SKOPAL, Pavel. Barrandov’s Co-productions: The Clumsy Way to Ideological Control, International Competitiveness and Technological Improvement. In Skopal, Pavel; Karl, Lars. Cinema in Service of the State: Perspectives on Film Culture in the GDR and Czechoslovakia 1945-1960. First published. New York - Oxford: Berghahn Books, 2015, s. 89-106. Film Europe. ISBN 1-78238-996-2.
Další formáty:   BibTeX LaTeX RIS
Základní údaje
Originální název Barrandov’s Co-productions: The Clumsy Way to Ideological Control, International Competitiveness and Technological Improvement
Autoři SKOPAL, Pavel (203 Česká republika, garant, domácí).
Vydání First published. New York - Oxford, Cinema in Service of the State: Perspectives on Film Culture in the GDR and Czechoslovakia 1945-1960, od s. 89-106, 18 s. Film Europe, 2015.
Nakladatel Berghahn Books
Další údaje
Originální jazyk angličtina
Typ výsledku Kapitola resp. kapitoly v odborné knize
Obor Písemnictví, masmedia, audiovize
Stát vydavatele Spojené státy
Utajení není předmětem státního či obchodního tajemství
Forma vydání tištěná verze "print"
Kód RIV RIV/00216224:14210/15:00085513
Organizační jednotka Filozofická fakulta
ISBN 1-78238-996-2
Klíčová slova anglicky co-productions; state socialist cinema; production history; Barrandov Studios
Štítky rivok
Příznaky Mezinárodní význam, Recenzováno
Změnil Změnila: Mgr. Vendula Hromádková, učo 108933. Změněno: 25. 4. 2016 15:33.
Anotace
As the analysis in this essay demonstrates, co-productions served a wide range of overlapping goals and purposes, and it is difficult to categorize them simply according to a conservative or a liberal tendency of cultural policy – in some cases, even individual projects themselves were labelled in a seemingly contradictory way. Furthermore, the expansion of the practice of co-production did not occur in parallel with a process of liberalization. Of course, cooperation with Western partners was inevitably related to a certain degree of liberalization in the cultural sphere, whereas the ‘preferred’ cooperation within the Bloc occasionally served the intentions of the Soviets. Nevertheless, the curbing of co-productions at the end of the 1950s by no means signified a final defeat of liberal tendencies, nor did it mark a shift away from direct competition with the West and a return to isolationism. Starting in the early 1960s, co-productions were perceived as a less effective, more expensive, clumsier mode of production that did not conform to the USSR’s offensive ambitions in the cultural sphere – ambitions that were manifested, for example, in the Soviet Ministry of Culture’s move to force Czechoslovak State Film to organize the festival in Karlovy Vary on a biannual basis in order to ‘make a space’ for the Moscow International Film Festival in the alternating years. How the individual national film industries of the Soviet Bloc coped with the situation is another question: Barrandov, for example, participated in an alternative strategy of exchange among film practitioners by providing experienced filmmakers for production at DEFA. In the second half of the 1960s, the Czech film studio resumed co-operation with Western partners on projects that served to supplement the efficiency of the talented representatives of the Czechoslovak New Wave.
Návaznosti
MUNI/A/1172/2014, interní kód MUNázev: Česká kinematografie a proces kulturního transferu
Investor: Masarykova univerzita, Česká kinematografie a proces kulturního transferu, DO R. 2020_Kategorie A - Specifický výzkum - Studentské výzkumné projekty
VytisknoutZobrazeno: 10. 8. 2024 01:07