20 research outputs found

    Julius Caesar on Stage in England & America 1599–1973 by John Ripley

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    Gosson, Ovid, and the Elizabethan Audience

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    Anon, Anon: or, a Mirror for a Magistrate

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    Iago as Melampus

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    Intent to Speed: Cyclical Production, Topicality and the 1950s Hot Rod Movie

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    This essay tracks the emergence, consolidation and dissolution of the short cycle of hot rod movies that was exhibited from 1956 to 1958. The aim is to explore this cycle’s connection to topical issues and show how filmmakers used timely subjects. The essay examines the media frenzy that whirled around the subculture of hot rodding and the sensationalist marketing strategies used to promote the films, which are linked to exhibition in drive-in theatres. There is an extraordinary mismatch between the thrills promised by the sales pitch for the films and the pedestrian action of the films themselves. While showing intent to speed, few examples of the cycle actually delivered on the promise to thrill. Finally, questions of turnover and the speed of production are considered. What draws these areas of interest together is a series of enquiries about what made hot rods and hot rod culture useful to film producers and audiences
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