The Kamera book on movie movements is a one-stop guide to the major movements that have shaped our sense of what cinema is and can be. It introduces the reader to definitions of the founding
concepts in Film Studies such as authorship and genre, technological impacts and the rise of digital cinema, social influences and notions of the avant-garde, and cinema's emergence as a major
art form that reflects and shapes the world.
It explores, in concise and clear sections, how major works from the classic French realist La RFgle de Jeu to the dazzling animation of Norman McLaren and the memorial documentary of Shoah,
were conceived, developed and produced, and eventually received by the public, critics and film history. Offering a concise overview of a vast and compelling subject, it's a book for both the
film enthusiast and the Film Studies student.