the
world over, including Quebec, to the shot/reverse shot rhythm of the
classical Hollywood narrative. How well Quebec cinema has faired in
the struggle to to produce and market films which continue to
reflect
the genius of French North America is a strong implicit theme of
this
international collection of essays.
Essays on Quebec Cinema weaves together the reflections of
filmmakers
and scholars from Canada, the United States, and Great Britain as
they move to a fresh assessment of one of the most dynamic film
industries in the Western Hemisphere. The contributors include
renowned documentarists Pierre Perrault and Jean-Pierre Lefebvre,
and
critic/teachers Paul Warren, Janis Pallister, Esther Pelletier and
Richard Vernier. A bibliography of three dozen Quebec filmmakers and
critics concludes this important collection.
Canadian Studies
Notes, bibliography, photographs,
indexWorld rights
194 pp., 6.00" x 9.00", January 1991
Library Edition, $29.95,
0-87013-294-6 978-0-87013-294-X

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