From:
Cinema Journal
Volume 51, Number 3, Spring 2012
pp. 74-96 | 10.1353/cj.2012.0058
Abstract:
This article examines how public discourse portrayed the appeal of widescreen cinema in the mid-1950s. Tracing this appeal to Cinerama's and CinemaScope's purported effects on the human body, the article contends that these systems promised to align viewers with a powerful apparatus while also threatening to submit them to it.
Access your Project MUSE content using one of the login options below

