维珍,安德里亚,2021。匈牙利和罗马尼亚电影的电影类型:历史、理论和接受。马萨诸塞州兰汉姆:列克星敦图书公司。339页。

IF 0.2 Q4 SOCIAL SCIENCES, INTERDISCIPLINARY
Lilla Tőke
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引用次数: 0

摘要

自20世纪30年代初以来,中东欧观众一直喜欢国际和国内类型电影,当时白人电话情节剧占据了屏幕的主导地位。塞尔吉奥·莱昂内(Sergio Leone)于20世纪60年代在意大利制作的意大利面条西部片也立即成为苏联集团的经典。即使在东欧电影制作最稀少的几年里,历史剧、侦探惊悚片和浪漫情节剧也同样是进口和国产的。最近,好莱坞和国内类型电影吸引的观众数量使备受尊敬的当地独立艺术电影运动相形见绌。在这种背景下,安德烈亚·维加斯的专著《匈牙利和罗马尼亚电影中的电影流派:历史、理论和接受》承诺在中东欧背景下对类型电影进行全面而新鲜的审视。以匈牙利和罗马尼亚为中心,作者提出了对“类型”概念的审视,即全球和地方、国家和跨国作品可以聚集在一起,相互互动,形成新的、独特的、混合的电影文本。在第一章中,维加斯阐述了她调查的“概念基础、语料库和方法论”。本章还提出了作者的主要假设,即“21世纪匈牙利和罗马尼亚电影的特征决定了它们在全球范围内的小型电影地位,这可能与在它们自己的国内(小型)国家背景下采用电影类型元素(通常是起源于古典好莱坞)的美学和诗意实践有关”(11)。第二章概述了匈牙利和罗马尼亚类型电影的历史,分为三个不同的时期:前共产主义时期、共产主义时期和后共产主义时期。本章试图重建匈牙利和罗马尼亚国家电影院的高度浓缩的历史,包括制作和发行机制,以及从无声电影时代到现在的主要时期的概述。第三章在Mette Hjort和Duncan Petrie合著的2007年《小国电影院》的基础上,对“小国电影院”的概念进行了详细的解释。Virginás随后将这一理论框架专门应用于匈牙利和罗马尼亚的类型影院,以证明独特的“艺术通用混合”电影的存在——类型元素与导演电影的融合——这是匈牙利和罗马尼亚电影传统的特征。作者在第四章中致力于通过在欧洲类型电影的更大框架内将地区电影置于情境中来扩展她的主要论点。给她
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Virginás, Andrea, 2021. Film Genres in Hungarian and Romanian Cinema: History, Theory and Reception. Lanham, MA: Lexington Books. 339 pp.
East-Central European audiences have enjoyed international and domestic genre-films since the early 1930s, a time when white-telephone melodramas dominated the screens. Sergio Leone’s Spaghetti Westerns produced in the1960s in Italy also became instant cult classics in the Soviet Bloc. Historical dramas, detective thrillers, and romantic melodramas were likewise imported as well as domestically produced even during those sparsest years of Eastern European filmmaking. More recently, Hollywood and domestic genre-films draw audiences in numbers that dwarf the much-revered local independent art-film movements. Within this context, Andrea Virginás’s monograph, Film Genres in Hungarian and Romanian Cinema: History, Theory and Reception promises a comprehensive and fresh look at genre cinema within the East-Central European context. Focusing on Hungary and Romania, the author proposes an examination of the concept of “genre” as a creative space where global and local, national and transnational works can come together and interact with each other forming new and unique, hybrid cinematic texts. In Chapter One, Virginás lays out the “Conceptual Foundations, Corpus, and Methodology” of her investigation. This chapter also presents the author’s main hypothesis that “the characteristics of twenty-first century Hungarian and Romanian cinema that define their small cinematic status on the global scale can be related to the aesthetic and poetic practice of adopting film genre elements – usually classical Hollywood in origin – within their own domestic (small) national contexts” (11). Chapter Two is an overview of the history of genre films in Hungary and Romania, divided into three distinct periods: the pre-communist, the communist and the post-communist. This chapter attempts to reconstruct a highly condensed history of Hungarian and Romanian national cinemas, including production and distribution mechanisms, as well as an overview of main periods from the silent-film era all the way to the present. The third chapter presents a detailed explanation of the concept of “small nation cinemas” based on the 2007 The Cinema of Small Nations, co-edited by Mette Hjort and Duncan Petrie. Virginás then applies this theoretical framework specifically to Hungarian and Romanian genre cinemas to make a case about the existence of unique “artistic-generic hybrid” films – a blend of genre elements with auteur cinema – as characteristic of Hungarian and Romanian film traditions. The author dedicates Chapter Four to expanding her main argument by contextualizing regional cinema within a larger framework of European genre-films. Here she
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Hungarian Cultural Studies
Hungarian Cultural Studies SOCIAL SCIENCES, INTERDISCIPLINARY-
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