Kapitel
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List of Figures
Kapitel in diesem Buch
- Frontmatter i
- Contents v
- List of Figures vii
- Acknowledgments x
- Notes on Contributors xi
- Introduction: William Wyler—Chariot Races and Flower Shows 1
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Part I Style
- 1 Wyler’s Early Films: Evolution of the “Styleless Style” 25
- 2 More than Meets the Eye: Perspectives on William Wyler and the Auteur Theory 54
- 3 Traumatic History and the Prosthesis of Myth in Wyler’s 68
- 4 Persistent Presence: Space and Time in the Films of William Wyler 88
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Part II Collaboration, Genre, and Adaptation
- 5 Clash of the Titans: The Hidden Collaboration of William Wyler and David O. Selznick on Carrie (1952) 109
- 6 Narratives of Failure: Dead End (1937), The Desperate Hours (1955), and Gangsters in Distress 127
- 7 Wyler’s Wuthering Heights (1939): Genre, Transnationalism, and the Adaptation of the Victorian Novel 143
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Part III Gender and Sexuality
- 8 William Wyler’s The Heiress (1949) and the Unknown Woman 9 These Three: Wyler and his Two Adaptations of The Children’s Hour 161
- 9 These Three: Wyler and his Two Adaptations of The Children’s Hour 176
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Part IV War and Peace
- 10 A War of the People: Destruction, Community, and Hope in William Wyler’s Wartime Films 191
- 11 Turning the Other Cheek: Wyler’s Pacifism Trilogy—Friendly Persuasion (1956), The Big Country (1958), and Ben-Hur (1959) 208
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Part V Global Wyler
- 12 William Wyler’s Voyage to Italy: Roman Holiday (1953), Progressive Hollywood, and the Cold War 227
- 13 “Down Eros, Up Mars!”: Post-Colonialism, Imperial Violence, and the Corrupting Influence of Hate in William Wyler’s Ben-Hur (1959) 244
- 14 “Life Isn’t Always What One Likes”: The Unbearable Lightness of Royalty, and Other Stereotypes in Roman Holiday (1953) 258
- Filmography 278
- Academy Awards for Acting under Wyler 281
- Index 284
Kapitel in diesem Buch
- Frontmatter i
- Contents v
- List of Figures vii
- Acknowledgments x
- Notes on Contributors xi
- Introduction: William Wyler—Chariot Races and Flower Shows 1
-
Part I Style
- 1 Wyler’s Early Films: Evolution of the “Styleless Style” 25
- 2 More than Meets the Eye: Perspectives on William Wyler and the Auteur Theory 54
- 3 Traumatic History and the Prosthesis of Myth in Wyler’s 68
- 4 Persistent Presence: Space and Time in the Films of William Wyler 88
-
Part II Collaboration, Genre, and Adaptation
- 5 Clash of the Titans: The Hidden Collaboration of William Wyler and David O. Selznick on Carrie (1952) 109
- 6 Narratives of Failure: Dead End (1937), The Desperate Hours (1955), and Gangsters in Distress 127
- 7 Wyler’s Wuthering Heights (1939): Genre, Transnationalism, and the Adaptation of the Victorian Novel 143
-
Part III Gender and Sexuality
- 8 William Wyler’s The Heiress (1949) and the Unknown Woman 9 These Three: Wyler and his Two Adaptations of The Children’s Hour 161
- 9 These Three: Wyler and his Two Adaptations of The Children’s Hour 176
-
Part IV War and Peace
- 10 A War of the People: Destruction, Community, and Hope in William Wyler’s Wartime Films 191
- 11 Turning the Other Cheek: Wyler’s Pacifism Trilogy—Friendly Persuasion (1956), The Big Country (1958), and Ben-Hur (1959) 208
-
Part V Global Wyler
- 12 William Wyler’s Voyage to Italy: Roman Holiday (1953), Progressive Hollywood, and the Cold War 227
- 13 “Down Eros, Up Mars!”: Post-Colonialism, Imperial Violence, and the Corrupting Influence of Hate in William Wyler’s Ben-Hur (1959) 244
- 14 “Life Isn’t Always What One Likes”: The Unbearable Lightness of Royalty, and Other Stereotypes in Roman Holiday (1953) 258
- Filmography 278
- Academy Awards for Acting under Wyler 281
- Index 284