International Adventures: German Popular Cinema and European Co-productions in the 1960s

Couverture
Berghahn Books, 2005 - 278 pages

West German cinema of the 1960s is frequently associated with the emergence of a new generation of filmmakers, collectively known by the 1970s as the "New German Cinema." Yet for domestic and international audiences at the time, German cinema primarily meant popular genres such as exotic adventure films, Gothic crime thrillers, westerns, and sex films, which were dismissed by German filmmakers and critics of the 1970s as "Daddy's Cinema."

International Adventures provides the first comprehensive account of these genres, and charts the history of the West German film industry and its main protagonists from the immediate post-war years to its boom period in the 1950s and 1960s. By analyzing film genres in the context of industrial practices, literary traditions, biographical trajectories, and wider cultural and social developments, this book uncovers a forgotten period of German filmmaking that merits reassessment.

International Adventures firmly locates its case studies within the wider dynamic of European cinema. In its study of West German cinema's links and co-operations with other countries including Britain, France, and Italy, the book addresses what is perhaps the most striking phenomenon of 1960s popular film genres: the dispersal and disappearance of markers of national identity in increasingly international narratives and modes of production.

 

Table des matières

Reconstruction of a National
19
From National to European Cinema
53
The Distribution Sector
71
Film Television and Internationalisation
88
Remigration Popular Genres
105
the West German Edgar Wallace Series
138
the Karl May Westerns
172
BFilm Production in the 1960s
207
the End of an Era?
237
Filmography of 1960s Genre Cycles
251
Bibliography
263
Index
271
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À propos de l'auteur (2005)

Tim Bergfelder is Head of Film Studies at the University of Southampton. He has published widely on German and European cinema, and is co-editor of The German Cinema Book (2002) and The Titanic in Myth and Memory (2004).

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