An edition of American Film (1975)

American Film, Volume 1, Number 8

June 1976

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Last edited by Vinnie Rattollee
December 6, 2016 | History
An edition of American Film (1975)

American Film, Volume 1, Number 8

June 1976

  • 0 Ratings
  • 27 Want to read
  • 2 Currently reading
  • 0 Have read

$1.50 cover price. Cover of James Stewart and John Wayne in "The Shootist."

Publish Date
Language
English
Pages
80

Buy this book

Previews available in: English

Edition Availability
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Book Details


Table of Contents

Comment. The Family Connection Page 2
Letters. Page 3
Festival Reports. Los Angeles & Cartagena Page 4
McMurtry on the Movies. Properties, Projects, Possibilities Page 6
Finally, the Truth About Casablanca. It keeps playing and playing - and here's the story behind the story. Page 10
Woman Directors. Toppling the Male Mystique Page 18
Just Who is Lawrence K. Grossman?. The Man and the Problems. He's the new president of PBS - and does he have a job ahead of him! Page 24
Ken, the Noodle Vendor and. Other Adventures on Japanese Television Page 28
Dialogue on Film. Verna Fields Page 33
Member News. Page 49
John Wayne: An Appreciation. A Long Career Assessed. Fifty years in the saddle, he is the greatest living legend of them all. Page 50
Aren't You... Jimmy Stewart?. As American As Apple Pie? Like "Pie," his favorite horse, he was his own personality and still likes to be in front of the pack. Page 51
Why TV Stars Don't Become Movie Stars. And on the other hand, some movie stars don't do too well on television. Page 58
James Agee. The Man Who Loved by Movies Page 62
Explorations. You Mean People Get PAID To Do That? Page 68
Books. Reviews.
Movies for Manipulation: On War and Propaganda. "Nazi Cinema" by Erwin Leiser, "The Mythical World of Nazi War Propaganda" by Jay W. Baird, and "Looking Away: Hollywood and Vietnam" by Julian Smith Page 71
A Broad Mosaic: On the Social Screen. "Film: The Democratic Art" by Gareth Jowett Page 73
Black and White. "The Devil Finds Work" by James Baldwin
The Magic Box. "Channeling Children: Sex Stereotyping on Prime Time TV," an analysis by Women on Words and Images
Focus on Education. A Summer Schooling Page 76
Periodicals. Page 80

Edition Notes

Series
The Journal of the Film and Television Arts
Copyright Date
1976

Contributors

Editor
Hollis Alpert
Contributor
Arthur Knight
Contributor
John Russell Taylor
Contributor
Larry McMurtry
Contributor
Ronald Haver
Contributor
Molly Haskell
Contributor
Phyllis Franck
Contributor
J.L. Anderson
Contributor
Jeanine Basinger
Contributor
Joseph McBride
Contributor
Bruce Cook
Contributor
Thomas Dardis
Contributor
Gary Arlen
Contributor
Martha Coolidge
Contributor
Michael Wood
Contributor
Robert Sklar
Contributor
Sam L. Grogg, Jr.
Contributor
Antonio Chemasi

The Physical Object

Format
Magazine
Number of pages
80

ID Numbers

Open Library
OL26200959M
OCLC/WorldCat
2246336

Work Description

"American Film" is a magazine published by The American Film Institute from 1975-1992. 10 issues were published yearly, with 166 issues in total. Originally subtitled "The Journal of the Film and Television Arts" the highbrow magazine initially focused on film classics but the focus soon shifted to contemporary movies. Countless people associated with the film industry contributed articles and columns, including Francois Truffaut, Ernest Lehman, Leonard Maltin, Roger Ebert, Roger Greenspun, Larry McMurty, and others.

In addition to the information about movies and television, the journal offers an insightful view on the home video industry, chronicling the introductions of VHS, Beta, Videodisc and laserdisc and continuing through the VHS boom in the early '90s when the magazine folded. In October 1979, they introduced "The Video Scene," a multi-column section centered on home video, punctuated with ads and printed on a different paper stock. Ads for videotapes began to surface quickly during the run of the magazine and then exploded, with the first major ad being for The Video Club of America's release of "The Sound of Music" in the May 1979 issue.

AFI struggled in the publishing market so the magazine went through a vast array of changes over the years. Early issues were black-and-white, ad-free, with a 16-page card-stock centerfold for their "Dialogue on Film" column, which featured transcripts of Q&A discussions with film legends. Beginning with the April 1978 issue, the publishers switched to a cheaper paper stock. By 1978, they began to become overrun with advertisements and in December, they added color spreads, predominantly for noteworthy new films - though by the early 1980s they were publishing full-color issues. In 1988, the magazine was sold to BPI Communications, and the following year the entire format was changed to glossy, oversized issues. In 1992, the magazine abruptly ceased publication.

In April 2012, the magazine was revived as a monthly digital e-zine, which ran until October 2014, with a total of 31 issues.

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December 6, 2016 Edited by Vinnie Rattollee Edited without comment.
November 20, 2016 Edited by Vinnie Rattollee Edited without comment.
November 20, 2016 Edited by Vinnie Rattollee Edited without comment.
November 20, 2016 Edited by Vinnie Rattollee Edited without comment.
November 20, 2016 Created by Vinnie Rattollee Added new book.