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   Book Info

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Power in the Eye: An Introduction to Contemporary Irish Film  
Author: Terry Byrne
ISBN: 0810832968
Format: Handover
Publish Date: June, 2005
 
     
     
   Book Review

Book Description
Explores indigenous Irish film production. In addition to internationally-known Irish filmmakers (Neil Jordan, Jim Sheridan, Pat O'Connor), the book focuses on the works and opinions of Joe Comerford, Cathal Black, John T. Davis, Thaddeus O'Sullivan, Gerry Stembridge, Kieran Hickey, Bob Quinn, Pat Murphy, and many others.

About the Author
As a production designer, art director, and scenic artist, Terry Byrne has made a twenty year career in New York, Dublin, and London on television, film, and live performance projects. Six of those years were spent working for Radio Telefis Eireann (the Irish national television network) and for Dublin's Gate, Olympia, and Abbey theaters. He is a graduate of the drama department of Carnegie-Mellon University, teaches at the College of New Jersey and is author of "Production Design for Television" (Focal Press, 1992).




Power in the Eye: An Introduction to Contemporary Irish Film

FROM THE PUBLISHER

The use of Irish settings in mainstream Hollywood cinema has been well documented; Terry Byrne's objective in "Power in the Eye" is to explore indigenous Irish film production that addresses itself primarily to a native Irish audience and to analyze the social impact of the films on modern Irish society. This is no easy task, as the book makes clear. Historically denied access to mainstream production funds and distribution systems, the work of these indigenous Irish filmmakers has (with two or three notable exceptions) been relegated to Irish and European art-house cinemas and to European television channels. The book addresses mainly the work of these filmmakers, in the hope that the stimulation of interest outside Ireland will encourage interested students of cinema to seek them out. In that context, "Power in the Eye" should serve as a guidebook—a launching-point from which to begin a search for these films and the subsequent work of their makers. In addition to internationally-known Irish filmmakers (Neil Jordan, Jim Sheridan, Pat O'Connor), the book focuses on the works and opinions of Joe Comerford, Cathal Black, John T. Davis, Thaddeus O'Sullivan, Gerry Stembridge, Kieran Hickey, Bob Quinn, Pat Murphy, and many others. It also deals with the social, economic, and political issues surrounding the production of films for the Irish market and those which would speak to the world on behalf of the Irish. Funding, censorship, and the definition of Irish culture are all wound up in these issues and brought to bear quite strongly in the making of films about the Irish. "Power in the Eye" addresses these issues and aims to stimulate the reader to pursue them further and to equipthem to begin that pursuit.

Author Biography: As a production designer, art director, and scenic artist, Terry Byrne has made a twenty year career in New York, Dublin, and London on television, film, and live performance projects. Six of those years were spent working for Radio Telefis Eireann (the Irish national television network) and for Dublin's Gate, Olympia, and Abbey theaters. He is a graduate of the drama department of Carnegie-Mellon University, teaches at the College of New Jersey and is author of "Production Design for Television" (Focal Press, 1992).

FROM THE CRITICS

Booknews

Assuming that the use of Irish settings for mainstream Hollywood cinema are well enough known, focuses on indigenous film production addressed primarily to an Irish audience. Examines the work of internationally known filmmakers such as Neil Jordan, Jim Sheridan, and Pat O'Connor, but includes as well the myriad of lesser known artists who struggle for funding and audiences. Also discusses the social, economic, and political issues around films for the Irish market. Annotation c. by Book News, Inc., Portland, Or.

     



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