I Found it at the Movies: Reflections of a Cinephile (Carcanet Film)

I Found it at the Movies: Reflections of a Cinephile (Carcanet Film)

by PhilipFrench (Author)

Synopsis

For nearly half a century Philip French's writing on cinema has been essential reading for filmgoers, cinephiles and anyone who enjoys witty, intelligent engagement with the big screen. I Found It at the Movies collects some of the best of Philip French's film writing from 1964 to 2009. Its subjects are as various, entertaining and challenging as cinema itself: Kurosawa and the Addams family; Satyajit Ray and Doris Day; from Hollywood and the Holocaust to British cinema and postage stamps. I Found It at the Movies is an illuminating companion to the world of the cinema. I Found It at the Movies is the first of three collections of Philip French's writings on film and culture.

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More Information

Format: Paperback
Pages: 292
Publisher: Carcanet Press Ltd
Published: 24 Mar 2011

ISBN 10: 1847771297
ISBN 13: 9781847771292

Media Reviews
There is a tiny number of British film critics who are really responsible and serious and understand true cinema and he is the doyen. Mike Leigh It's very rare that you find someone who manages to find a way of writing that expresses the essence of the emotional experience of watching a film and Philip manages to do that beautifully and succinctly. Neil Jordan Philip believes that cinema is the art form for the world's people... If Philip goes out and chances his arm on backing somebody, it means more to the industry than any other writer. Richard Attenborough Good critics are fundamental in the creation of any good piece of art and Philip is an exemplar of the very best of an important tradition. David Puttnam
Author Bio
Philip French was born in Liverpool in 1933, and after service as an officer with the Parachute Regiment in the Middle East he read law and edited The Isis at Oxford before going on to study journalism at Indiana University. For over 30 years he was a producer for BBC Radio, specialising in programmes on the arts and American affairs. From the early 1960s he has been a regular contributor to numerous magazines and newspapers ranging from Sight & Sound to the TLS, and from the Financial Times to The Observer, where he's written a weekly film column since 1978. His books as author or editor include The Age of Austerity (1963), The Movie Moguls (1969), Westerns (1973), Three Honest Men: Edmund Wilson, F.R. Leavis, Lionel Trilling (1980), Malle on Malle (1992), The Faber Book of Movie Verse (1993), Cult Movies (1999), and Westerns and Westerns Revisited (2005). He was a Booker Prize judge in 1986, served on the jury at the 1988 Cannes Film Festival, was given a life achievement award by the Critics Circle in 2003, received an honorary doctorate from the University of Lancaster in 2006, became the first critic to be made a Lifetime Honorary Member of BAFTA in 2008, and in 2009 was named Critic of the Year in the National Press Awards.