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Renowned scholar David Weir provides an in-depth analysis of Ernst Lubitsch's Trouble in Paradise (1932), exploring the film's significance to cultural and cinematic history.
As light, elegant, and serious as a Lubitsch film, this volume gives us a full analysis and appreciation of one of the great director's greatest movies. Eric Smoodin, University of California, Davis, USA
1. Introduction: A biographical sketch of Lubitsch's career leading up to Trouble in Paradise.2. The development of classic Hollywood technique3. Analysis of Trouble in Paradise4. Reception, legacy and influence5. ConclusionNotesCredits Bibliography
David Weir is an American scholar who has written widely on the Decadent movement in literature and its impact in America. He is Associate Professor on the Faculty of Humanities and Social Sciences at The Cooper Union for the Advancement of Science and Art. Weir is internationally renowned as an expert on the works of James Joyce and on the culture of decadence. He taught courses in those two subjects at Cooper Union, as well as courses in linguistics, anarchism, orientalism, aesthetics, and European cinema.