Description
For two decades, Michel Chion has been asking basic questions about cinema sound and coming up with startling, seminal answers. It all started with The Voice in Cinema and a simple question: why are so many films built around voices separated from the image of their sources? Elementary questions, creative responses, and clear prose make this one of the few books on film sound capable of simultaneously satisfying scholars and students alike. How wonderful to have The Voice in Cinema available, finally, in such a readable English translation. -- Rick Altman, author of A Theory of Narrative and Silent Film Sound
About the Author
Michel Chion is a composer of musique concr te, a filmmaker, an associate professor at the Universit de Paris, and a prolific writer on film, sound, and music. His other books with Columbia University Press are Film, A Sound Art and Audio-Vision: Sound on Screen.Claudia Gorbman is a film studies professor at the University of Washington, Tacoma. She is the author of Unheard Melodies: Narrative Film Music (1987), the editor of several books, and the author of many articles on film sound and film music. She is also the translator of Michel Chion's Film, A Sound Art, Audio-Vision: Sound on Screen, and 2001: Kubrick's Cinema Odyssey.
Reviews
[A] creative look at sound in the cinema. -- R. Blackwood Choice
Book Information
ISBN 9780231108232
Author Michel Chion
Format Paperback
Page Count 208
Imprint Columbia University Press
Publisher Columbia University Press