Channel 4 and British Film Culture
Edited by Paul McDonald and Justin Smith
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Considers aspects of the legacy that makes Film4 synonymous with a rejuvenated national cinema
When Channel 4 was launched in 1982 its policy of commissioning new feature films for television broadcast and selective cinema release marked a shift in British film culture. Widely credited with revitalising a moribund UK film industry, the initiative represented a new intervention on the part of a public service broadcaster and, in turn, redefined the place of film on television with landmark strands from Film on Four to The Eleventh Hour. Channel 4 withstood early criticism from some industry voices and controversy aroused by its broadcast film provision; in 1987 its contribution to European cinema was recognised in the accolade of the Roberto Rosselini award at the Cannes film festival. Since then the international box office successes of many Film4 titles (from My Beautiful Laundrette and The Crying Game to Four Weddings and Funeral and Slumdog Millionaire), have made Film4 synonymous with a rejuvenated national cinema and established television as a vital cornerstone of government film policy. This special issue will investigate aspects of that legacy, casting a critical eye upon received wisdom, and drawing on new archival and interview material to offer a revisionist history of the broadcaster’s rich and diverse contributions to British film culture. Indispensible to anyone with an interest in British film over the past thirty years.
About the authors:
Paul McDonald is Professor of Cinema and Media Industries at the University of Nottingham. He is the author of Hollywood Stardom (Wiley, 2013), Video and DVD Industries (BFI, 2007) and The Star System: Hollywood's Production of Popular Identities (Wallflower, 2000), and co-editor of The Contemporary Hollywood Film Industry (Blackwell, 2008). Since 2002 he has jointly edited the International Screen Industries series from the British Film Institute. Currently he is Co-investigator for the project Channel 4 Television and British Film Culture (www.c4film.co.uk).
Justin Smith is Reader in British Film Culture at the University of Portsmouth where he is also Post-Graduate Tutor in the School of Creative Arts, Film and Media. He is the author of Withnail and Us: Cult Films and Film Cults in British Cinema (I. B. Tauris, 2010) and, with Sue Harper, British Film Culture in the 1970s: The Boundaries of Pleasure (Edinburgh University Press, 2011). He was a Co-Investigator on the AHRC-funded project 1970s British Cinema, Film and Video: Mainstream and Counter-Culture (2006-2009), www.1970sproject.co.uk; he is currently Principal Investigator on the AHRC-funded project 'Channel 4 Television and British Film Culture' (2010-2014), www.c4film.co.uk . A cultural historian with a special interest in British cinema, his research interests embrace production, reception and exhibition practices, film fandom, and issues of cultural identity and popular memory.
See the publisher website: Edinburgh University Press
> From the same authors:
The Routledge Companion to British Cinema History (2020)
Dir. I. Q. Hunter, Laraine Porter and Justin Smith
Subject: Countries > Great Britain
British Film Culture in the 1970s (2011)
The Boundaries of Pleasure
by Sue Harper and Justin Smith
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The Star System (2001)
Hollywood's Production of Popular Identities
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