An edition of American Film (1975)

American Film, Volume VII, Number 10

September 1982

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Last edited by Vinnie Rattollee
December 13, 2016 | History
An edition of American Film (1975)

American Film, Volume VII, Number 10

September 1982

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

$2.00 cover price. Cover photo of Jack Lemmon. Includes a 2-page spread for "Star Wars" on home video.

Publish Date
Language
English
Pages
88

Buy this book

Previews available in: English

Edition Availability
Cover of: American Film, Volume VIII, Number 2
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Cover of: American Film, Volume 1, Number 3
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Book Details


Published in

New York, USA

Table of Contents

The Editing Room. Page 5
Letters. Page 6
Newsreel. Brief news stories Page 8
Loose Lips Sync Snips. Looping movies
More Crises. "Fire on the Water" on PBS's "Crisis to Crisis
Up Against The Wall. The film adaptation of Pink Floyd's 1979 album
In-Flight Movies Take Off. Airline distributors and editing
Nuclear Film Proliferation. "Eight Minutes to Midnight"
Dialogue on Film: Jack Lemmon. The star of "Missing" talks about working with George Cukor, an encounter with John Ford, and his turn toward serious roles. Page 11
VideoFile.
Night Flight Takes Off. An innovative blend of music and other arts is USA Network's answer to late-night comedy. Page 25
Cable Fables. Shelley Duvall's "Faerie Tale Theatre." Page 27
Raiders Meets Invaders. Lucasfilm-Atari venture Page 28
Piggyback Video. Atari-compatible Arcadia Page 28
Collector's Choice: Musicals. Musicals on home video Page 29
Gothic Television. Silhouette Books plan to spin-off their romance novels into films. Page 31
Videography. A list of referenced films on video Page 32
The Discreet Charm of Luis Bunuel. The man whose films revel in perversity, blasphemy and cruelty has long lived the life of a monk. Page 34
They're Here!. The new fall programs mix ghosts of seasons past with spirited newcomers. Page 41
Preview of the New Fall Lineup. Page 43
The Shape of Theaters to Come. Will the rise of the home entertainment industry mean the fall of movie theaters? Not if exhibitors have anything to say about it. They're fighting back with megascreens, multiplexes and more. Page 50
DeepFocus: Out of the Closet and Onto the Screen. Hollywood has always shunned gay subjects - until now. Nine critics explore the reasons why. (Topics include Making Love, La cage aux Folles, Personal Best, Victor/Victoria, etc.) Page 57
Scoring with Synthesizers. Film composers Georgio Moroder and Vangelis have heard the sound of the future, and it comes from a machine. Page 66
Explorations: The Legacy of Rainer Werner Fassbinder. With his low-budget amalgam of Brecht and Sirk, he almost single-handedly created the New German Cinema. Page 72
Books. Reviews
Over the Edge. "Passolini: A Biography" by Enzo Sicilano Page 76
Films of the Fifties. "Running Time: Films of the Cold War" by Nora Sayre Page 78
American Film Classified Ads. 82
Trailers. Brief looks at "Yes, Georgio," Second Thoughts," "My Favorite Year," "Five Days in Summer" and "Tempest." Page 85
September Calendar for AFI Members. Page 86
From the Director. We Want More Films... Page 88
Notable Advertisements.
RCA. Videodiscs (Casablanca, Rod Stewart Live at the Los Angeles Forum, Dr. No, Muhammad Ali's Greatest Fights, Superman the Movie, Airplane, Dirty Harry, The Godfather, Stir Crazy) Page 4
Columbia Pictures Home Entertainment. VHS Releases (Z, In Cold Blood, Only When I Laugh, Stripes, The Three Stooges, The Who's Tommy, The Deep, Stir Crazy, Kramer Vs. Kramer, The Blue Lagoon, And Justice for All, etc.) Page 10
Mitsubishi. CK-2582 25" color tv Page 12-13
JVC. GX-S9U color video camera Page 21
Fox. Star Wars on home video Page 22-23
The Movie Channel. Page 33
Blay Video. VHS releases (Assault, The Lady Vanishes, Carry on Behind, The Night Porter, In Which We Serve, Let Go, The Belstone Fox, Never Let Go, Magic, Doctor at Sea, The Steps, Malta Story) Page 40
General Electric. Various home video innovations Page 44-45
Kodak. Vilmos Zsigmond for Kodak Page 54-55
NBC. "Little Gloria... Happy at Last," "The Executioner's Song,"James Clavell's Shogun," "Rage of Angels," "Jesus of Nazareth" Page 69
ABC. The Winds of War, "The first theatrical motion picture made for television." Page 84
Warner Home Video. Chariots of Fire (inner back cover)
HBO/Cinemax. (Back Cover)

Edition Notes

Series
Magazine of the Film and Television Arts
Copyright Date
1982

Contributors

Editor
Peter Biskind
Writer
Tony Peyser
Writer
Anne Ross Muir
interviewee
Jack Lemmon
Writer
Marc Kirkeby
Writer
Vic Cox
Writer
Michael Schrage
Writer
Tom Shales
Writer
Michael Wood
Writer
David Marc
Writer
Ben Brown
Writer
Karen Stabiner
interviewee
Andrew Britton
interviewee
Stuart Byron
interviewee
Richard Dyer
interviewee
Doug Edwards
interviewee
Stephen Harvey
interviewee
Richard Lippe
interviewee
Vito Russo
interviewee
Tom Waugh
interviewee
Robin Wood
Writer
Terry Atkinson
Writer
J. Hoberman
Writer
Michael Silverman
Writer
Carrie Rickey
Writer
Jean Firstenberg
Senior Editor
Antonio Chemasi
Senior Editor
Jean Callahan
Senior Editor
Thomas Wiener
Associate Editor
Peter Craig
Art Director
Victoria Valentine
Consulting Editor
Hollis Alpert
Publisher
Tod Herbers

The Physical Object

Format
Magazine
Number of pages
88

ID Numbers

Open Library
OL26207017M
OCLC/WorldCat
2246336
Amazon ID (ASIN)
B002B966G0

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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Download catalog record: RDF / JSON / OPDS | Wikipedia citation
December 13, 2016 Edited by Vinnie Rattollee Edited without comment.
December 13, 2016 Edited by Vinnie Rattollee Edited without comment.
December 13, 2016 Edited by Vinnie Rattollee Added new cover
December 13, 2016 Created by Vinnie Rattollee Added new book.