Robert Phillip Kolker is an American film historian, theorist, and critic. He has authored and edited a number of influential books on cinema and media studies. He is a Professor Emeritus at the University of Maryland, College Park.
Robert P. Kolker graduated with a PhD in English literature from Columbia University in 1969. [1] In the early 1970s, Kolker began writing about filmmakers for Film Comment and Sight and Sound . [2] [3] In 1972 Kolker interviewed Jean-Luc Godard and Jean-Pierre Gorin while they were on a U.S. film tour. The interview was originally published by Sight and Sound in 1973, and later reprinted in David Sterritt's 1998 book of Godard interviews. [4]
A film academic and media studies scholar, Kolker has taught at the University of Maryland, Georgia Tech, and the University of Virginia. [1] [5] [6] He specializes in cinema of the United States, international cinema, European art cinema, Latin American cinema, and cultural studies. [1] [7] [8] [9]
His first book A Cinema of Loneliness: Penn, Kubrick, Coppola, Scorsese, Altman was first published in 1980 by Oxford University Press, and is in its fourth revised edition. [6] [10] [11] The Directors Guild of America said it "remains the most acute and perceptive critical study of some of the finest films and directors of the Hollywood New Wave." [10] The book examined film directors of the "New Hollywood", who had been influenced by American film noir and the French New Wave, and how their films influenced American society of the 1960s and 1970s. [12] Kolker observed that "for all the challenge and adventure, their films speak to a continual impotence in the world, an inability to change and to create change. When they do depict action, it is invariably performed by lone heroes in an enormously destructive and antisocial manner." [13] In A Cinema of Loneliness, Kolker also wrote about buddy films as an extension of male bonding, in which men in these movies could engage in nonsexual activity together while marginalizing women. [14] Kolker noted that Robert Altman was one of the few American filmmakers to examine the results of men's violent acts, and that Altman's 1982 film Come Back to the 5 & Dime dealt with the "crisis of women confronting the oppression of patriarchy." [15] Kolker also pointed out that the aural and visual simultaneity in Altman's films was critical as that represented an emphasis on the plurality of events, which required viewers to become active spectators. [16] According to Kolker, Stanley Kubrick's films were "more intellectually rigorous than the work of any other American filmmaker." [6] Kolker's second book The Altering Eye: Contemporary International Cinema, published in 1983 also by Oxford University Press, concentrated on image, form, and politics in film since World War II, particularly in Europe and Latin America. [8] [17] [18]
In addition to Kubrick, Kolker's analysis of film auteurs includes books on Orson Welles, Alfred Hitchcock, Bernardo Bertolucci, and Wim Wenders. [1] Luciana Bohne, co-founder of Film Criticism, said Kolker's 1985 book on Bertolucci was "first rate" in its exploration of the director's Marx/Freud dialectic. [19] Writing about Bertolucci's 1970 made-for-TV film The Spider's Stratagem , about an alleged anti-fascist hero, Kolker observed the film was "about the political effects of spectacle" and how it permitted the viewer to identify and comprehend participating in it. [20] [21] The book also observed that Bertolucci's representation of women was problematic, due to the way he "often places them in inferior or, worse, destructive roles." [22]
Kolker's books and articles of the 1980s, while heavily focused on male auteurs, analyzed cinema using feminist film theory (such as that of Laura Mulvey). [9] [18] And in 1989 he co-authored an article with Madeleine Cottenet-Hage on the cinema of Marguerite Duras. [23] Hage was Professor Emerita of French at the University of Maryland, College Park. [24] [25]
Kolker has also written for Film Quarterly and Cinema Journal . [26] [27] Kolker, writing in 2004 for Cinema Journal, pushed for film/media studies to return to a seriousness and celebration of complexity, history, and politics. "Film/media studies," he wrote, "is in many important ways, only getting started. As filmmaking itself turns more and more to the digital, we become archivists of past knowledge, scholars of the present, prophets of the future. As our outlook broadens and we begin to understand the intertextualities of film and all other visual and narrative arts, we can see that film is part of the overwhelming text of cultural practice." [27]
In 2006, a 30th-anniversary 2-disc "Collector's Edition" DVD of Martin Scorsese's film Taxi Driver was released. The first disc contained the film itself with audio commentary by Kolker and screenwriter Paul Schrader, and the second disc contained special features with those two in addition to extensive reflections from Scorsese. [28] [29]
In 2006, Kolker edited an Oxford University Press book on Kubrick's 1968 science fiction film 2001: A Space Odyssey to reexamine its complexities. [30] Contributors included Barry Keith Grant, Marcia Landy, Michael Mateas, and Susan White. In 2019, Kolker co-authored a book on Kubrick's 1999 film Eyes Wide Shut . Kolker has also written about The Stanley Kubrick Archive at University of the Arts London. [31]
In 2008, Kolker edited The Oxford Handbook of Film and Media Studies, which included perspectives on film and media in the U.S., Latin America, Asia, and the Middle East. Articles in the book also explored developments in new media, examining topics such as copyright, globalization, and video game genres. [32] In the book's introduction, Kolker wrote,
"Traditional film studies starts with the individual work, genre, or director, and moves outward to larger issues of the ideologies of production and reception, to gender issues, to the effects of distribution on viewership, and increasingly to the ways globalization is affecting national cinemas, always attempting to solidify its ground in theory. Media studies starts with larger textual entities, sometimes isolating a media artifact – a genre of music, a television series, a social-networking site, a computer game — often analyzing these from the perspective of subcultural, audience-specific interaction." [33]
In his 2015 book The Cultures of American Film, Kolker said cultures are "expressions of our engagement — individually, by group, class, race, gender, by institutions — with one another and with the world at large," and film culture is created when filmmakers decide to "engage with the world by creating movies" and when viewers "engage with films according to...taste and the responses learned by seeing many other films." [34] The book chapters integrated technical and analytical aspects of American film into the book's cultural survey, although analysis of race and racism was mostly confined to examinations of Sidney Poitier, blaxploitation films, and the distressing legacy of D. W. Griffith's controversial, racist 1915 film The Birth of a Nation . [34] For example, Kolker pointed out that William Joseph Simmons, future Imperial Wizard of the Ku Klux Klan, had capitalized on The Birth of a Nation's initial popularity to "run an ad for the Klan next to an ad for the movie," resulting in the dormant hate organization being "reborn at Stone Mountain, Georgia." [34]
Kolker has co-authored with Nathan Abrams two books on Stanley Kubrick:
Eyes Wide Shut: Stanley Kubrick and the Making of his Final Film (Oxford University Press, 2019) is an "archeology" of the film from inception to pre-production, production, and post production, including discussion about whether the release print of Eyes Wide Shut is the film Kubrick wanted the public to see.
Kubrick: An Odyssey (Faber & Faber, Pegasus/Simon & Schuster, 2024) is a "cradle to grave" biography of one of the great filmmakers of the 20th century. It draws upon original research in the Kubrick Archives at the University of the Arts, London, as well as interviews with family members and co-workers.
Stanley Kubrick was an American filmmaker and photographer. Widely considered one of the greatest filmmakers of all time, his films were nearly all adaptations of novels or short stories, spanning a number of genres and gaining recognition for their intense attention to detail, innovative cinematography, extensive set design, and dark humor.
Andrew Sarris was an American film critic. He was a leading proponent of the auteur theory of film criticism.
Jean-Luc Godard was a Franco-Swiss film director, screenwriter, and film critic. He rose to prominence as a pioneer of the French New Wave film movement of the 1960s, alongside such filmmakers as François Truffaut, Agnès Varda, Éric Rohmer and Jacques Demy. He was arguably the most influential French filmmaker of the post-war era. According to AllMovie, his work "revolutionized the motion picture form" through its experimentation with narrative, continuity, sound, and camerawork. His most acclaimed films include Breathless (1960), Vivre sa vie (1962), Contempt (1963), Band of Outsiders (1964), Alphaville (1965), Pierrot le Fou (1965), Masculin Féminin (1966), Weekend (1967) and Goodbye to Language (2014).
The New Hollywood, Hollywood Renaissance, American New Wave, or New American Cinema, was a movement in American film history from the mid-1960s to the early 1980s, when a new generation of filmmakers came to prominence. They influenced the types of film produced, their production and marketing, and the way major studios approached filmmaking. In New Hollywood films, the film director, rather than the studio, took on a key authorial role.
HealtH is a 1980 American ensemble comedy film, the fifteenth feature project from director Robert Altman. It stars Carol Burnett, Glenda Jackson, James Garner, Lauren Bacall, and Paul Dooley, and was written by Altman, Dooley and Frank Barhydt. The film's title is an acronym for "Happiness, Energy, and Longevity through Health".
Paul Herman was an American actor. He was best known for playing Randy in David O. Russell's dramedy Silver Linings Playbook (2012) and Whispers DiTullio in Martin Scorsese's crime epic The Irishman (2019).
The Spider's Stratagem is a 1970 Italian made-for-television political mystery-drama film written and directed by Bernardo Bertolucci and produced by RAI. The screenplay is based on the 1944 short story Theme of the Traitor and the Hero by Jorge Luis Borges. The film stars Giulio Brogi and Alida Valli, and follows the son of an antifascist martyr who travels to his namesake’s father’s hometown, uncovering secrets of his father’s past in the process.
The Film Foundation is a US-based non-profit organization dedicated to film preservation and the exhibition of restored and classic cinema. It was founded by director Martin Scorsese and several other leading filmmakers in 1990. The foundation raises funds and awareness for film preservation projects and creates educational programs about film. The foundation and its partners have restored more than 900 films.
2001: A Space Odyssey is a 1968 epic science fiction film produced and directed by Stanley Kubrick. The screenplay was written by Kubrick and science fiction author Arthur C. Clarke, and was inspired by Clarke's 1951 short story "The Sentinel" and other short stories by Clarke. Clarke also published a novelisation of the film, in part written concurrently with the screenplay, after the film's release. The film stars Keir Dullea, Gary Lockwood, William Sylvester, and Douglas Rain and follows a voyage by astronauts, scientists, and the sentient supercomputer HAL to Jupiter to investigate an alien monolith.
David Sterritt is a film critic, author and scholar. He is most notable for his work on Alfred Hitchcock and Jean-Luc Godard, and his many years as the Film Critic for The Christian Science Monitor, where, from 1968 until his retirement in 2005, he championed avant garde cinema, theater and music. He has a Ph.D. in Cinema Studies from New York University and is the Chairman of the National Society of Film Critics.
Thomas Pierson is an American composer, conductor and film director.
Andrew Annandale Sinclair FRSL FRSA was a British novelist, historian, biographer, critic, filmmaker, and a publisher of classic and modern film scripts. He has been described as a "writer of extraordinary fluency and copiousness, whether in fiction or in American social history".
Gene D. Phillips, S.J. was an American author, educator, and Catholic priest.
The Story of Film: An Odyssey is a 2011 British documentary film about the history of film, presented on television in 15 one-hour chapters with a total length of over 900 minutes. It was directed and narrated by Mark Cousins, a film critic from Northern Ireland, based on his 2004 book The Story of Film.
A list of books and essays about Stanley Kubrick and his films.
Stanley Kubrick (1928–1999) directed thirteen feature films and three short documentaries over the course of his career. His work as a director, spanning diverse genres, is widely regarded as extremely influential.
Part of the New Hollywood wave, Kubrick's films are considered by film historian Michel Ciment to be "among the most important contributions to world cinema in the twentieth century", and he is frequently cited as one of the greatest and most influential directors in the history of cinema. According to film historian and Kubrick scholar Robert Kolker, Kubrick's films were "more intellectually rigorous than the work of any other American filmmaker."
Winnifred "Wendy" Torrance is a fictional character and protagonist of the 1977 horror novel The Shining by the American writer Stephen King. She also appears in the prologue of Doctor Sleep, a 2013 sequel to The Shining.
Modernist film is related to the art and philosophy of modernism.
Carl Howard Freedman is an American writer, literary theorist and professor of English literature at Louisiana State University. He is best known for the non-fiction book Critical Theory and Science Fiction, and his scholarly work on the writer Philip K. Dick. Freedman's other works include a series of books on Isaac Asimov, Ursula K. Le Guin and Samuel R. Delany, and several essays and a book on China Miéville. In 2018, he won the Pilgrim Award for lifetime contribution to science fiction and fantasy scholarship.