At the Movies, Film Reviewing, and Screenwriting (Book)

Selective Affinities and Cultural Mediation

Analyses film reviewing as a form of cultural mediation of taste and narrative expectations, drawing on the work of influential sociologist Pierre Bourdieu. It studies one of Australia’s most famous review programs to analyse the under-explored cultural dynamics and affinities surrounding film reviewing as a form of media practice. 20 illus.

Category: Film Studies

Edition

This book examines film reviewing and screenwriting as key sites of cultural mediation, providing new insights on the relationship between criticism and reviewing, as well as the way reviewers handle concepts of story, dialogue, and narrative.

Drawing on the work of Pierre Bourdieu on the cultural field, and his theory of taste, the book provides an assessment of the place of film reviewing in contemporary screen culture. The book analyses a case study comprised of ten years of television scripts of the Australian film reviewing programme, At the Movies (2004–2014). Hosted by two of Australia’s most eminent film critics, Margaret Pomeranz and David Stratton, for over two decades, this study of At the Movies provides a unique window into film reviewing, movie consumption, and wider cultural attitudes in this period of Australian cultural history. It examines the programme’s cultural significance, and the contribution of Margaret and David to screen culture.

This book makes a significant contribution to an under-studied area of media studies (the review), screenwriting research through the analysis of broadcast scripts, and cultural studies through the study of an important television programme.

Steven Maras is Associate Professor of Media and Communication at the University of Western Australia. He is author of Screenwriting: History, Theory and Practice (Wallflower, 2009) and editor of Ethics in Screenwriting: New Perspectives (Palgrave, 2016). He also co-edits the Palgrave Studies in Screenwriting book series.

About At the Movies

List of Abbreviations

List of Tables

List of Figures

 

Preface

A Case Study Approach
Margaret and David as Cultural Mediators

Reviewing as Performance

Acknowledgements

 

Chapter 1. At the Movies, Reviewing, and Screenwriting

From Elective to Selective Affinities

Film Reviewing

Two approaches: Functionalism and rhetoric

Shifting the criticism/reviewing distinction Screenwriting

 

Chapter 2. At the Movies and its Influence

The Business of Managing the Review Process

            Debunking the powerful critic theory

The Margaret and David Effect

A Variable Cultural Field: From Restricted to Large-Scale

The Persona of the Critic

The Responsibilities of the Reviewer

            Proximity to industry

            The Australian new wave

 

Chapter 3. Arbiters of taste.

Inside the Gut

Where the Reviewer Sits

Summary Judgements

The Gospel According to David and Margaret

Taste, Taste Culture, or Cultural Forum

 

Chapter 4. The Politics of Classification

Ken Park (2002)

Romper Stomper (1992)

Wolf Creek 2 (2013)

 

Chapter 5. Three Discourse Frames (Australia, 1987–2002)

Frame 1: Funding Methods and Creative Outcomes

Frame 2: The Crisis in the Film Industry and the Script as Problematic Object

Frame 3: The Doxa

 

Chapter 6. The Discursive Construction of Screenwriting in At the Movies (2004–2014)

Method

Coding: Script, Screenplay, Screenwriter

Analysis

 

Chapter 7. The Well-Made Screenplay: At the Movies as an Aesthetic Enterprise

Performing the Doxa
Problematizations and Conclusions

 

Chapter 8. In Interview: David Stratton on Reviewing and At the Movies

 

Chapter 9. In Interview: Margaret Pomeranz on Reviewing and At the Movies

 

Appendix 1: Notes on method, verification and exclusions

 

Appendix 2: ‘Written by’

 

Appendix 3: DVD classics

 

Appendix 4: Selective reference list of descriptors used by Margaret and David

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