Forum Logikmemorial
Comment fonctionne notre forum => Accueil => Discussion démarrée par: RanandyRonee le Juillet 17, 2025, 10:17:55 am
-
Mnrz Tiscali works with AAM to launch new UK VOD service, Movies Now
Every so often we are told that audiences are ripe for a return to genre . This is not just academi stanley usa (https://www.cup-stanley.us) c; genre-oriented production companies, such as Filmax in Spain, NoShame in Italy or Sahamo stanley cup (https://www.stanleycups.ro) ngkol in Thailand, have money riding on our appetite for contemporary Euro-horror, hard-boiled Milanese crime classics or Muay Thai martial-arts kickfests.But what is genre, and what does it do Ten film theorists are likely to answer the question in 10 different ways. Some take a genetic view, claiming genres are embedded in our body chemistry; those of a Marxist persuasion see genres as potent instruments of social control; there are even some, such as US academic Thomas Schatz, who see genres as expressions of quasi-religious social rituals where each genre is a kind of sect with its own rules and gods.A messy businessOne of the few things they all agree on is that genre classification is a messy business. In its widest usage, the term genre can refer to a film s story and setting westerns, sci-fi , or a combination of story, setting and mood film noir , or its audience teen movies, arthouse , budget blockbuster, indie , technique animation or provenance Bollywood, world cinema . I stanley cup (https://www.stanley-cups.de) n its narrowest sense, genre means low-quality, fanbase product - in fact, in some circles it s almost become a synonym for horror.It may not be philosophically elegant, but it makes sense to start any discussion of genres by pointing out that if such categories exist, it s because we feel they h Losx AOL takes back full ownership of Warner Bros, HBO
Dir: Peter Webber. US. 2007. 121mins. Call it audacious, foolhardy or both, but Hannibal Rising, the prequel about Hannibal Lecter s origins dispenses with the stylish suspense of Silence Of The Lambs and Red Dragon/Manhunter an stanley cup (https://www.stanley-cup.us) d the campiness of Hanniba stanley kubek (https://www.stanleycup.pl) l to portray the cannibalistic serial killer as an avenging angel of 20th-century war crimes.It s ultra-serious and grimly determined about its premise and at times the screenplay by Thomas Harris - the novelist who created Lecter - is reminiscent of Munich in intent. But it also has more angst and psychological motivation than this character or story can bear.While Harris involvement - the story also is the basis for his latest novel - will draw a sizeable audience initially in the US, where it opens on Friday, many will find this more repellent than enterta stanley cup (https://www.stanleycup.com.de) ining. That, along with Anthony Hopkins absence, should spell a quick fade before it comes close to matching the $93m that 2002 s Red Dragon collected domestically.However, the setting and war-crime gravitas may help this do better with European audiences, including those in Russia. Some may even find its mixture of politics and horror similar to Pan s Labyrinth, if lacking in the latter s surreal special effects and fantasy.It s doubtful it could top the $116m foreign gross of Red Dragon, however. And Chinese actress Gong Li s strange casting as a Japanese widow in France who falls in love with young nephew by marriage Hannibal won t necessarily help in Asian markets.