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From the Third Eye

The Evergreen Review Film Reader

Ed Halter Barney Rossett Matt Peterson

$59.99

Paperback

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English
Seven Stories Press,U.S.
15 December 2017
In this first collection of film writing from Evergreen Review, the legendary publication's important contributions to film culture are available in a single volume. Featuring such legendary writers as Nat Hentoff, Norman Mailer, Parker Tyler, and Amos Vogel, the book presents writing on the films of Jean-Luc Godard, Pier Paolo Pasolini, Ousmane Sembene, Andy Warhol, and others and offers incisive essays and interviews from the late 1950s to early 1970s. Articles explore politics, revolution, and the cinema; underground and experimental film, pornography, and censorship; and the rise of independent film against the dominance of Hollywood. A new introductory essay by Ed Halter reveals the important role Evergreen Review and its publisher, Grove Press, played in advancing cinema during this period through innovations in production, distribution, and exhibition.

Editor Ed Halter began working on this book in 2001 with Barney Rosset, using his personal files and interviews with him as initial research.
By:   ,
With:  
Imprint:   Seven Stories Press,U.S.
Country of Publication:   United States
Dimensions:   Height: 235mm,  Width: 171mm, 
Weight:   367g
ISBN:   9781609806156
ISBN 10:   1609806158
Pages:   586
Publication Date:  
Audience:   General/trade ,  ELT Advanced
Format:   Paperback
Publisher's Status:   Active
"Introduction Ed Halter 1958 The Angry Young Film Makers Amos Vogel 1960 Jazz on a Summer's Day Jerry Tallmer The Magic Box Jerry Tallmer 1967 Dragtime and Drugtime, or, Film à la Warhol Parker Tyler Someday What You Really are is Going to Catch Up with You Michael O'Donoghue 13 Confusions Amos Vogel The New American Cinema: Five Replies to Amos Vogel Dan Talbot, Parker Tyler, Annette Michelson, Richard Schnickel, Gregory Markopoulos, with additional reply from Jonas Mekas Chappaqua Lawrence Shainberg 1968 Turning the Camera into the Audience Nat Hentoff Norman Mailer's Wild 90 Lita Eliscu Warhol's Nude Restaurant Stefan S. Brecht Vietnam Déjà Vu: A Film Review of Godard's La Chinoise Lita Eliscu The Edge Lita Eliscu Sex and Politics: An Interview with Vilgot Sjöman John Lahr The Sixth New York Film Festival Sidney Bernard 1969 A Way of Life: An Interview with John Cassavetes Andre S. Labarthe  Lola in LA: An Interview with Jacques Demy Michel Delahaye  The Day Rap Brown Became a Press Agent for Paramount Amos Vogel Solanas: Film as a Political Essay Louis Marcorelles Easy Rider: A Very American Thing L.M. Kit Carson Participatory Television Nat Hentoff Rocha's Film as Carnival  Frieda Grafe Rimbaud's Desert as Seen by Pasolini Wallace Fowlie   1970 Mister Freedom: An Interview with William Klein Abraham Segal Destroy, She Said: An Interview with Marguerite Duras  Jacques Rivette & Jean Narboni The Man Who Lies: An Interview with Alain Robbe-Grillet Tom and Helen Bishop Do They or Don't They? Why It Matters So Much Parker Tyler Mandabi: Confronting Africa Julius Lester Seeing America First with Andy Warhol Dotson Rader ""It Could Only Happen in California"" Dotson Rader Women's Lib: Save the Last Dance for Me   Tom Seligson Have You Seen It All, Dennis Hopper? L.M. Kit Carson Woodstock: An Interview with Michael Wadleigh and Bob Maurice Kent E. Carroll Mucking with the Real L.M. Kit Carson Film and Revolution: An Interview with Jean-Luc Godard Kent E. Carroll  We: A Manifesto, Dziga Vertov Papatakis: Tiger in a Think-Tank Parker Tyler Hollywood's Last Stand Tom Seligson 1971 Fonda, My Buddy Seymour Krim Eros and the Muses  Jerome Tarshis The First Annual Congress of the High Church of Hard Core Robert Coover News from Phyllis and Eberhard Kronhausen Sara Davidson Those Homophile Husbands Parker Tyler Pasolini's Decameron Tom Hamilton Film: Freaks and Fellini Nat Hentoff Perverse Chic Tom Seligson 1973 A Transit to Narcissus Norman Mailer"

ED HALTER is a critic and curator living in New York City. He is a founder and director of Light Industry, a venue for film and electronic art in Brooklyn, New York, and his writing has appeared in Artforum, The Believer, Bookforum, Cinema Scope, frieze, Little Joe, Mousse, Rhizome, Triple Canopy, the Village Voice and elsewhere. He is a 2009 recipient of the Creative Capital | Warhol Foundation Arts Writers Grant, and his book From Sun Tzu to Xbox- War and Video Games was published in 2006. From 1995 to 2005, he programmed and oversaw the New York Underground Film Festival, and he has curated screenings and exhibitions at Artists Space, BAM, the Flaherty Film Seminar, the ICA, London, the Museum of Modern Art, the New Museum, PARTICIPANT INC., and Tate Modern, as well as the cinema for Greater New York 2010 at MoMA PS1 and the film and video program for the 2012 Whitney Biennial. He teaches in the Film and Electronic Arts department at Bard College, and is currently writing a critical history of contemporary experimental cinema in America. BARNEY ROSSET (1922-2012) was the former owner of the publishing house Grove Press, and publisher and editor in chief of the magazine Evergreen Review. He led numerous successful legal battles against censorship in landmark rulings for free speech and the First Amendment.

Reviews for From the Third Eye: The Evergreen Review Film Reader

""Over a decade and a half in the making, From The Third Eye: The Evergreen Review Film Reader is the first comprehensive look at Barney Rosset and Grove Press’s contribution to film culture, collecting close to four dozen articles of the Evergreen Review’s film section, contextualized with an in-depth introduction by Ed Halter and brilliantly laid out in the distinguished style of the erstwhile magazine. That such a work has finally arrived forty-five years after the demise of the Review is a testament to Rosset’s repeated lament that Grove’s place in film history is overlooked. [...] Film, after all, was Rosset’s first artistic obsession, and he speaks of thinking more in images than in words, although it is undoubtedly the latter upon which his legacy rests. But the legendary publisher envisioned Grove as an interdisciplinary Leviathan, establishing dominion over theatre and film as well as the written word—a “new kind of communications center of the sixties” as Grove’s 1967 shareholder statement asserts with McLuhanesque bravado. Hearing this declaration decades hence, one is inclined to wonder—was it? As an answer to this question, From The Third Eye offers an intimate glimpse into this multimedia machine and its fractured legacy. [...] Unlike many contemporaneous underground outlets, [the Evergreen Review's] articles still crackle with crisp lucidity and a healthy skepticism, encouraging conversation and debate and giving a platform to a diversity of voices. From The Third Eye holds fast to this approach, unafraid to expose the foibles and faults of a venerable and problematic institution but equally determined to showcase the depths of its talent and inquiry."" –Mitch Anzuoni, Brooklyn Rail ""It could be argued that the world of underground film and culture in the 1960s and 1970s would not have flourished as it did without the essays in Evergreen Review. The film commentary, specifically, dealt with the political, cultural, and sexual evolution of cinema, and gave credence to these changes in the medium. Moreover, the journal's publisher, Grove Press, became heavily involved in the production and distribution of films in this period, so these writings managed to both elucidate and advertise experimental film. Featuring essays from 1958 to 1973, and written by the likes of cultural critics Nat Hentoff, Amos Vogel, and Parker Tyler, this is a snapshot of a major shift in cinema and a true time capsule of films and filmmakers who are often little known outside of a film studies class. VERDICT A wonderful resource on the virtues of directors Pier Paolo Pasolini, Jean-Luc Godard, Vilgot Sjöman, and many others; however, the esoteric nature of the subject matter and the high percentage of essays dealing with nudity or pornography relegates this to an academic audience or devoted film enthusiasts."" —Peter Thornell, Hingham P.L., MA “From the Third Eye has a historically useful appendix listing all known films ever distributed by Grove Press (including some surprises—Flaming Creatures, Fuses, Wavelength) and copious illustrations. I especially appreciated the house ads promoting Grove films (in which fake-looking hippies brandish a picket sign demanding movies by Glauber Rocha) and sex—education flicks (seminude hippies canoodle in a cow pasture). Among other things, Rosset created the intellectual stroke book of which his fellow Chicagoan Hugh Hefner could only dream.” –J. Hoberman, Artforum


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