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Film

Stanley Kubrick's Napoleon: The Greatest Movie Never Made
New!

Stanley Kubrick's Napoleon: The Greatest Movie Never Made

Hardcover with 10 smaller books inserted, includes image database, 29.5 x 37.3 cm (11.6 x 14.7 in.), 2874 pages
$ 700.00
Tucked inside of a carved-out book, all the elements from Stanley Kubrick's archives that readers need to imagine what his unmade film about the emperor might have been like, including a facsimile of the script. This collector's edition is limited to 1,000 numbered copies.
Art Cinema
New!

Art Cinema

Hardcover, 23.1 x 28.9 cm (9.1 x 11.4 in.), 192 pages
$ 29.99
Over 500 of the most creative, innovative and provocative films ever are examined, along with the auteurs, artists, mavericks, visionaries and iconoclasts behind them. This compendium of art cinema contextualizes the development and history of film as art.
Japanese Cinema

Japanese Cinema

Hardcover, 23.1 x 28.9 cm (9.1 x 11.4 in.), 192 pages
$ 29.99
Beyond Kurosawa: exploring the work of the greatest Japanese filmmakers
The Godfather Family Album, Art Edition B

The Godfather Family Album, Art Edition B

Hardcover + Box, 29 x 44 cm (11.4 x 17.3 in.), 444 pages
$ 4000.00
Selections from Steve Schapiro's photographs provide an insider's view of the making of the legendary trilogy. This Art Edition is limited to 100 numbered copies, each signed by Steve Schapiro, and comes with one of two pigment prints: Don Michael Corleone: “I know it was you, Fredo. You broke my heart – you broke my heart!” (Al Pacino).

Stanley Kubrick's Napoleon
The Greatest Movie Never Made. Kubrick's unfilmed masterpiece. Click here & watch the video!

Editors in charge
Alison Castle received a BA in philosophy from Columbia University and an MA in photography and film from New York University (NYU/International Center of Photography masters program). The editor of TASCHEN's Some Like it Hot and The Stanley Kubrick Archives, she lives in Paris, home of the world's best cinemas.

Paul Duncan has edited 50 film books for TASCHEN, including the award-winning The Ingmar Bergman Archives, and authored Alfred Hitchcock and Stanley Kubrick in the Film Series.

Jürgen Müller has worked as an art critic, a curator of numerous exhibitions, a visiting professor at various universities, and has published books and numerous articles on cinema and art history. Currently he holds the chair for art history at the University of Dresden, where he lives. Müller is the series editor for TASCHEN’s Movies decade titles.

From the Reading Room
eCards

eCard 'Art Cinema'

Still from Matthew Barney's Cremaster 3 (2002)

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