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Understanding Movies (12th Edition) (MyCommunicationKit Series)

Product Type: Book
Product Price: $93.40
Manufacturer: Allyn & Bacon
Purchase
Description
This book engages readers in the fascinating language of film and helps further their appreciation and understanding of why and how movie watchers respond as they do to different films. From Slumdog Millionaire to Transformers. this book provides readers with a new way of looking at films that are familiar to them through contemporary coverage
Reviews
Rating: 5 / 5
Date: 2010-06-02
Summary: "Great price and product!!"
What can I say...It was just what my son needed and at a wonderful price. Thanks!!
Rating: 4 / 5
Date: 2010-04-19
Summary: "Timely delivery & truth regarding quality."
This purchase met my expectations. Slightly dog eared but with no marks in the text. It was quickly delivered. A bit pricey.
Rating: 5 / 5
Date: 2010-04-01
Summary: "Awesome deal!!!!"
I needed this book for a class and the school wanted $86. I think i paid about $16 which included shipping and this is totally the right book. I am totally happy with this and saved a ton of money! Thanks and I highly recommend this seller.
Rating: 4 / 5
Date: 2010-02-25
Summary: "12th Edition -- get less, pay more. Prior reviews -- bore, chore or both?"
Has the beleaguered American student proletariat finally had Too Much of inflated textbook prices and planned obsolescence? At the time of this writing, the 12th (Transformer cover) edition of Louis Giannetti's UNDERSTANDING MOVIES has only had about a month on the shelves and has garnered only a few reviews, mostly quite negative, and mostly assaulting the ethics of releasing yet another updated volume as opposed to critiquing the text per se. This review may have a similar "meta" flavor but I hope to offer some potentially useful facts:
-- The Eleventh Edition (Spiderman cover) has a retail price about the same as the new 12th. Yet Amazon discounts it more, making it significantly cheaper (alas, though, used copies are scarcer and selling for pretty close to new prices).
-- Nonetheless, the 12th edition has almost fifty FEWER pages than the 11th! Spend more, get less? I can't for the life of me understand why anyone would want the 12th.
-- The textbook publisher may have pushed one time too often in this recessionary era because the prior (again, 11th) edition is not yet three full years old.
-- I defy anyone to compare the 12th, 11th, 10th (Sean Penn cover) or even 9th (Russell Crowe/Gladiator) editions and tell me that the gap between new/latest and very good condition/several generations ago is all THAT significant that it justifies such a quantum increase in price.
-- Frank Hoffman of Philadelphia, my Comment notwithstanding, made some very good points in 2007 about how contemporary students are captive audiences. But, I would add, only if the instructor insists that all students buy the utmost latest. Open up earlier options and the price will crash! E.g., I paid less than $20 for my VG copy of the 9th "Gladiator" edition, which has 556 pages. As of now, the very latest 12th ed. has 576 pages and retails at ninety dollars plus change!
-- FWIW I agree with Prof. Hoffman that gay and lesbian content is tokenistic to the point of trivial. The best solution might be, as he suggests, to assign be the groundbreaking book by the late Vito Russo, THE CELLULOID CLOSET (1987), as a second required text. Since this gem has no color plating, hasn't been revised since publication date and (probably most significantly) is aimed at general readers, not just captive-audience students, it is quite cheap. As of now it retails at $[...], significantly cheaper at Amazon.
-- Amazon amateur reviews, POSTED UNDER THE 12TH EDITION, span the time to "just now" back to the turn of the millennium, which means numerous editions back. Go ahead and read the reviews if you like; much of what they say still holds true because UNDERSTANDING MOVIES but slowly evolves. Please be aware, though, there are more possible time warps lurking than in all the BACK TO THE FUTURE movies put together.
To me, UNDERSTANDING MOVIES is still the standard text for into-to-film course, and I don't blame Prof. Giannetti (who is now in emeritus status) for the ongoing futzing around with pages and prices and perpetual editions. Chief culprit of that is the publishing (multi-)house that controls the book, and in a competitive climate in which its rivals are more like oligopolistic brethren.
I have been reading and enjoying numerous editions of the Giannetti text from the late seventies until recently. I always used to say they just got better and better over time. I'm not sure I can still say that with any sincerity.
Thanks for hearing out the "rant"; I hope it has helped in some way.
Al Smalling, Chicago
Rating: 1 / 5
Date: 2010-02-24
Summary: "overpriced text book"
Assigned as text for "Cinema as Art" class. The book is comprehensive. Photo captions are good. Prose is dreadful.
Sole virtue is its popularity among cinematography instructors. Grossly overpriced. Do not buy. Instead, rent
DVDs and study appended commentaries.
