What happens when fictional characters acknowledge our 'presence' as
film spectators? By virtue of its eccentricity and surprising frequency
as a filmic device, direct address enables us to ask some fundamental
questions of film theory, history and criticism and tackle, head-on,
assumptions about the cinema as a medium. Brown provides a broad
understanding of the role of direct address within fiction cinema, with
focused analysis of its role in certain strands of avant-garde or
experimental cinema, on the one hand, and popular genre traditions
(musicals and comedies) on the other.