Play Time: Jacques Tati and Comedic Modernism

Awards:   Winner of CHOICE, Outstanding Academic Title 2020
Author:   Malcolm Turvey
Publisher:   Columbia University Press
ISBN:  

9780231193023


Pages:   304
Publication Date:   03 December 2019
Format:   Hardback
Availability:   Manufactured on demand   Availability explained
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Play Time: Jacques Tati and Comedic Modernism


Awards

  • Winner of CHOICE, Outstanding Academic Title 2020

Overview

Full Product Details

Author:   Malcolm Turvey
Publisher:   Columbia University Press
Imprint:   Columbia University Press
ISBN:  

9780231193023


ISBN 10:   0231193025
Pages:   304
Publication Date:   03 December 2019
Audience:   Professional and scholarly ,  Professional & Vocational
Format:   Hardback
Publisher's Status:   Active
Availability:   Manufactured on demand   Availability explained
We will order this item for you from a manufactured on demand supplier.

Table of Contents

Reviews

Malcolm Turvey's Play Time is a completely joyful and entirely refreshing account of the films of Jacques Tati. It is also one of the finest, most nuanced accounts of comedic form that we have, a work that no one who studies comedy, or simply enjoys it, should be without. In tending so carefully to the structure of Tati's gags-a seemingly infinite amount of them-Turvey does something that is as extraordinary as it is subtle. With Tati, he shows us how intelligence and popularity, structure and participation, aesthetic excellence and ordinary life, cannot be easily or gainfully opposed. -- Brian Price, University of Toronto This book is an excellent, detailed study of the films of Jacques Tati that establishes how Tati's work draws upon classical comedian comedy while also connecting with the interwar European avant-garde. Moreover, the author insightfully discusses Tati's love/hate relationship with modernity as well as his passion for creating a participatory style in which the spectator works to find humor in his films and also in the real world. -- Lucy Fischer, Distinguished Professor Emerita, University of Pittsburgh Few films deserve a book-length study as much as those of Jacques Tati. Malcolm Turvey has done them justice. His explanation of their context in the slapstick and modernist traditions is fascinating. Turvey takes Tati's work seriously, not by spoiling the fun but by respecting its extraordinary complexity. His title comes from Tati's masterpiece. No matter how many times you have seen Play Time-and it is a film made for many viewings-Turvey will reveal something new and make you want to see it yet again. -- Kristin Thompson, Honorary Fellow in the Department of Communication Arts, University of Wisconsin-Madison Malcolm Turvey's Play Time is the best extended critical study of Tati I've encountered: persuasively argued, scrupulously observed, and beautifully illustrated. The writing is clear and graceful, and the research is impressive, especially regarding the relation of slapstick films to avant-garde movements of the early twentieth century and Tati's critiques of modern architecture. Most critical books about Tati have been short on close analysis, but this one beats them all. -- Jonathan Rosenbaum, author of <i>Cinematic Encounters: Interviews and Dialogues</i> Malcolm Turvey's exhilarating study of Jacques Tati is a precise, loving appreciation of the unique style and worldview of a great filmmaker. It's also a history of avant-garde humor and a deep analysis of techniques of slapstick and satire. Turvey, one of our finest scholars of modernity in the arts, shows in detail how Tati's comedy turned modernist experimentation into popular entertainment. -- David Bordwell, author of <i>Reinventing Hollywood: How 1940s Filmmakers Changed Movie Storytelling</i> Turvey provides a sharply observant account of the scope and function of the more 'cognitively challenging' of these comic devices in Tati's major films. -- David Trotter * London Review of Books *


Malcolm Turvey's Play Time is a completely joyful and entirely refreshing account of the films of Jacques Tati. It is also one of the finest, most nuanced accounts of comedic form that we have, a work that no one who studies comedy, or simply enjoys it, should be without. In tending so carefully to the structure of Tati's gags-a seemingly infinite amount of them-Turvey does something that is as extraordinary as it is subtle. With Tati, he shows us how intelligence and popularity, structure and participation, aesthetic excellence and ordinary life, cannot be easily or gainfully opposed. -- Brian Price, University of Toronto This book is an excellent, detailed study of the films of Jacques Tati that establishes how Tati's work draws upon classical comedian comedy while also connecting with the interwar European avant-garde. Moreover, the author insightfully discusses Tati's love/hate relationship with modernity as well as his passion for creating a participatory style in which the spectator works to find humor in his films and also in the real world. -- Lucy Fischer, Distinguished Professor Emerita, University of Pittsburgh Few films deserve a book-length study as much as those of Jacques Tati. Malcolm Turvey has done them justice. His explanation of their context in the slapstick and modernist traditions is fascinating. Turvey takes Tati's work seriously, not by spoiling the fun but by respecting its extraordinary complexity. His title comes from Tati's masterpiece. No matter how many times you have seen Play Time-and it is a film made for many viewings-Turvey will reveal something new and make you want to see it yet again. -- Kristin Thompson, Honorary Fellow in the Department of Communication Arts, University of Wisconsin-Madison Malcolm Turvey's Play Time is the best extended critical study of Tati I've encountered: persuasively argued, scrupulously observed, and beautifully illustrated. The writing is clear and graceful, and the research is impressive, especially regarding the relation of slapstick films to avant-garde movements of the early twentieth century and Tati's critiques of modern architecture. Most critical books about Tati have been short on close analysis, but this one beats them all. -- Jonathan Rosenbaum, author of <i>Cinematic Encounters: Interviews and Dialogues</i> Malcolm Turvey's exhilarating study of Jacques Tati is a precise, loving appreciation of the unique style and worldview of a great filmmaker. It's also a history of avant-garde humor and a deep analysis of techniques of slapstick and satire. Turvey, one of our finest scholars of modernity in the arts, shows in detail how Tati's comedy turned modernist experimentation into popular entertainment. -- David Bordwell, author of <i>Reinventing Hollywood: How 1940s Filmmakers Changed Movie Storytelling</i>


Turvey provides a sharply observant account of the scope and function of the more 'cognitively challenging' of these comic devices in Tati's major films. -- David Trotter * London Review of Books * Malcolm Turvey's exhilarating study of Jacques Tati is a precise, loving appreciation of the unique style and worldview of a great filmmaker. It's also a history of avant-garde humor and a deep analysis of techniques of slapstick and satire. Turvey, one of our finest scholars of modernity in the arts, shows in detail how Tati's comedy turned modernist experimentation into popular entertainment. -- David Bordwell, author of <i>Reinventing Hollywood: How 1940s Filmmakers Changed Movie Storytelling</i> Malcolm Turvey's Play Time is the best extended critical study of Tati I've encountered: persuasively argued, scrupulously observed, and beautifully illustrated. The writing is clear and graceful, and the research is impressive, especially regarding the relation of slapstick films to avant-garde movements of the early twentieth century and Tati's critiques of modern architecture. Most critical books about Tati have been short on close analysis, but this one beats them all. -- Jonathan Rosenbaum, author of <i>Cinematic Encounters: Interviews and Dialogues</i> Few films deserve a book-length study as much as those of Jacques Tati. Malcolm Turvey has done them justice. His explanation of their context in the slapstick and modernist traditions is fascinating. Turvey takes Tati's work seriously, not by spoiling the fun but by respecting its extraordinary complexity. His title comes from Tati's masterpiece. No matter how many times you have seen Play Time-and it is a film made for many viewings-Turvey will reveal something new and make you want to see it yet again. -- Kristin Thompson, Honorary Fellow in the Department of Communication Arts, University of Wisconsin-Madison This book is an excellent, detailed study of the films of Jacques Tati that establishes how Tati's work draws upon classical comedian comedy while also connecting with the interwar European avant-garde. Moreover, the author insightfully discusses Tati's love/hate relationship with modernity as well as his passion for creating a participatory style in which the spectator works to find humor in his films and also in the real world. -- Lucy Fischer, Distinguished Professor Emerita, University of Pittsburgh Malcolm Turvey's Play Time is a completely joyful and entirely refreshing account of the films of Jacques Tati. It is also one of the finest, most nuanced accounts of comedic form that we have, a work that no one who studies comedy, or simply enjoys it, should be without. In tending so carefully to the structure of Tati's gags-a seemingly infinite amount of them-Turvey does something that is as extraordinary as it is subtle. With Tati, he shows us how intelligence and popularity, structure and participation, aesthetic excellence and ordinary life, cannot be easily or gainfully opposed. -- Brian Price, University of Toronto The book is a delicious treat, and serious film students will appreciate it as a penetrating primer on the cinematic comic artisdt at work. * Choice * Turvey's study of Tati's context traces a fascinating continuity between the clown tradition, Charlie Chaplin's construction of comic personas and the role of the 'living object' in Dada, Surrealism, Cubism and other interwar artistic movements. * Times Literary Supplement *


Malcolm Turvey's Play Time is the best extended critical study of Tati I've encountered: persuasively argued, scrupulously observed, and beautifully illustrated. The writing is clear and graceful, and the research is impressive, especially regarding the relation of slapstick films to avant-garde movements of the early twentieth century and Tati's critiques of modern architecture. Most critical books about Tati have been short on close analysis, but this one beats them all. -- Jonathan Rosenbaum, author of <i>Cinematic Encounters: Interviews and Dialogues</i>


Malcolm Turvey's Play Time is the best extended critical study of Tati I've encountered: persuasively argued, scrupulously observed, and beautifully illustrated. The writing is clear and graceful, and the research is impressive, especially regarding the relation of slapstick films to avant-garde movements of the early twentieth century and Tati's critiques of modern architecture. Most critical books about Tati have been short on close analysis, but this one beats them all.--Jonathan Rosenbaum, author of Cinematic Encounters: Interviews and Dialogues


Author Information

Malcolm Turvey is Sol Gittleman Professor in the Art and Art History Department and director of the Film and Media Studies Program at Tufts University. He is an editor of the journal October. His books include Doubting Vision: Film and the Revelationist Tradition (2008) and The Filming of Modern Life: European Avant-Garde Film of the 1920s (2011).

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