En el período 1963-1975 la sociedad española vivirá una tímida apertura aunque seguirá deseando integrarse en la pujante Europa comunitaria y democrática, hecho que no llegará hasta finales de 1985. El cine impulsado con la formula de la coproduccion fue un fiel espejo de estos vientos de cambio apenas una brisa de la raquitica industria cinematografica española: otra mirada al exterior que hara tornar el blanco y negro en timidos colores. Son los años del mitico 600, de las turistas en bikini, del auge del electrodomestico y de las chicas yeye. Es la epoca de esplendor del cine de genero en España: western mediterraneo, fantaterror, thrillers aderezados con espias internacionales, cine belico, comedias con aires pop; cine de barrio, de programa doble, construido con otros paises vecinos buscando un mercado mas global con un sello mas europeo.Once especialistas procedentes de diferentes campos, con una marcada presencia del sello Film-Historia asociado a autores como Jose Maria Caparros, Rafael de España o Magi Crusells se acercan en este primer volumen a esas peliculas hechas en ocasiones con medios precarios, pero con una ilusion y amor al cine a prueba de bombas. Junto a un cine de corte mas intelectual encontramos uno mas popular, que inundo las plateas de los cines españoles, mas tarde fue carne de videoclub y ha acabado teniendo una buena legion de seguidores.Esta obra nace con la intencion de contextualizar esas peliculas y reivindicar a una serie de directores, tecnicos, actores y mas de 1500 titulos que forman parte de la Historia de nuestro cine y que merecen algo mas que el menosprecio o el olvido.
The official retrospective for the British cinematic masterpiece The Third Man, directed by Carol Reed, written by Graham Greene, and starring Joseph Cotton and Orson Welles, on its 75th anniversary.On its release in 1949, Carol Reeds atmospheric film noir thriller The Third Man instantly became a classic, winning the Palm dOr at Cannes, a BAFTA for Best British Film, and the Oscar for Best Cinematography. Featuring some of cinemas most memorable set pieces and quotable lines, the films war-torn Viennese locations quickly etch themselves in the memorythe vast sewers, the Ferris wheel, the tree-lined cemetery. It marks one of those unusual conjunctions of script, director, subject, cast, and settingand, of course, musicin which everything works. In time for the movies 75th anniversary, this beautiful, illustrated book comprehensively covers the making of the movie, acknowledged as the masterwork of many of its key players: Carol Reed as director; cast members including Joseph Cotton and Orson Welles; novelist/screenwriter Graham Greene; and composer of the instantly recognizable zither score Anton Karas. The battle for ownership of the film between US producer David O. Selznick and the British producer Alexander Korda, which developed into protracted legal proceedings, is explored, as is the lasting influence the movie has had on modern filmmakers, such as Martin Scorsese. This stunning book features original versions of the script and behind-the-scenes photography making it a must-have for any film fan.