Francois Ozon

aw_product_id: 
33246124567
merchant_image_url: 
https://cdn.waterstones.com/bookjackets/large/9780/2520/9780252077944.jpg
merchant_category: 
Books
search_price: 
17.99
book_author_name: 
Thibaut Schilt
book_type: 
Paperback
publisher: 
University of Illinois Press
published_date: 
13/01/2011
isbn: 
9780252077944
Merchant Product Cat path: 
Books > Entertainment > Film, TV & radio > Films & cinema > Individual film directors & film-makers
specifications: 
Thibaut Schilt|Paperback|University of Illinois Press|13/01/2011
Merchant Product Id: 
9780252077944
Book Description: 
In just over a decade, Francois Ozon has earned an international reputation as a successful and provocative filmmaker. A student of Eric Rohmer and Jean Douchet at the prestigious Femis, Ozon made a number of critically acclaimed shorts in the 1990s and released his first feature film Sitcom in 1998. Two additional shorts and eleven feature films have followed, including international successes 8 femmes and Swimming Pool and more recent releases such as Angel, Ricky, and Le refuge. Ozon's originality lies in his filmmaking style, which draws on familiar cinematic traditions (the crime thriller, the musical, the psychological drama, the comedy, the period piece) but simultaneously mixes these recognizable genres and renders them unfamiliar. Despite tremendous diversity in cinematic choices, Ozon's oeuvre is surprisingly consistent in its desire to blur the traditional frontiers between the masculine and the feminine, gay and straight, reality and fantasy, auteur and commercial cinema. Thibaut Schilt provides an overview of Francois Ozon's career to date, highlighting the director's unrestrained, voracious cinephilia, his recurrent collaborations with women screenwriters and actresses, and the trademarks of his cinema including music, dance, and the clothes that accompany these now typically Ozonian episodes. Schilt contextualizes Ozon's filmmaking within the larger fields of French filmmaking and international queer cinema, and he discusses several major themes running through Ozon's work, including obsessions with inadequate fathers, various types of mourning, and a recurring taste for "the foreign." The volume also includes an insightful interview with the director.

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