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Panel to the Screen: Style, American Film & Comic Books in Blockbuster Era - Perfect for Film Studies, Pop Culture Analysis & Comic Book History Research
Panel to the Screen: Style, American Film & Comic Books in Blockbuster Era - Perfect for Film Studies, Pop Culture Analysis & Comic Book History Research

Panel to the Screen: Style, American Film & Comic Books in Blockbuster Era - Perfect for Film Studies, Pop Culture Analysis & Comic Book History Research

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Description

Over the past forty years, American film has entered into a formal interaction with the comic book. Such comic book adaptations as Sin City, 300, and Scott Pilgrim vs. the World have adopted components of their source materials' visual style. The screen has been fractured into panels, the photographic has given way to the graphic, and the steady rhythm of cinematic time has evolved into a far more malleable element. In other words, films have begun to look like comics. Yet, this interplay also occurs in the other direction. In order to retain cultural relevancy, comic books have begun to look like films. Frank Miller's original Sin City comics are indebted to film noir while Stephen King's The Dark Tower series could be a Sergio Leone spaghetti western translated onto paper. Film and comic books continuously lean on one another to reimagine their formal attributes and stylistic possibilities. In Panel to the Screen, Drew Morton examines this dialogue in its intersecting and rapidly changing cultural, technological, and industrial contexts. Early on, many questioned the prospect of a "low" art form suited for children translating into “high” art material capable of drawing colossal box office takes. Now the naysayers are as quiet as the queued crowds at Comic-Cons are massive. Morton provides a nuanced account of this phenomenon by using formal analysis of the texts in a real-world context of studio budgets, grosses, and audience reception.

Reviews

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- Verified Buyer
I received a copy of this book from Netgalley in exchange for a fair and honest review. Thank you! ?This was an interesting book to read and I found it very informative, but it read like a technical manual. The author knows his stuff but it comes across as over intellectual and repetitive. The book is incredibly monotonous and I believe it just isolates it’s target audience. It’s a fascinating subject to write a book on but don’t present it like a student thesis, be more accessible!