About this book
"Nikita" (1990) is the story of a nineteen-year old junkie, Nikita (Anne Parillaud) who is given a second chance in life through being trained to be - and becoming - a skilled assassin for the State. "Nikita" is a cult classic, directed by Luc Besson (with Thierry Arbogast as director of photography) in his hallmark powerful style. The film was an international hit, which spawned a TV series and a Hollywood remake. Susan Hayward develops here a fresh and provocative way of understanding "Nikita"'s plot structure as a neo-baroque symphony. She goes in depth into key sequences of the film, examines its reception as a popular film by audiences and critics, and looks at "The Assassin", the Hollywood remake of "Nikita". This is a wonderfully exciting book on an underrated film. It also shows that the woman placed at the centre of a film noir can', as Susan Hayward points out, 'for once win - or at least 'get away with it".
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Information
Table of contents
- Contents
- Acknowledgements
- Synopsis
- Introductions
- 1. Production contexts
- 2. Nikita, a neo-baroque symphony
- 3. Sequence analyses
- 4. Reception
- 5. The Remake of Nikita - Point of no Return/The Assassin (John Badham, 1993) - or 'How Hollywood took Nina Simone to the movies and learnt to karaoke Nikita'
- Conclusion
- Appendix 1: Credits
- Appendix 2: Filmography
- Appendix 3: Selected Bibliography
