Footlights

Footlights

Critical Notebook 19701982

About the Book

The early essays of the most influential French film critic of the post-68 period.

The Footlights (1983) was the first book by Serge Daney, a film critic admired in his lifetime by Gilles Deleuze and Jean-Luc Godard and recognized since his premature death in 1992 as the most important French writer on film after André Bazin. The Footlights stands apart in Daney’s body of work as the only collection of his essays he conceived of as a book, organizing his seminal pieces from Cahiers du Cinéma by theme and linking them with original texts that reflect in a personal voice on the doubts, battles, and illuminations of a generation of film lovers inspired by the explorations of Lacanian theory and roused by the collective aspirations of Maoist dogma. In pieces on fellow travelers Godard and Straub/Huillet, on films ranging from Pasolini’s Saló to Spielberg’s Jaws, and on the difference between film language and television discourse, Daney offers a definitive portrait of an era of radical hope and disappointment.
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Semiotext(e) / Foreign Agents Series

The Life, Old Age, and Death of a Working-Class Woman
Footlights
The Cinema House and the World
Human Strike and the Art of Creating Freedom
Letters and Other Texts
An Apartment on Uranus
Wars and Capital
Aberrant Movements
The Ordinary Man of Cinema
Foams
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About the Author

Serge Daney
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About the Author

Nicholas Elliott
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