
Dark Energy
Hitchcock's Absolute Camera and the Physics of Cinematic Spacetime
- 256 pages
- English
- PDF
- Available on iOS & Android
About this book
Alfred Hitchcock and the cinema grew up together. Born in 1899, four years after the first 'official' film showing in Paris, Hitchcock demonstrated an early fascination with the new art of the cinema. He entered the film industry in 1920, and by 1925, he had directed his first feature-length film, The Pleasure Garden. His subsequent film career paralleled the phenomenal growth of the film industry during the years 1925-1976, the year of his last film. In the same way, Hitchcock's films are consonant with the revolutionary theories in the fields of physics and cosmology that were transforming the twentieth century, personified by the genius of Albert Einstein. Philip Skerry's book applies the theories of dark energy, entropy, black holes, and quantum mechanics to Hitchcock's technological genius and camera aesthetics, helping to explain the concept of 'pure cinema' and providing verification for its remarkable power. Including interviews with influential physicists, this study opens up new ways of analyzing Hitchcock's art.
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Information
Table of contents
- Cover
- Half Title
- Title
- Copyright
- Dedication
- Contents
- Acknowledgments
- Epigraph
- Prologue: On time, light, and Hitchcock
- Introduction: Searching for light in the darkness
- 1 In search of light and enlightenment
- 2 Hitchcock’s “absolute camera”
- 3 Rear Window: The apotheosis of the absolute camera
- 4 Two princes of Dark Energy
- 5 Psycho: A New Paradigm
- 6 The quantum universe of Vertigo
- 7 The physicists speak
- Epilogue
- Notes
- Bibliography
- Index