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Wesleyan Film

Action Speaks Louder: Violence, Spectacle, and the American Action Movie

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An authoritative and entertaining history of the action film

For more than 30 years, the action movie has been the film genre that most represents Hollywood to the world, as action films find blockbuster success at box offices internationally. Still, the genre seldom receives the critical attention it deserves. Studying its trends, key components, and visual excesses, this new and expanded edition of Action Speaks Louder traces the genre's evolution to reveal how it has come to assume its place of prominence in American culture. With scores of in-depth case studies―including films such as Dirty Harry, RoboCop, Die Hard, Lethal Weapon, Armageddon, Spider-Man, War of the Worlds, and The Incredibles―author Eric Lichtenfeld draws on film analysis, production histories, critical responses, studio marketing materials, and original filmmaker interviews. Up-to-date and comprehensive, Action Speaks Louder is the definitive study of the movies' most kinetic form of fun.

Paperback

First published September 30, 2004

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Eric Lichtenfeld

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Displaying 1 - 4 of 4 reviews
Profile Image for Andrea.
412 reviews8 followers
March 25, 2016
What I love about Lichtenfeld's book is its coverage of the Hollywood business aspect of films. Little nuggets of information from behind the scene help me better understand the hows and whys of a film's end product. I also like that he gives more attention to the filmic elements themselves when going into the occasional analysis. This kind of proof is more helpful and shows appreciation of the film as a medium that some scholars do not show (when they treat it as literature and just talk about action and dialogue).
Profile Image for Fraser Sherman.
Author 10 books33 followers
September 4, 2021
4.5. Lichtenfeld argues that the action movie genre started in the 1970s with Death Wish and Dirty Harry, drawing elements from Westerns and crime thrillers. He then traces its growth through the Stallone and Schwarzenegger years, the martial artists (Chuck Norris, Jean Claude van Damme), the really over-the-top stuff and then 1990s disaster movies followed by superheroes.
I find some of his selections odd — why is Batman Begins an action movie but not Batman? — hence the 4.5. But his analysis of individual films and how the genre evolved over time is excellent.
Profile Image for Randy Lander.
237 reviews44 followers
April 13, 2009
In all honesty, I only got about 60 pages into this before realizing it wasn't for me. Lichtenfeld has some interesting observations to make about the action genre, but the approach is extremely dry and academic, and it makes for a tedious read.

So I'm not sure who the audience is. Surely someone with a familiarity with these movies is going to want a breezier read, and surely someone with an eye towards purely academic writing is more likely to be a Merchant Ivory fan, right? :)
Profile Image for Thomas.
347 reviews16 followers
June 29, 2015
An interesting academic study of action movies. I especially liked the first third of the book, where he discusses the origins of the action genre. It's a bit like a Western transplanted to the big city, mixed in with a bit of old fashioned film noir. The later chapters aren't as compelling, I think -- it seems silly to read a discussion of the merits of Dante's Peak vs. Volcano, for example.
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