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Resource type: Book Language: en: English ID no. (ISBN etc.): 9781441103802 BibTeX citation key: Constandinides2010a Email resource to friend View all bibliographic details |
Categories: General Keywords: "300", "Wanted", Adaptation, Classical antiquity, Film adaptation, Jones. J.G., Millar. Mark, Miller. Frank, United Kingdom, USA Creators: Constandinides Publisher: Continuum (London, New York) |
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Abstract |
The main corpus of film adaptation thus far has focused on films based on canonical literature. From Film Adaptation to Post-Celluloid Adaptation takes the next logical step by discussing the emerging modes of film adaptation from older media to new, mainly focusing on the computer-generated reconstructions of popular narratives and characters along with other forms of convergence such as the Internet. While ‘New Media’ is a broad concept, the book will concentrate on the ways digital technology is being used in the encoding of films and discuss the ways this shift can be debated from a theoretical perspective. Though the discussion is framed through the ‘new media’ lens, the work will not exclude a broader understanding of New Media which refers to video games, official websites and interactivity so as to examine how the visual style of contemporary films is dispersed across, and influenced by, other media. Discussing films like Minority Report, King Kong, 300 and Wanted in relation to Film Adaptation theory, the work aims to challenge and rework the definition of adaptation. Table of Contents Introduction 1. Towards the Intertextual Dialogism Approach 2. Towards Post-celluloid Adaptation 3. From the Pre-diction of Crime to the Pre-vision of Screenless Media: Spielberg’s Adaptation of Philip K. Dick’s The Minority Report 4. Adapting the Literature of the Double: Manifestations of Cinematic Forms in Fight Club and Enduring Love 5. Bullet-time, Blood Spraying Time, and the Adaptation of the Graphic Novel 6. From Shadows to Excess: New Media Hollywood and the Digitizing of Gothic Monsters in Van Helsing 7. Puppet Kong vs. Synthetic Kong: Peter Jackson’s King Kong as Post-celluloid Adaptation Conclusion Bibliography Index Added by: joachim Last edited by: joachim |