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Motion pictures --- Coproduction (Motion pictures, television, etc.) --- History
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Mariages durables ou éphémères, mariages harmonieux ou contrastés, mariages féconds, mariages inattendus, mariages d'amour, mariages forcés ou arrangés... Ce livre veut raconter un aspect important de l'histoire du cinéma européen : la coproduction cinématographique constitue un champ de recherche vaste et encore largement inexploré. Dans un contexte politique, diplomatique et économique nouveau, qui est celui de l'après-guerre, l'Europe et son industrie cinématographique doivent faire face tout à la fois à l'arrivée massive de la concurrence hollywoodienne, aux tensions entre l'Est et l'Ouest, à la nécessité d'intégrer les nouveautés techniques (la couleur, les grands formats), ainsi qu'a une nouvelle mais nécessaire internationalisation de la production, de la distribution, et de l'exploitation cinématographiques. L'une des réponses apportées à ces questions est la mise en place, pour la première fois, d'accords officiels - c'est à dire intergouvernementaux - de coproduction. Après l'initiative pionnière de 1946 entre la France et l'Italie, ce modèle se répand graduellement dans toute l'Europe, et, sous des formes qui ont évolué dans le temps, il est encore en vigueur aujourd'hui. Des chercheurs européens, spécialistes de terrains variés - Allemagne(s), Bulgarie, Espagne, France, Grèce, Italie, Roumanie, Tchécoslovaquie et URSS - apportent leur contribution approfondie et documentée à cette exploration, ample à plus d'un titre. La période couverte va de la sortie de guerre à aujourd'hui. Réalisateurs, scénaristes, acteurs... célèbres et moins célèbres sont impliqués, comme les catégories d'œuvres les plus variées : du film musical au drame d'auteur, de la science-fiction au film historique consacré à un passé récent et douloureux, du dessin animé à la série télévisée, du mélodrame au film pour enfants. Ces collaborations ont impliqué des pays appartenant aux mêmes blocs idéologiques - l'Est et l'Ouest - mais elles ont aussi traversé le rideau de fer, faisant fi des glaciations géopolitiques, et constitué un élément de continuité de l'histoire culturelle globale de l'Europe. Qu'elle ait été vécue comme une contrainte ou comme une occasion rêvée d'échapper aux carcans nationaux, la coproduction cinématographique a toujours revêtu la forme d'un drôle de mariage, dont les multiples variations ont donc contribué - et contribuent encore - à façonner l'identité culturelle européenne.
Coproduction (audiovisuel) --- Films --- Production et réalisation --- Coproduction (Motion pictures, television, etc.) - Europe - History --- Motion picture industry - Europe - History --- Production et réalisation --- Coproduction (Motion pictures, television, etc.) --- Motion picture industry
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This volume offers an up-to-date analysis of film and television co-production in Europe. It brings together the voices of policy professionals, industry practitioners and media industry scholars to trace the contours of a complex practice that is of increasing significance in the global media landscape. Analysis of the latest production statistics sits alongside interviews with producers and the critical evaluation of public film policies. The volume incorporates contributions from representatives of major public institutions?Eurimages, the European Audiovisual Observatory and the European Commission?and private production companies including the pan-European Zentropa Group. Policy issues are elucidated through case studies including the Oscar-winning feature film Ida, the BAFTA-winning I am not a Witch and the Danish television serial Ride Upon the Storm. Scholarly articles span co-development, co-distribution and regional cinemas as well as emerging policy challenges such as the digital single market. The combination of qualitative and quantitative approaches, and the juxtaposition of industry and scholarly voices, provides a unique perspective on European co-production that is information-rich, complex and stimulating, making this volume a valuable companion for students, scholars, and industry professionals
Coproduction (Motion pictures, television, etc.) --- Motion pictures --- Television --- Cinéma --- Industrie du cinéma --- Médias audiovisuels --- Production and direction --- Political aspects --- Politique publique --- Finances. --- Production et réalisation
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West German cinema of the 1960s is frequently associated with the emergence of a new generation of filmmakers, collectively known by the 1970s as the "New German Cinema." Yet for domestic and international audiences at the time, German cinema primarily meant popular genres such as exotic adventure films, Gothic crime thrillers, westerns, and sex films, which were dismissed by German filmmakers and critics of the 1970s as "Daddy's Cinema." International Adventures provides the first comprehensive account of these genres, and charts the history of the West German film industry and its main protagonists from the immediate post-war years to its boom period in the 1950s and 1960s. By analyzing film genres in the context of industrial practices, literary traditions, biographical trajectories, and wider cultural and social developments, this book uncovers a forgotten period of German filmmaking that merits reassessment. International Adventures firmly locates its case studies within the wider dynamic of European cinema. In its study of West German cinema's links and co-operations with other countries including Britain, France, and Italy, the book addresses what is perhaps the most striking phenomenon of 1960s popular film genres: the dispersal and disappearance of markers of national identity in increasingly international narratives and modes of production.
Film --- anno 1940-1949 --- anno 1950-1959 --- anno 1960-1969 --- Germany: West --- Motion picture industry --- Motion pictures --- Coproduction (Motion pictures, television, etc.) --- History --- Co-production (Motion pictures, television, etc.) --- Radio --- Television --- Video recordings --- Cinema --- Feature films --- Films --- Movies --- Moving-pictures --- Audio-visual materials --- Mass media --- Performing arts --- Film industry (Motion pictures) --- Moving-picture industry --- Cultural industries --- Production and direction --- History and criticism
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From their very inception, European cinemas undertook collaborative ventures in an attempt to cultivate a transnational “Film-Europe.” In the postwar era, it was DEFA, the state cinema of East Germany, that emerged as a key site for cooperative practices. Despite the significant challenges that the Cold War created for collaboration, DEFA sought international prestige through various initiatives. These ranged from film exchange in occupied Germany to partnerships with Western producers, and from coproductions with Eastern European studios to strategies for film co-authorship. Uniquely positioned between East and West, DEFA proved a crucial mediator among European cinemas during a period of profound political division.
Coproduction (Motion pictures, television, etc.) --- Motion picture industry --- Motion pictures --- History. --- Political aspects --- DEFA --- coproductions with eastern european studios. --- defa. --- film exchange in occupied germany. --- partnerships with western producers. --- period of profound political division. --- sought international prestige. --- state cinema of east germany. --- strategies for film coauthorship. --- study of german cinema.
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