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Overhearing Film Dialogue
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30 March 2000

Sarah Kozloff shows why dialogue has been neglected in the analysis of narrative film and uncovers the essential contributions dialogue makes to a film's development and impact. She uses narrative theory and drama theory to analyze the functions that dialogue typically serves in a film.
The second part of the book is a comprehensive discussion of the role and nature of dialogue in four film genres: westerns, screwball comedies, gangster films, and melodramas. Focusing on topics such as class and ethnic dialects, censorship, and the effect of dramatic irony, Kozloff provides an illuminating new perspective on film genres.
Introduction: The Study of Filmic Speech
PART ONE
GENERAL CHARACTERISTICS
1. The Functions of Dialogue in Narrative Film
2. Structural and Stylistic Variables
3· Integration
PART TWO
DIALOGUE AND GENRE
4· Verbal Frontiers: Dialogue in Westerns
5· Word Play: Dialogue in Screwball Comedies
6. Words as Weapons: Dialogue in Gangster Films
7· Misunderstandings: Dialogue in Melodramas
Conclusion
Notes
Select Filmography
Bibliography
Index