Historical Dictionary of Australian and New Zealand Cinema

By (author) Karina Aveyard, Albert Moran, Errol Vieth

Hardback - £99.00

Publication date:

26 December 2017

Length of book:

448 pages

Publisher

Rowman & Littlefield Publishers

Dimensions:

228x148mm
6x9"

ISBN-13: 9781538111260

Filmmakers have honed their skills and many have achieved critical and popular success at home and abroad, as have actors and other crew. American filmmakers and companies have found it cheaper to make films in Australia because wages and salaries are lower, tax rebates have been attractive and the expertise in most areas of filmmaking is comparable to that of anywhere in the world. At the same time, Australian audiences still enjoy watching Australian films, making some of them profitable, even if this is a small profit when considered in Hollywood terms.

New Zealand filmmakers, cast and crew have shown that they are equal to the world’s best in making films with international themes, while other films have shown that the world is interested in New Zealand narratives and settings. Increased support for Maori filmmakers and stories has had a significant impact on production levels and on the diversity of stories that now reach the screen. It has also helped create more viable career paths for those who continue to be based in their home country.

This second edition of Historical Dictionary of Australian and New Zealand Cinema contains a chronology, an introduction, and an extensive bibliography. The dictionary section has over 700 cross-referenced entries on leading films as well as many directors, writers, actors and producers. It also covers early pioneers, film companies, genres and government bodies.
This second edition of Moran and Vieth's dictionary retains its predecessor’s key features: separate chronologies and brief historical overviews of the Australia and New Zealand/Aotearoa film industries; up-to-date entries on each country’s films, cinematic personnel, organizations, genres, and themes; and an in-depth combined bibliography. Aveyard (Univ. of Sydney, Australia) and Moran (independent scholar) thoroughly revised the entries throughout; Vieth is credited posthumously as coauthor of the first edition (CH, May'06, 43-5004). Additions include recent innovations like digital cinema and such notable films as Animal Kingdom, Australia, Happy Feet, the Hobbit trilogy, and Lion. . . the extensive cross-references prove useful: terms with their own entries are boldfaced in the text. The bibliography, slimmed down to 55 pages. . . does provide a useful historical perspective. As the authors note, this dictionary is not meant to be exhaustive, but it supplements some of the more thorough, though somewhat dated, sources listed in the bibliography, e.g., The Oxford Companion to Australian Film, ed. by Brian McFarlane, Geoff Mayer, and Ina Bertrand (CH, Sep'00, 38-0024), and Celluloid Dreams: A Century of Film in New Zealand, editor in chief Geoffrey Churchman (1997).



Summing Up: Recommended. All readers.