In Cinema, If You Please, Murray Pomerance explores our ways of
watching film in light of socially organized forms of pleasure that date
back to the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries. Wedding the notion of
pleasure in film viewing to the history of pleasure in the West, the
book considers pleasure gardens and promenading; the history of oil
painting and its display; the passion for travel and exposure to the
exotic and strange; and forms of musical repetition and restatement.
With in-depth studies of films like Vertigo, The Passenger, A Matter of
Life and Death, Clouds of Sils Maria, Personal Shopper, Call Me By Your
Name and Blow-Up, this ground-breaking book draws the reader into the
past and the present at once, joining an understanding of personal and
visual delight to their cultural and historical roots.