Film as a Subversive Art

Summary

Film as a Subversive Art is a fully illustrated 1974 film history book by Amos Vogel with mini-essays on over 600 films.[1]

Summary edit

The book was a catalogue of films[2] that broke aesthetic, sexual and ideological boundaries.[3]

Selected examples edit

[4][5][6]

Publication history edit

The book was published by Random House, New York; it was re-printed in London by C.T. Editions with a new foreword and introduction by Scott MacDonald in 2005, and again in 2021 as a "remastered" edition by The Film Desk.

Film edit

A documentary film of the same name about Vogel and directed by Paul Cronin was released in 2003.[7]

Bibliography edit

  • Vogel, Amos (2005) [1974]. Film as a Subversive Art (Reprint ed.). C.T. Editions. ISBN 0-9547071-1-7.

References edit

  1. ^ Anthology Film Archives
  2. ^ FILM AS A SUBVERSIVE ART: The End of Sexual Taboos — Spectacle Theater
  3. ^ Museum of the Moving Image
  4. ^ Amos Vogel and Film as a Subversive Art Honored with Series of 16 Iconic Films - BWW TV World
  5. ^ The Canon of Subversion: Amos Vogel and the Films That Assailed the Art|The Village Voice
  6. ^ Amos Vogel, Founder of the New York Film Festival and Cinema 16, Dies at 91|IndieWire
  7. ^ Video as a Subversive Art: The 48th San Francisco International Film Festival — Senses of Cinema

External links edit

  • The Subversive Nub