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Featured researches published by Noah Isenberg.


Film Quarterly | 2011

Fatih Akin's Cinema of Intersections

Noah Isenberg

A career survey of the work of Turkish German director Fatih Akin, whose films (notably The Edge of Heaven and Soul Kitchen ) combine comedy with darker notes, emphasizing the theme of dual identity and paying particular attention to the use of music.


Archive | 2007

Permanent Vacation: Home and Homelessness in the Life and Work of Edgar G. Ulmer

Noah Isenberg

In her preface to the catalogue published in conjunction with the Edgar G. Ulmer retrospective, held at the 1997 Edinburgh Film Festival, curator Lizzie Francke observes how the Austrian-born director and so-called wandering emigre once tellingly remarked, “there are no nationalities, the only home you have is the motion picture set.”1 For Ulmer, who was born in 1904 in Olmiitz, in the provinces of the Austro-Hungarian Empire, a multinational amalgamation that no longer existed by the time he was in his teens, the question of home and nationality remained an elusive one throughout his adult life. He personally experienced the mass migrations prompted by two World Wars—the first landing him in foster care in Uppsala, Sweden, after his father’s death in Austrian uniform in 1916, and the second sealing his fate to remain, at least temporarily, among the many refugees from Hitler’s Europe who decamped from Berlin and Vienna for Southern California in the 1930s and 1940s—and in his some thirty-five year career as a director, he returned to the basic theme of displacement with near obsessive frequency. The lack of permanence or firm footing that might link his subjects to a stable location—a city, a community, a nation— is something Ulmer explores in his best-known work, including The Black Cat (1934), Detour (1945), and Ruthless (1948), as well as in his lesser- known films: in his ethnic pictures directed in and around New York City during the mid- to late 1930s; in his eleven-film cycle of B-movies shot at Producers Releasing Corporation (PRC), the poverty row studio where, from 1942 to 1946, Ulmer earned a reputation as one of the pioneers of low-budget independent filmmaking; and in his later films, many of which were shot in Europe in the 1950s and 1960s and all of which were made outside the industry norms and standards of Hollywood.


Archive | 1999

Between Redemption and Doom: The Strains of German-Jewish Modernism

Noah Isenberg


Archive | 2008

Weimar cinema : an essential guide to classic films of the era

Noah Isenberg


Cinema Journal | 2004

Perennial Detour: The Cinema of Edgar G. Ulmer and the Experience of Exile

Noah Isenberg


Film Quarterly | 2012

Carnage and All: A Discussion

Noah Isenberg; Robert A. White


Film Quarterly | 2014

Vienna Is No More? Film History, Psycho-Geography, and the Great City of Dreams

Noah Isenberg


Archive | 2014

Edgar G. Ulmer: A Filmmaker at the Margins

Noah Isenberg


Film Quarterly | 2010

Review: Edgar G. Ulmer: Detour on Poverty Row, ed.Gary D. Rhodes

Noah Isenberg


Germanic Review | 2008

Introduction: Peter Weiss's Die Ästhetik des Widerstands at Twenty-Five

Noah Isenberg

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