An edition of American Film (1975)

American Film, Volume IX, Number 2

November 1983

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Last edited by Vinnie Rattollee
August 5, 2017 | History
An edition of American Film (1975)

American Film, Volume IX, Number 2

November 1983

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

Cover photo of director Philip Kaufman and the cast of "The Right Stuff" (Lance Henriksen, Scott Paulin, Ed Harris, Charles Frank, Scott Glenn, Fred Ward, and Dennis Quaid). $2.50 Cover price.

Publish Date
Language
English
Pages
88

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Previews available in: English

Edition Availability
Cover of: American Film, Volume IX, Number 2
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Book Details


Table of Contents

The Editing Room. Page 4
Letters. Page 6
Newsreel. Short news stories Page 10
Double Agent. "The Secret Agent," a documentary on Agent Orange.
Wheel Finds Legs. Heart Like a Wheel gets a bigger release.
Nuke Film Fallout. ABC's "The Day After."
It Ain't Yours, Babe!. The Bob Dylan documentary "Don't Look Back"
Explorations: Between Two Worlds. The work of Soviet director Andrei Tarkovsky is little known in America. Here he describes the evolution of his new film, "Nostalghia." Page 14
Dialogue on Film: Martin Ritt. The director talks about money in Hollywood, getting politics on the screen, and his new film, "Cross Creek." Page 19
Riding High with The Right Stuff. Until now, Philip Kaufman's career seems to have stalled on the launchpad, but his new film may be just the right vehicle to boost him into orbit. Page 23
Fear of Spying. Hitchcock loosed a psycho on Janet Leigh and the birds on Tippi Hedren. For this he's become the director feminists love to hate. But the rerelease of Rear Window and Vertigo show that his murderous gaze was directed at the hearts of men. Page 28
Prime-Time Whitewash. Wanted: new plots and characters for televisions vast WASPland. Blacks and Jews need not apply. Page 36
Moonlighting with the Stars. You know the guy who used to sell no wine before its time? He directed 'Citizen Kane.' Orsone Welles traded on fame for fortune -- in true Hollywood tradition. Celebrities hawk merchandise. Page 40
Wild Style. Sick of valley girls? Meet the break boys, rappers and graffiti guerrillas of Charlie Ahern's new film. Page 48
New Kid on the Bloc. Polish and Czech cinema has gone from ashes to diamonds and back again. But the Hungarian film industry, which has been producing world-class films for two decades, is only now catching fire in the West. Page 52
VideoFile: To Have and Have Not. Why are so few classic films available on videotape? Page 59
Scanlines. News blurbs Page 62
Wanna Be Directing Something?. Established filmmakers move to MTV.
Copping Out. Critics and viewers hail "Hill Street Blues."
Return of Willmar 8. A documentarian gets her own TV-movie spin in "On the Basis of Sex"
Collector's Choice: Lost and Found. Films that failed in theaters thrive on cassette. Page 64
Classified Ads. Page 80
AFI Calendar. Page 82
Trailers. The Dresser, Star '80, Heaven, Savage Islands, Going Berserk Page 86
From the Director. Independents: Voices That Must Not Be Stilled Page 88
NOTABLE ADS
Walt Disney Home Video. TRON Page 15
MGM/UA Home Video. 2-page spread featuring That Championship Season, The White Rose, Brimstone and Treacle, The Year of Living Dangerously, The Dirty Dozen Page 66
Media Home Entertainment. The Grey Fox Page 70
Worldvision Home Video. Holocaust, The Gathering, Gideon's Trumpet, Give 'Em Hell Harry, The Fugitive Page 83
RCA Columbia Pictures Home Video. Blue Thunder, Spacehunter: Adventures in the Forbidden Zone

Edition Notes

Published in
New York, USA
Series
Magazine of the Film and Television Arts
Other Titles
Volume 10, Number 2
Copyright Date
1983

Contributors

Editor
Peter Biskind
Writer
Jean Callahan
Writer
Howard Kohn
Writer
Michael Heaton
Writer
Andrei Tarkovsky
Writer
J. Hoberman
Writer
Michael Goodwin
Writer
Robin Wood
Writer
Todd Gitlin
Writer
Penny Stallings
Writer
Howard Mandelbaum
Writer
Ellin Stein
Writer
Terry Atkinson
Writer
Candace McCoy
Writer
Pat Aufderheide
Writer
Lawrence O'Toole
Writer
Jean Firstenberg

The Physical Object

Format
Magazine
Number of pages
88

ID Numbers

Open Library
OL26323299M
OCLC/WorldCat
2246336
Amazon ID (ASIN)
B002B92H1I

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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August 5, 2017 Edited by Vinnie Rattollee Contents
June 11, 2017 Edited by Vinnie Rattollee Edited without comment.
June 11, 2017 Edited by Vinnie Rattollee Edited without comment.
June 11, 2017 Edited by Vinnie Rattollee Added new cover
June 11, 2017 Created by Vinnie Rattollee Added new book.