Gabriele Pedullà’s In Broad Daylight reviewed in Publisher's Weekly and Spectrum Culture
Gabriele Pedullà’s In Broad Daylight: Movies and Spectators After the Cinema has recently received glowing reviews in Publisher's Weekly and Spectrum Culture.
Publisher's Weekly writes of Pedullà’s charting of the transition from a communal cinema experience to a lone individual's dark room and monitor glare:
As with so much else, technological innovations have had unintended consequences in this realm, as making films readily available on the small screen affects, inter alia, the experience of viewing them (movies shown on TVs literally run at a higher frames-per-second rate than they do on the big screen). What was once a communal experience in a darkened theater that shut out the outside world is now often a solitary one undertaken while multitasking at home....Insights abound, and the author’s facility with so many different disciplines--from ancient Greek philosophy to 20th century semiotics--will ensure that casual filmgoers and academics alike find something salient to ponder in Pedullà’s treatise.
At Spectrum Culture, Jesse Cataldo appends this with recognition of Pedullà’s accessible application of theory:
While some passages get into knotty post-structural theory, referencing Baudrillard and Lacan, nothing feels beyond the comprehension of the layman. Pedulla is good at building a lucid path toward complex notions, and his best ideas feel earned because he sets them up so well. Some of these have to do with the hypnotic power of television, building off Serge Daney’s seminal ‘80s TV criticism to great effect. Pedulla posits that movie theaters swallow viewers up, holding them prisoner, an effect that eventually results in a kind of Stockholm Syndrome empathy with the characters onscreen.
Visit Publisher's Weekly and Spectrum Culture to read the reviews in full.