
Off the Map
Freedom, Control, and the Future in Michael Mann's Public Enemies
Niles Schwartz(Author)
Wipf and Stock Publishers
Published on 11. June 2018
152 pages
978-1-5326-3659-2 (ISBN)
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Description
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A motion picture chronicling the last adventures of bank robber John Dillinger (Johnny Depp), Public Enemies was met with much bafflement upon its 2009 release. Director Michael Mann's terse storytelling and unorthodox use of high-definition digital cameras challenged viewers' familiarity with Hollywood's historical gangland elegance while highlighting Public Enemies' own place in a medium--and culture--undergoing sweeping technological change. In Off the Map, Niles Schwartz immerses us in Mann's representation of Dillinger, a subject increasingly aware of his own role as a romanticized frontier folk hero, in flight from an enveloping bureaucratic system. The cultural issues of Dillinger's 1930s anticipate the 21st century watershed moment for the moving image, as our relationship with the pictures surrounding us increasingly affects our own sense of identity, historical truth, and means of relating to each other. Mann's follow-up, the hacker thriller Blackhat (2015), reflects a world where Public Enemies' abstract surveillance state has since colonized the firmament of our everyday lives. Yet in this virtual labyrinth of surplus images, cinema may inwardly illuminate a transformative path for us. Off the Map places Mann's late works in deep focus, exploring our present relationship to cinema on a backdrop that swings from the blockbuster spectacle of Avatar to the curious intimacy of Moonrise Kingdom, ultimately suggesting the mysterious space between the viewer and the screen may yet become a sanctuary of deep spiritual reflection.
More details
Series
Language
English
Place of publication
Eugene
United States
ISBN-13
978-1-5326-3659-2 (9781532636592)
Schweitzer Classification
Other editions
Additional editions

Book
06/2018
Wipf & Stock Publishers
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Book
06/2018
Cascade Books
€39.30
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Person
Niles Schwartz studied at Grand View University, the University of Iowa, and Hamline University. He is the co-founder and critic at the Minneapolis / St. Paul Cinephile Society (mspcinephiles.org), and makes regular contributions to The Point Magazine (thepointmag.com). He lives in Minneapolis.
Content
- Intro
- Title Page
- Series Foreword
- Acknowledgments
- Introduction: "The Way of the Future
- Chapter 1: 2009 and the New Image
- Chapter 2: Last of the Frontier Folk Heroes
- Chapter 3: Mechanical Eyes, Tactile Bodies
- Chapter 4: "Our Type Cannot Get the Job Done"
- Chapter 5: Embodying Romance
- Chapter 6: Hoover's Cinema of Control
- Chapter 7: Dillinger's Cinema of Liberation
- Chapter 8: Bodies Electric in an Elegant Universe: Blackhat
- Conclusion: A God's Eye View
- Bibliography
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