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Introduction: Film Remakes in the Context of European Cinema
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Eduard Cuelenaere
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Kapitel in diesem Buch
- Frontmatter i
- Contents v
- Figures vii
- Notes on Contributors viii
- Acknowledgements xi
- Preface: Farewell, Hollywood xii
- Introduction: Film Remakes in the Context of European Cinema 1
-
Part I Conceptual Perspectives: Delineating and Pushing the Boundaries of Remake Studies
- 1 The Film Remake as Prism: Towards a Model of Systematic Textual Analysis 17
- 2 The ‘Secret Remake’: A European Take on the Traditional Remake? 33
- 3 From ‘Mini-Remake’ to Open-Ended Coda: How to Make a ‘Proper’ Homage 45
- 4 Rainer Werner Fassbinder’s Berlin Alexanderplatz (1980) as Remake? 59
- 5 Remakesploitation: Exploitation Film Remakes and the Transnational Giallo 73
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Part II Historical Perspectives: Continuity and Change
- 6 Re-forming La Maternelle: Socio-Cultural Continuity and the Remake 87
- 7 Screening Transformation Processes: Post-War Remakes of Nazi-Era Films 103
- 8 The Colour Remakes of Swedish Classics in the 1950s: Production, Promotion and Critical Reception in the Context of Technological Innovation 117
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Part III Contemporary Perspectives: European Film Remakes in the New Millennium
- 9 Remakes à la polonaise: From National Re-Adaptations to Internationally Inspired Rom-Coms 131
- 10 Nostalgic Mediations of the Soviet Past in Nikolai Lebedev’s Remake The Crew (2016) 149
- 11 Mistaken Identities: Millennial Remakes, Post-Socialist Transformation and Hungarian Popular Cinema 163
- 12 Refashioning the Remake: A Bigger Splash 177
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Part IV Industrial Perspectives: Practices of Production and Circulation
- 13 Remake and Decline in Scottish Cinema: Whisky Galore! 1949 and 2016 193
- 14 ‘Remakable’ Directors: The Contemporary Spanish Media Industry and Popular Discourses on Remakes and National Authorship 211
- 15 Remakes and Globally-Oriented European Cinema: Contemporary Industrial Practices and Shifting Hierarchies 225
- Index 240
Kapitel in diesem Buch
- Frontmatter i
- Contents v
- Figures vii
- Notes on Contributors viii
- Acknowledgements xi
- Preface: Farewell, Hollywood xii
- Introduction: Film Remakes in the Context of European Cinema 1
-
Part I Conceptual Perspectives: Delineating and Pushing the Boundaries of Remake Studies
- 1 The Film Remake as Prism: Towards a Model of Systematic Textual Analysis 17
- 2 The ‘Secret Remake’: A European Take on the Traditional Remake? 33
- 3 From ‘Mini-Remake’ to Open-Ended Coda: How to Make a ‘Proper’ Homage 45
- 4 Rainer Werner Fassbinder’s Berlin Alexanderplatz (1980) as Remake? 59
- 5 Remakesploitation: Exploitation Film Remakes and the Transnational Giallo 73
-
Part II Historical Perspectives: Continuity and Change
- 6 Re-forming La Maternelle: Socio-Cultural Continuity and the Remake 87
- 7 Screening Transformation Processes: Post-War Remakes of Nazi-Era Films 103
- 8 The Colour Remakes of Swedish Classics in the 1950s: Production, Promotion and Critical Reception in the Context of Technological Innovation 117
-
Part III Contemporary Perspectives: European Film Remakes in the New Millennium
- 9 Remakes à la polonaise: From National Re-Adaptations to Internationally Inspired Rom-Coms 131
- 10 Nostalgic Mediations of the Soviet Past in Nikolai Lebedev’s Remake The Crew (2016) 149
- 11 Mistaken Identities: Millennial Remakes, Post-Socialist Transformation and Hungarian Popular Cinema 163
- 12 Refashioning the Remake: A Bigger Splash 177
-
Part IV Industrial Perspectives: Practices of Production and Circulation
- 13 Remake and Decline in Scottish Cinema: Whisky Galore! 1949 and 2016 193
- 14 ‘Remakable’ Directors: The Contemporary Spanish Media Industry and Popular Discourses on Remakes and National Authorship 211
- 15 Remakes and Globally-Oriented European Cinema: Contemporary Industrial Practices and Shifting Hierarchies 225
- Index 240