786 resultados para Cinema Clássico de Hollywood
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Regista-se entre nós uma maneira muito particular de confundir cultura e literatura, a ponto de se considerar culto apenas aquele que revela conhecimentos e competências na área especifica das literaturas. É por essa razão que a história da revista Presença e de um dos seus fundadores, José Régio, tem sido sobretudo analisada respeitando este prisma teórico. Proponho nesta curta reflexão mostrar que a revista e o seu director possuíam um campo de intervenção mais amplo, que incluía também as outras artes, sobretudo a criação plástica, a fotografia, o cinema e naturalmente o teatro. Desde os seus primeiros números a Presença dá noticia das grandes opções cinematográficas, tendo José Régio encarado a possibilidade de realizar filmes em Coimbra, apoiado numa empresa que tinha como sócios virtuais ou reais os seus amigos e companheiros de Coimbra e da Presença.
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RESUMO: O presente trabalho salienta a importância da aplicação do Marketing às instituições culturais, nomeadamente como veículo de captação e fidelização de públicos. Nesse sentido, foi estudado o Cinema-Teatro Joaquim d’Almeida, no Montijo, tendo sido realizada uma análise mais geral da programação, comunicação e públicos desde a sua reabertura em 2005 como equipamento cultural municipal e uma análise mais aprofundada da última temporada do mesmo, correspondente ao ano de 2009-2010. Pretende-se assim com este trabalho salientar a importância da aplicação do marketing à cultura através da investigação do objecto de estudo supracitado e consequente análise e sugestão de estratégias para melhoria da relação entre a referida instituição e os seus públicos. O marketing revela-se assim essencial para a construção desse relacionamento, satisfazendo cada vez mais os consumidores e simultaneamente beneficiando a instituição. ABSTRACT: This thesis intends to point out the importance of the use of marketing in cultural institutions, particularly as a medium of audiences’ attraction and loyalty building. In that sense, we studied Cinema-Teatro Joaquim d’Almeida, in Montijo. We proceeded at a general analysis of the programming, communication and audiences since it opened to public as a municipal cultural infrastructure. We proceeded at a more detailed analysis of the last season, in the year 2009-2010. Then it was elaborated a theoretical investigation about Portugal’s cultural environment and the general applications of marketing at culture and services. Later we continued the analysis of the case study, regarding the documentation supplied by this cultural institution. It was also developed a marketing research about the audiences of the Theater in order to understand their general opinion about its offers and services. With this procedure, we intended to suggest a set of marketing strategies to improve the relationship between the institution and its audiences, in order to delight even more the consumers and simultaneously to benefit the institution.
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No cinema, o silêncio é muito utilizado porque tem uma grande riqueza semântica; no entanto, quando se limita em acompanhar a imagem, e vale por si só, precisa de tempo para ser compreendido e apreciado. Este silêncio cria atmosferas particulares que dão a forma ao filme. A fotografia é em si, silenciosa. Quando ela «fala com o espetador» é porque o seu conteúdo exprime ou sugere o som. O cinema tem o movimento das imagens e a possibilidade de reproduzir os sons da vida. A fotografia tem a possibilidade de congelar o tempo. Ambas mostram uma imagem espelhada da realidade. Será que podem exprimir o mesmo silêncio?
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This paper argues that transatlantic hybridity connects space, visual style and ideological point of view in British television action-adventure fiction of the 1960s–1970s. It analyses the relationship between the physical location of TV series production at Elstree Studios, UK, the representation of place in programmes, and the international trade in television fiction between the UK and USA. The TV series made at Elstree by the ITC and ABC companies and their affiliates linked Britishness with an international modernity associated with the USA, while also promoting national specificity. To do this, they drew on film production techniques that were already common for TV series production in Hollywood. The British series made at Elstree adapted versions of US industrial organization and television formats, and made programmes expected to be saleable to US networks, on the basis of British experiences in TV co-production with US companies and of the international cinema and TV market.
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The essay asserts that, since pioneering work in the 1970s and 80s (in Screen in particular), the study of classical Hollywood cinema has failed adequately to acknowledge and understand the role of spectacle therein. This essay outlines theoretical but, even more, practical understandings of particular kinds of spectacle; they are susceptible to the practice of close analysis. Seeking to discuss spectacle in precise terms and in particular contexts, I define two kinds of spectacle associated with the historical film: ‘the decor of history’ and ‘the spectacular vista’. The example of Gone with the Wind illustrates the interrelationship between these two kinds of spectacle and their associations with particular ideas of femininity and masculinity. This gendering of spectacle is related to ‘the historical gaze’, a performative gesture that exemplifies the wider rhetoric of historical films, in their seeking to address the historical knowledge of the film spectator and to uphold a vision of history as being driven by powerful men, aware of their own destiny. Over the course of the three famous hilltop scenes in Gone with the Wind, one can plot Scarlett O'Hara's increased access to this kind of foresight and fortitude coded as ‘masculine’. This character arc can also be traced through Scarlett's shifting place within the film's use of spectacle: she begins the film wholly preoccupied with the domestic world of lavish parties and beautiful gowns; however, after her encounter with cataclysmic history visualized as a vast, terrible spectacle (the fall of Atlanta), Scarlett assumes the role occupied by her broken and emasculated father.
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In 1999, Elizabeth Hills pointed up the challenges that physically active women on film still posed, in cultural terms, and in relation to certain branches of feminist theory . Since then, a remarkable number of emphatically active female heroes have appeared on screen, from 'Charlie’s Angels' to 'Resident Evil', 'Aeon Flux', and the 'Matrix' and 'X-Men' trilogies. Nevertheless, in a contemporary Western culture frequently characterised as postfeminist, these seem to be the ‘acceptable face’ – and body – of female empowerment: predominantly white, heterosexual, often scantily clad, with the traditional hero’s toughness and resolve re-imagined in terms of gender-biased notions of decorum: grace and dignity alongside perfect hair and make-up, and a body that does not display unsightly markers of physical exertion. The homogeneity of these representations is worth investigating in relation to critical claims that valorise such air-brushed, high-kicking 'action babes' for their combination of sexiness and strength, and the feminist and postfeminist discourses that are refracted through such readings. Indeed, this arguably ‘safe’ set of depictions, dovetailing so neatly with certain postfeminist notions of ‘having it all’, suppresses particular kinds of spectacles in relation to the active female body: images of physical stress and extension, biological consequences of violence and dangerous motivations are all absent. I argue that the untidy female exertions refused in popular “action babe” representations are now erupting into view in a number of other contemporaneous movies – 'Kill Bill' Vols 1 & 2, 'Monster', and 'Hard Candy' – that mark the return of that which is repressed in the mainstream vision of female power – that is, a more viscerally realistic physicality, rage and aggression. As such, these films engage directly with the issue of how to represent violent female agency. This chapter explores what is at stake at a representational level and in terms of spectatorial processes of identification in the return of this particularly visceral rendering of the female avenger.
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Review and critical reflection on 'The Matrix', in relation to questions of genre, aesthetics, representation, and cultural and industrial contexts.
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Review and critical reflection on 'Transformers' as an example of the contemporary blockbuster, exploring questions of genre, aesthetics, representation, and cultural and industrial contexts.