HA3465 Seriality | Readinglists@Leicester

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

HA3465 Seriality | Readinglists@Leicester 09/29/21 HA3465 Seriality | readinglists@leicester HA3465 Seriality View Online 1. Chadwick, J. et al. First episode. Bleak House (2006). 2. Geraghty, C. Serialisation and Soaps: Chapter. in Bleak house vol. BFI TV classics 19–31 (BFI, 2012). 3. Geraghty, C. The Continuous Serial - A Definition. in 9–26 (1981). 4. Geraghty, C. Women and soap opera: a study of prime time soaps. (Polity Press, 1990). 5. Dickens, C. Bleak house. (Electric Book Co, 2001). 6. Hayward, J. Introduction: Chapter. in Consuming pleasures: active audiences and serial fictions from Dickens to the soap opera 1–20 (University Press of Kentucky, 1997). 7. 1/15 09/29/21 HA3465 Seriality | readinglists@leicester Giddings, R. & Selby, K. The classic serial on television and radio. (Palgrave, 2001). 8. Giddings, R. Soft Soaping Dickens: Andres Davies, BBC-1 and ‘Bleak House’. http://charlesdickenspage.com/Soft_Soaping_Dickens.html. 9. Dickens Journals Online. http://www.djo.org.uk/. 10. Page, A. et al. Middlemarch. (2001). 11. Davis, C. et al. Pride and prejudice. (2005). 12. Vincent, J. A Woman in Grey. (1919). 13. Holmes, H. & McGowan, J. P. The Hazards of Helen, Episode 26, in More treasures from American film archives 1894-1931: Program 1 /[ curated by Scott Simmon, music curated by Martin Marks]. More treasures from American film archives 1894-1931: Program 1 /[ curated by Scott Simmon, music curated by Martin Marks] (1915). 14. Hagedorn, R. Doubtless to be Continued: A Brief History of Serial Narrative: Chapter. in To be continued: soap operas around the world 27–48 (Routledge, 1995). 15. 2/15 09/29/21 HA3465 Seriality | readinglists@leicester Singer, B. Serials, Chapter. in The Oxford history of world cinema 105–111 (Oxford University Press, 1996). 16. Canjels, R. Distributing silent film serials: local practices, changing forms, cultural transformation. vol. Routledge advances in film studies (Routledge, 2010). 17. Dahlquist, M. Exporting Perilous Pauline: Pearl White and the serial film craze. vol. Women and film history international (University of Illinois Press, 2013). 18. Enstad, Nan. Dressed for adventure: working women and silent movie serials in the 1910s. Feminist Studies 21, 67–90. 19. Gardner, J. Serial Pleasures, 1907-1938’ Chapter. in Projections: comics and the history of twenty-first-century storytelling vol. Post 45 29–67 (Stanford University Press, 2012). 20. Lambert, Josh. "Wait for the Next Pictures”: Intertextuality and Cliffhanger Continuity in Early Cinema and Comic Strips. Cinema Journal; Winter 48, 3–25 (2009). 21. Rainey, B. Serials and series: a world filmography, 1912-1956. (McFarland, 2010). 22. Singer, B. Melodrama and modernity: early sensational cinema and its contexts. vol. Film and culture (Columbia University Press, 2001). 3/15 09/29/21 HA3465 Seriality | readinglists@leicester 23. Stamp, S. Movie-struck girls: women and motion picture culture after the nickelodeon. (Princeton University Press, 2000). 24. White, P., Gasnier, L. J. & MacKenzie, D. The perils of Pauline. (1914). 25. Feuillade, L., Breon, E., Navarre, R., Allain, M. & Souvestre, P. Fantômas. vol. Artificial eye. 26. Feuillade, L., Mathé, É. & Musidora. Les vampires: Disc 1: Episodes 1-5. vol. Artificial eye. 27. Feuillade, L., Mathé, É. & Musidora. Les vampires: Disc 2: Episodes 6-8. vol. Artificial eye. 28. Feuillade, L., Mathé, É. & Musidora. Les vampires: Disc 3: Episodes 9-10 [plus short films]. vol. Artificial eye. 29. Schaeffer, A. & McGowan, J. P. The Hurricane Express, The John Wayne cliffhanger collection. The John Wayne cliffhanger collection (1932). 30. Stephani, F., Crabbe, B., Rogers, J. & Middleton, C. Flash Gordon. vol. Flash Gordon (1999). 4/15 09/29/21 HA3465 Seriality | readinglists@leicester 31. Higgins, S. Seriality’s Ludic Promise: Film Serials and the Pre-History of Digital Gaming. Eludamos. Journal for Computer Game Culture 8, (2014). 32. Barefoot, G. Who Watched that Masked Man? Hollywood’s Serial Audiences in the 1930S. Historical Journal of Film, Radio and Television 31, 167–190 (2011). 33. Cline, W. C. In the nick of time: motion picture sound serials. (McFarland, 1998). 34. Cline, W. C. Serials-ly speaking: essays on cliffhangers. (McFarland, 1994). 35. Higgins, S. Suspenseful Situations: Melodramatic Narrative and the Contemporary Action Film. Cinema Journal 47, 74–96 (2007). 36. Hurst, R. M. Republic Studios: between poverty row and the majors. (Scarecrow Press, 2007). 37. Kinnard, R., Crnkovich, T. & Vitone, R. J. The Flash Gordon serials, 1936-1940: a heavily illustrated guide. (McFarland, 2011). 38. Kuhn, A. Jam Jars and Cliffhangers: Chapter. in An everyday magic: cinema and cultural 5/15 09/29/21 HA3465 Seriality | readinglists@leicester memory vol. Cinema and society 38–65 (I.B. Tauris, 2002). 39. Telotte, J. P. A Charming Interlude: Of Serials and Hollow Men, Chapter. in Replications: a robotic history of the science fiction film 91–110 (University of Illinois Press, 1995). 40. Tuska, J. The vanishing legion: a history of Mascot Pictures, 1927-1935. vol. McFarland classics (McFarland, 2000). 41. Beebe, F., Goodkind, S. A. & Crabbe, B. Buck Rogers. (2003). 42. Beebe, F., Crabbe, B., Rogers, J. & Middleton, C. Flash Gordon’s trip to Mars. vol. Flash Gordon (2000). 43. Beebe, F., Taylor, R., Crabbe, B., Hughes, C. & Middleton, C. Flash Gordon conquers the universe. vol. Flash Gordon (2000). 44. Brower, O. et al. The science fiction cliffhanger collection. (2006). 45. Lugosi, B., Herman, A. & Clark, C. The whispering shadow. vol. Classic movie serials (2004). 46. 6/15 09/29/21 HA3465 Seriality | readinglists@leicester English, J., Witney, W. & Hadley, R. Zorro’s fighting legion. (2004). 47. Fforde, J. The Eyre affair: a novel. (Hodder and Stoughton, 2003). 48. Wells, J. An Eyre-Less Affair: Jasper Fforde’s Seeming Ellision of Jane, Chapter. in A breath of fresh Eyre: intertextual and intermedial reworkings of Jane Eyre vol. Internationale Forschungen zur allgemeinen und vergleichenden Literaturwissenschaft 195–208 (Rodopi, 2007). 49. Criminal Appropriations of Shakespeare in Jasper Fforde’s Something Rotten. College Literature 37, 23–41 (2010). 50. Hateley, E. The End of The Eyre Affair: Jane Eyre, Parody, and Popular Culture. The Journal of Popular Culture 38, 1022–1036 (2005). 51. Rubik, M. ‘Frames and Framing in Jasper Fforde’s The Eyre Affair’: Chapter. in Framing borders in literature and other media vol. Studies in intermediality (SIM) 341–358 (Rodopi, 2006). 52. Rubik, M. Invasions into Literary Texts, Re-plotting and Trans-fictional Migration in Jasper Fforde’s The Eyre Affair, Chapter. in A breath of fresh Eyre: intertextual and intermedial reworkings of Jane Eyre vol. Internationale Forschungen zur allgemeinen und vergleichenden Literaturwissenschaft 167–195 (Rodopi, 2007). 53. 7/15 09/29/21 HA3465 Seriality | readinglists@leicester Reiner, J. et al. Friday night lights: Season 1. (2012). 54. Newman, M. Z. ‘From Beats to Arcs: Towards a Poetics of Television Narrative’. (2006). 55. Booth, P. ‘Memories, Temporalities, Fictions: Temporal displacement in Contemporary Television’. (2011). 56. Geraghty, C. ‘Aesthetics and quality in popular television drama’ International Journal of Cultural Studies 6,. 25–45 http://ics.sagepub.com.ezproxy4.lib.le.ac.uk/content/6/1/25.full.pdf+html (2003). 57. Mittell, J. Genre and television: from cop shows to cartoons in American culture. (Routledge, 2004). 58. Mittell, J. ‘Previously On: Prime Time Serials and the Mechanics of Memory’. (2009). 59. Creeber, G. Taking our personal lives seriously”: intimacy, continuity and memory in the television drama serial". (2001). 60. Johnson, C. ‘Tele-branding in TVIII: the network as brand and the programme as brand’. (2007). 8/15 09/29/21 HA3465 Seriality | readinglists@leicester 61. Corner, J. ‘Narrative’ in Critical ideas in television studies. in vol. Oxford television studies (Oxford University Press, 1998). 62. Creeber, G. ‘Analysing Television: Issues and Methods in Textual Analysis’ in Tele-visions: an introduction to studying television. (BFI, 2006). 63. Campion, J. Top of the Lake. (2013). 64. Hills, M. ‘From the box in the corner to the box set on the shelf’: TVIII and the cultural/textual valorisations of the DVD’. (2007). 65. Hills, M. ‘Television Aesthetics: A Pre-structuralist Danger?’ (2011). 66. Spigel, L. & Olsson, J. Television After TV: Essays on a Medium in Transition. (Duke University Press., 2004). 67. Kompare, D. ‘Publishing flow: DVD box sets and the reconception of television’. (2006). 68. Holdsworth, A. ‘Televisual Memory’. (2010). 69. 9/15 09/29/21 HA3465 Seriality | readinglists@leicester Kackman, M. ‘Quality Television, Melodrama, and Cultural Complexity’. (2008). 70. Mittell, J. ‘Authorship, intentionality and intelligent design’. (2009). 71. Walters, J. ‘Repeat Viewings: Television Analysis in the DVD Age’. in Film and Television After DVD (ed. Bennett, J.) (Routledge, 2008). 72. Jacobs, J. ‘Issues of Judgement and Value in Television Studies’ International Journal of Cultural Studies. 427–447 http://ics.sagepub.com.ezproxy4.lib.le.ac.uk/content/4/4/427.full.pdf+html (2001). 73. Lynch, D., Frost, M., MacLachlan, K. & Ontkean, M. Twin Peaks: the first season. (2008). 74. Dolan, M. The Peaks and Valleys of Serial Creativity: Chapter. in Full of secrets: critical approaches to ‘Twin Peaks’ vol. Contemporary film and television series 30–50 (Wayne State University Press, 1995). 75. Ledwon, L. Twin Peaks and the Television Gothic: Article. Literature/film quarterly 260–270. 76. Lynch, D. & Rodley, C. Lynch on
Recommended publications
  • Dictionary of Westerns in Cinema
    PERFORMING ARTS • FILM HISTORICAL DICTIONARY OF Historical Dictionaries of Literature and the Arts, No. 26 VARNER When early filmgoers watched The Great Train Robbery in 1903, many shrieked in terror at the very last clip, when one of the outlaws turned toward the camera and seemingly fired a gun directly at the audience. The puff of WESTERNS smoke was sudden and hand-colored, and it looked real. Today we can look back at that primitive movie and see all the elements of what would evolve HISTORICAL into the Western genre. Perhaps the Western’s early origins—The Great Train DICTIONARY OF Robbery was the first narrative, commercial movie—or its formulaic yet enter- WESTERNS in Cinema taining structure has made the genre so popular. And with the recent success of films like 3:10 to Yuma and The Assassination of Jesse James by the Coward Robert Ford, the Western appears to be in no danger of disappearing. The story of the Western is told in this Historical Dictionary of Westerns in Cinema through a chronology, a bibliography, an introductory essay, and hundreds of cross-referenced dictionary entries on cinematographers; com- posers; producers; films like Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid, Dances with Wolves, The Good, the Bad, and the Ugly, High Noon, The Magnificent Seven, The Searchers, Tombstone, and Unforgiven; actors such as Gene Autry, in Cinema Cinema Kirk Douglas, Clint Eastwood, Henry Fonda, Jimmy Stewart, and John Wayne; and directors like John Ford and Sergio Leone. PAUL VARNER is professor of English at Abilene Christian University in Abilene, Texas.
    [Show full text]
  • 16Mm WALTER O. CUTLOHN, Inc
    IW16 16mm SOUND UHFILM WALTER O. CUTLOHN, Inc. 35 WEST 45th STREET NEW YORK, N. Y. Gentlemen: et The filo Ti^ to a i ,aS shown stu< faculty and I tcust com hold in getting i* It is a very a. tionally and able From the bave teen collection n V m li East reinger v Jjibrary Dear Mrs. I intone Please fi B ;ictur;7which cc the special on June 5. best t of the e in genetic poychology. school systen San Francisco, California sour an having a, grateful for having set-i fine film. of this 2006 preview this Gratefully/yours, BOARD OF EDUCATION COLLEGE BUFFALO 1940 February 3, cooper- your kind to would like il program. i our "^Jir^^assrtsation with &3S*3~*:3 -sr-sss* teaching S n.r.. ^tending In the*. - ..... falconer, INTRODUCTION The subjects listed in this catalogue were selected because of their excellence from the standpoint of subject matter, photography, sound quality and intelligent presentation. They are composed of feature productions with well-known actors, and short subjects which consist of musicals, cartoons, sports, comedies, travels and miscellaneous films. A number of these are in color. We have particularly stressed pictures suitable for schools, churches and general audiences, but in addition have added a number of programs which will appeal more to mature groups. Pictures marked (*) have been approved by THE NATIONAL BOARD OF REVIEW and/or THE LEGION OF DECENCY as partic- ularly suited for Family, Church or School presentation. Feature pictures marked have been approved by a selected committee of experienced reviewers as suitable for general audiences.
    [Show full text]
  • Manifest Density: Decentering the Global Western Film
    City University of New York (CUNY) CUNY Academic Works All Dissertations, Theses, and Capstone Projects Dissertations, Theses, and Capstone Projects 9-2018 Manifest Density: Decentering the Global Western Film Michael D. Phillips The Graduate Center, City University of New York How does access to this work benefit ou?y Let us know! More information about this work at: https://academicworks.cuny.edu/gc_etds/2932 Discover additional works at: https://academicworks.cuny.edu This work is made publicly available by the City University of New York (CUNY). Contact: [email protected] MANIFEST DENSITY: DECENTERING THE GLOBAL WESTERN FILM by MICHAEL D. PHILLIPS A dissertation submitted to the Graduate Faculty in Comparative Literature in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy, The City University of New York 2018 © 2018 Michael D. Phillips All Rights Reserved ii Manifest Density: Decentering the Global Western Film by Michael D. Phillips This manuscript has been read and accepted for the Graduate Faculty in Comparative Literature in satisfaction of the dissertation requirement for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy. __________________ ________________________________________________ Date Jerry W. Carlson Chair of Examining Committee __________________ ________________________________________________ Date Giancarlo Lombardi Executive Officer Supervisory Committee: Paula J. Massood Marc Dolan THE CITY UNIVERSITY OF NEW YORK iii ABSTRACT Manifest Density: Decentering the Global Western Film by Michael D. Phillips Advisor: Jerry W. Carlson The Western is often seen as a uniquely American narrative form, one so deeply ingrained as to constitute a national myth. This perception persists despite its inherent shortcomings, among them its inapplicability to the many instances of filmmakers outside the United States appropriating the genre and thus undercutting this view of generic exceptionalism.
    [Show full text]
  • RUDOLPH VALENTINO January 1971
    -,- -- - OF THE SON SHEIK . --· -- December 1970 -.. , (1926) starring • January 1971 RUDOLPH VALENTINO ... r w ith Vilma Banky, Agnes Ayres, George Fawcett, Kar l Dane • .. • • i 1--...- \1 0 -/1/, , <;1,,,,,/ u/ ~m 11, .. 12/IOJ,1/, 2/11.<. $41 !!X 'ifjl!/1/. , .....- ,,,1.-1' 1 .' ,, ,t / /11 , , . ... S',7.98 ,,20 /1/ ,. Jl',1,11. Ir 111, 2400-_t,' (, 7 //,s • $/1,!!.!!8 "World's .. , . largest selection of things to show" THE ~ EASTIN-PHELAN p, "" CORPORATION I ... .. See paee 7 for territ orial li m1la· 1;on·son Hal Roach Productions. DAVE PORT IOWA 52808 • £ CHAZY HOUSE (,_l928l_, SPOOK Sl'OO.FI:'\G <192 i ) Jean ( n ghf side of the t r acks) ,nvites t he Farina, Joe, Wheeze, and 1! 1 the Gang have a "Gang•: ( wrong side of the tr ack•) l o a party comedy here that 1\ ,deal for HallOWK'n being at her house. 6VI the Gang d~sn't know that a story of gr aveyard~ - c. nd a thriller-diller Papa has f tx cd the house for an April Fool's for all t ·me!t ~ Day party for his fr i ends. S 2~• ~·ar da,c 8rr,-- version, 400 -f eet on 2 • 810 303, Standord Smmt yers or J OO feet ? O 2 , v ozs • Reuulart, s11.9e, Sale reels, 14 ozs, Regularly S1 2 98 , Sale Pnce Sl0.99 , 6o 0 '11 Super 8 vrrs•OQ, dSO -fect,, 2-lb~ .• S l0.99 Regu a rly SlJ 98. Sale Pn ce I Sl2.99 425 -fect I :, Regularly" ~ - t S12 99 400lc0 t on 8 o 289 Standard 8mm ver<lon SO r Sate r eels lJ o,s-.
    [Show full text]
  • Download an Article
    ANNE NESBET DISCUSSES DARING DARLEEN, QUEEN OF THE SCREEN WITH BETSY BIRD This exchange originally appeared in an extended form on the blog A Fuse #8 Production. BETSY BIRD: So! Silent films, eh? There aren’t a lot of middle-grade amazingly gifted child actor from the silent period, Baby Peggy (later novels that center silent film at their core. Brian Selznick’s Wonderstruck, known as Diana Serra Cary), whom I had the honor to meet several perhaps, but not much beyond that. Where did the kernel of an idea for this times at the great silent film festival held each year in Pordenone, Italy. book originate? As of 2019, Baby Peggy is one hundred and one years old—the last living silent film star! ANNE NESBET: Well! This time we can thank my day job (film histo- rian and teacher) for providing the seed. In fact, the idea for Daring BB: Your favorite silent film: Go! Darleen popped into my head one morning as I was walking to class ANNE’S SLIGHTLY SNEAKY ANSWER: I love many silent films, as to talk about the brave and talented young women who starred in I also love many books. I can’t possibly pick a single favorite, but I some of the most popular serial adventure films between late 1912 and can say that as accompaniment (a kind of video playlist) for Daring 1917. I thought to myself, Oh, but wouldn’t it be fun to write a story set Darleen, the following combination might be good: in the early film world? Cliffhangers! Stunts! Technical tricks! And what if a publicity stunt in 1914 went quite terribly wrong? YES! — William K.
    [Show full text]
  • SERIALS - Available in DVD Format
    SERIALS - Available in DVD Format Listed in alphabetical order: ACE DRUMMOND 13-Universal John "Dusty" King ADVENTURES OF CAPTAIN AFRICA 15-Columbia John Hart ADVENTURES OF CAPTAIN MARVEL 12-Republic Tom Tyler ADVENTURES OF FRANK AND JESSE JAMES 13-Universal Clayton Moore THE ADVENTURES OF FRANK MERRIWELL 12-Universal Don Briggs ADVENTURES OF RED RYDER 12-Republic Don "Red" Barry ADVENTURES OF REX AND RINTY 12-Mascot Rin Tin Tin THE ADVENTURES OF SIR GALAHAD 15-Columbia George Reeves ADVENTURES OF SMILIN' JACK 13-Universal Tom Brown ADVENTURES OF THE FLYING CADETS 13-Universal Johnny Downs ATOM MAN v/s SUPERMAN 15-Columbia Kirk Alyn BATMAN 15-Columbia Lewis Wilson BATMAN AND ROBIN 15-Columbia Robert Lowery BLACK ARROW 15-Columbia Robert Scott THE BLACK COIN 15-Independent Ralph Graves BLACKHAWK 15-Columbia Kirk Alyn BLACK WIDOW 13-Republic Bruce Edwards BLAKE OF SCOTLAND YARD 15-Independent Ralph Byrd BLAZING THE OVERLAND TRAIL 15-Columbia Dennis Moore BRICK BRADFORD 15-Columbia Kane Richmond BRUCE GENTRY 15-Columbia Tom Neal BUCK ROGERS 12-Universal Buster Crabbe BURN'EM UP BARNES 12-Mascot Jack Mulhall CALL OF THE SAVAGE 13-Universal Noah Berry, Jr. CANADIAN MOUNTIES v/s ATOMIC INVADERS 12-Republic Bill Henry CAPTAIN AMERICA 15-Republic Dick Pucell CAPTAIN MIDNIGHT 15-Columbia Dave O'Brien CAPTAIN VIDEO 15-Columbia Judd Holdren CHICK CARTER, DETECTIVE 15-Columbia Lyle Talbot THE CLUTCHING HAND 15-Independent Jack Mulhall CODY OF THE PONY EXPRESS 15-Columbia Jock Mahoney CONGO BILL 15-Columbia Don McGuire THE CRIMSON GHOST 12-Republic
    [Show full text]
  • NPRC) VIP List, 2009
    Description of document: National Archives National Personnel Records Center (NPRC) VIP list, 2009 Requested date: December 2007 Released date: March 2008 Posted date: 04-January-2010 Source of document: National Personnel Records Center Military Personnel Records 9700 Page Avenue St. Louis, MO 63132-5100 Note: NPRC staff has compiled a list of prominent persons whose military records files they hold. They call this their VIP Listing. You can ask for a copy of any of these files simply by submitting a Freedom of Information Act request to the address above. The governmentattic.org web site (“the site”) is noncommercial and free to the public. The site and materials made available on the site, such as this file, are for reference only. The governmentattic.org web site and its principals have made every effort to make this information as complete and as accurate as possible, however, there may be mistakes and omissions, both typographical and in content. The governmentattic.org web site and its principals shall have neither liability nor responsibility to any person or entity with respect to any loss or damage caused, or alleged to have been caused, directly or indirectly, by the information provided on the governmentattic.org web site or in this file. The public records published on the site were obtained from government agencies using proper legal channels. Each document is identified as to the source. Any concerns about the contents of the site should be directed to the agency originating the document in question. GovernmentAttic.org is not responsible for the contents of documents published on the website.
    [Show full text]
  • Torrance Press
    Sunday, August 27, 1961 THE PRESS Page A-7 TELEVISION LOG FOR WEEK SUNDAY MONDAY TUESDAY WEDNESDAY FRIDAY SATURDAY AUGUST 27 AUGUST 28 AUGUST 29 AUGUST 30 SEPTEMBER 1 SEPTEMBER 2 12.00 ( 7> Union Report 12:00 ( 2) News 12:00 ( 2) News 12:00 ( 2) News 12:00 ( 2) News 12:00 ( 2) Movie ( 9) Movie ( 4) Jan Murray (C) ( 4) Jan Murray (C) ( 4) Jan Murray (C) ( 4) Jan Murray ( 9) Movie ( 5> Little Doggie Roundup ( 5) Doggie Roundup ( 5) Doggie Roundup ( 5) Doggie Roundup 2:30 ( 4) Highway Holiday (11) Movie ( 7) Camouflage ( 7) Camouflage ( 7) Camouflage ( 7) Camouflage (13) Hispanorama (13) Oral Roberts (11) Lunch Brigade (11) Sheriff John (11) Sheriff John (11) Sheriff John Movie 12:05 ( 2) Burns and Alien 1:00 (4) 12:30 ( 2) Life of Riley 12:05 ( 2) Burns and Alien 12:05 ( 2) Burns and A'lcn 12:05 ( 2) Burns and Alien ( 5) Movie 12:30 ( 2) As World Turns ( 7) Movie ( 5) Commercial Feature 12:30 ( 2) As World Turns 12:30 ( 2) As World Turns 12:30 ( 2) As World Turns ( 4) Loretta Young ( 4) Loretta Young ( 4) Lorelta Young ( 4) Lorctta Young ( 5) Continental (11) Movie ( 7) Big Story ( ft) Continental ( 5) Continental (13) Robin Hood (13) Gospel of Christ ( 5) Continental ( 7) Number Please ( 7) Number PJeais ( 7) Number Please ( 7) Number Please 1:00 ( 2) Face the Facts 1:30 ( 2) Movie 1:00 ( 2) Face the Facts 1:00 ( 2) Face the Facts ( 4) Young Dr. Malone (13) Movie 1.00 ( 2) Time Out For Sports 1:00 ( 2) Face the Facts ( 4) Young Dr.
    [Show full text]
  • Descargar Listado (PDF)
    CATÁLOGO DE PROSPECTOS DE CINE DE ESPAÑA www.prospectosdecine.com COLECCIÓN COMPLETA 16707 prospectos listados 00001. EL ENEMIGO EN LA SANGRE Distribuidora: Repertorio M.DE MIGUEL Feind im Blut 1931 1h 16min 00002. EL PRÓFUGO (B2) Distribuidora: Metro Goldwyn Mayer VARIEDAD/COLOR `The Squaw Man` de Cecil B. DeMille tt0022428 00003. EL PROFUGO (B1) Distribuidora: METRO VARIEDAD/COLOR 00004. EL PRÓFUGO (A3) Distribuidora: METRO VARIEDAD/COLOR 00005. EL PRÓFUGO (A2) Distribuidora: METRO VARIEDAD/COLOR 00006. EL PRÓFUGO (A1) Distribuidora: METRO VARIEDAD/COLOR 00007. SOY UN PRÓFUGO Distribuidora: Columbia 00008. SOY UN PRÓFUGO Distribuidora: Columbia Programa historieta 00009. SOY UN PRÓFUGO 00010. SOY UN PRÓFUGO 00011. SOY UN PRÓFUGO 00012. SOY UN PRÓFUGO Distribuidora: Columbia Films, S.A. 00013. SOY UN PRÓFUGO Distribuidora: Columbia Films 00014. SOY UN PRÓFUGO 00015. ¡UN TÍO IMPONENTE! (2) Distribuidora: SELECCIONES FUSTER DIFERENCIAS/DISTRIBUIDORA. 00016. CENIZAS BAJO EL SOL Distribuidora: BENGALA FILMS 00017. LOS MERCADERES DE LA MUERTE (3) Distribuidora: PARAMOUNT VARIEDAD/COLOR interno, con respecto a los modelos (1) y (2). 00018. CENTAUROS DEL DESIERTO (2) Distribuidora: MERCURIO DIFERENCIAS/TACHÓN donde ponía Vistavisión. 00019. EL ASESINO INVISIBLE (2) Distribuidora: RADIO FILMS VARIEDAD/COLOR. 00020. JUNTOS HASTA LA MUERTE (2) Distribuidora: WARNER VARIEDAD/COLOR. 00021. EL 113 Distribuidora: EXCLUSIVAS HERRERA ORIA 00022. LA CONSENTIDA Distribuidora: CIFESA 00023. UNA AVENTURA NUPCIAL Distribuidora: ALIANZA CINEMATOGRÁFICA ESPAÑOLA 00024. GUERRA DE VALSES (2) Distribuidora: UFA VARIEDAD/COLOR. 00025. ROSA DE FRANCIA (2) Distribuidora: FOX VARIEDAD/COLOR. 00026. GRANADEROS DEL AMOR (2) Distribuidora: FOX VARIEDAD/COLOR. 00027. HOLLYWOOD CONQUISTADO (2) Distribuidora: FOX VARIEDAD/COLOR. 00028. UN PAR DE DETECTIVES Distribuidora: FOX 00029.
    [Show full text]
  • Musicals ~ R Classic Gun Lights Ed Estem About Seven Re Footage
    Dear Customers: In the last catalog, we urged you to write and give us you,r su~ges· tions and boy, have you. We re thrilled with all the cards and let­ ters we've been gening with your ideas for the catalog. For those of vou who asked about some har?· to-come-by favo rite films, you II find many of them among our new releases and we've put our selection team to ,vo rk on track­ ing down othe rs. And fo r those of you who wrote just to say La Dolce Vita Help Save Planet Earth Parenthood how much you liked the catalog, Marcello Mastroia11111 , Ho.Htd by ud Danson S1e1·e Marrin. Tom Hu/ce, What can you do to help de.in up pollut,on? Rifk Moranis, Mal) Stetnbur~err thanks a mill ion. We try our best Anita Ekberg, A11oul< Aimee Fellin, sets a JOUmalm loose m decadently Plent~' Just ~,k Ted Dan'°n and concerned D1rcc1or-wnter Ron Hov.ard asks an all ·,tar to not only be your most complete ,plcndid Roman high society, and creates a co-,tars Beau and LIO\ d Bridges, Who<ipi comedy q•Jesuon: How do )OIi balance career ~ource of videocassettes, but to wickedly symhohc satire, Oscar-nominated for Goldberg anJ Sal,y Kellerman m this unique ,ucce'), agaan~t parcnl ~ucce,,;? An~wer· Let offer our customers the fi nest m scnpt and immeasurably mfluent,al in filmdom how-to video. rcvie\1-cd and approved by envi­ vour children rai,c then--,clvcs Thev'll do quality.
    [Show full text]
  • Guide to the William K
    Guide to the William K. Everson Collection George Amberg Memorial Film Study Center Department of Cinema Studies Tisch School of the Arts New York University Descriptive Summary Creator: Everson, William Keith Title: William K. Everson Collection Dates: 1894-1997 Historical/Biographical Note William K. Everson: Selected Bibliography I. Books by Everson Shakespeare in Hollywood. New York: US Information Service, 1957. The Western, From Silents to Cinerama. New York: Orion Press, 1962 (co-authored with George N. Fenin). The American Movie. New York: Atheneum, 1963. The Bad Guys: A Pictorial History of the Movie Villain. New York: Citadel Press, 1964. The Films of Laurel and Hardy. New York: Citadel Press, 1967. The Art of W.C. Fields. Indianapolis: Bobbs-Merrill, 1967. A Pictorial History of the Western Film. Secaucus, N.J.: Citadel Press, 1969. The Films of Hal Roach. New York: Museum of Modern Art, 1971. The Detective in Film. Secaucus, N.J.: Citadel Press, 1972. The Western, from Silents to the Seventies. Rev. ed. New York: Grossman, 1973. (Co-authored with George N. Fenin). Classics of the Horror Film. Secaucus, N.J.: Citadel Press, 1974. Claudette Colbert. New York: Pyramid Publications, 1976. American Silent Film. New York: Oxford University Press, 1978, Love in the Film. Secaucus, N.J.: Citadel Press, 1979. More Classics of the Horror Film. Secaucus, N.J.: Citadel Press, 1986. The Hollywood Western: 90 Years of Cowboys and Indians, Train Robbers, Sheriffs and Gunslingers, and Assorted Heroes and Desperados. Secaucus, N.J.: Carol Pub. Group, 1992. Hollywood Bedlam: Classic Screwball Comedies. Secaucus, N.J.: Carol Pub. Group, 1994.
    [Show full text]
  • President's Column the Nebulas Have a Cold Confluence Parsec Picnic Tarzan Meets Superman! More Tarzan! Brief Bios Bernard
    President’s Column The Nebulas Have a Cold Confluence Parsec Picnic Tarzan Meets Superman! More Tarzan! Brief Bios Bernard Herrmann Part 2 A Newbie At The Nebbies. Parsec Meeting Schedule President’s Column and so help me The Crypt of Terror and The Vault of Horror. Spa Fon! I was time-slipped to the front porch of my childhood Carver Street home, a stack of luscious comic books piled high, my behind on gray painted concrete, sneakers on the stoop, a hot humid day. (Yes, my mother absolutely threw a fortune away.) As I and my doppelgänger read and viewed, I knew that this encounter with comic books was the missing dimension for which I had been yearning. I continue to read and am mighty partial, not to the superhero books, but to the graphic editions that draw from and create true science fiction. Mystery In Space, Weird Science, Weird Fantasy, Journey Into the Unknown, Planet Comics, Tales of Suspense, Out of this World, Unknown Worlds, the Buck Rogers.Flash Gordon and Brick Bradford newspaper comic strips, even in the name of all that has crumbled, Magnus Robot Fighter. The incomplete list does not even begin to contemplate any modern comic book attempts at SF. People ask me, “How do you find time to read?”As if that was a legitimate question. I answer, “How is it that you can’t find the time? Are you standing in a supermarket line, eating breakfast, waiting for the movie to begin, riding on the bus, sitting in your backyard, taking the dog for a stroll, mowing the lawn?” I do get a few peculiar looks while intent on the EC work of Wally Wood, Johnie Craig and Al Feldstein as I peddle the hamster running machine at the gym.
    [Show full text]