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Barnes and Noble

Hollywood San Francisco: Location Shooting and the Aesthetics of Urban Decline

Current price: $105.00
Hollywood San Francisco: Location Shooting and the Aesthetics of Urban Decline
Hollywood San Francisco: Location Shooting and the Aesthetics of Urban Decline

Barnes and Noble

Hollywood San Francisco: Location Shooting and the Aesthetics of Urban Decline

Current price: $105.00
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Size: Hardcover

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One of the country’s most picturesque cities and conveniently located just a few hours’ drive from Hollywood, San Francisco became the most frequently and extensively filmed American city beyond the production hubs of Los Angeles and New York in the three decades after World War II. During those years, the cinematic image of the city morphed from the dreamy beauty of
Vertigo
to the nightmarish wasteland of
Dirty Harry
, although San Francisco itself experienced no such decline. This intriguing disconnect gives impetus to
Hollywood in San Francisco
, the most comprehensive study to date of Hollywood’s move from studio to location production in the postwar era.
In this thirty-year history of feature filmmaking in San Francisco, Joshua Gleich tracks a sea change in Hollywood production practices, as location shooting overtook studio-based filming as the dominant production method by the early 1970s. He shows how this transformation intersected with a precipitous decline in public perceptions of the American city, to which filmmakers responded by developing a stark, realist aesthetic that suited America’s growing urban pessimism and superseded a fidelity to local realities. Analyzing major films set in San Francisco, ranging from
Dark Passage
and
to
The Conversation
,
The Towering Inferno
, and
Bullitt
, as well as the TV show
The Streets of San Francisco
, Gleich demonstrates that the city is a physical environment used to stage urban fantasies that reveal far more about Hollywood filmmaking and American culture than they do about San Francisco.

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