About the Book:In considering Jane Campion’s early award-winning short films on through international sensationThe Pianoand beyond, Kathleen McHugh traces the director’s distinctive visual style as well as her commitment to consistently renovating the conventions of “women’s films.” By refusing to position her female protagonists as victims, McHugh argues, Campion scrupulously avoids the moral structures of melodrama, and though she often works with the narratives, mise-en-scene, and visual tropes typical of that genre, her films instead invite a distanced or even amused engagement.Jane Campionconcludes with four brief, revelatory interviews and a filmography. Campion spoke twice with Michel Cimentafter the screening of her short and medium-length films at the Cannes Film Festival 1986, and three years later, after the Cannes screening ofSweetie.Judith Lewis narrates a Beverly Hills interview with Campion that followed the release ofHoly Smoke,and Lizzie Francke’s interview, reprinted fromSight and Sound,centers on Campion’s filmIn the Cut,adapted from Susanna Moore’s novel.A volume in the series Contemporary Film Directors, edited by James R. Naremore
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