V. F. Perkins

From Wikipedia the free encyclopedia

Victor Francis Perkins (22 December 1936 – 15 July 2016), usually cited as V. F. Perkins, was a British film critic, best known for his work on film aesthetics and interpretation. He was born in Devon, and began teaching at Warwick University in 1978.[1]

Best known for his first book, Film as Film (1972), which quickly became a core text in Film Studies courses, Perkins influenced the way in which film is studied and became internationally known for his sharp intellect and jargon-less approach to the critical analysis of film.[2] Victor Perkins remained an active scholar until he died, continuing to lecture at Warwick University, as well as write and give papers on film analysis at home and abroad.

He died on 15 July 2016,[3] after suffering an aneurysm.[4] Perkins married Tessa Pudney (daughter of the poet John Pudney) in the late 1960s [5] Their son, Toby Perkins, is the Labour Member of Parliament for Chesterfield. Their daughter, Polly Vienna Perkins, is a writer and film producer.

Select bibliography

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  • "The British Cinema" in MOVIE No.1, 1962
  • "Why Preminger?" in MOVIE No. 4 (November 1962)
  • "The Cinema of Nicholas Ray," MOVIE No. 9, May 1963., reprinted in Ian Cameron (ed.) Movie Reader, New York, 1972, and in Bill Nicholls (ed.), Movies and Methods Vol 1, California, 1976.
  • "55 Days at Peking" in MOVIE No. 11.
  • "Cheyenne Autumn" in MOVIE No. 12, Spring 1965.
  • "Supporting the British Cinema" in MOVIE No. 16, Winter, 1968-1969.
  • "America, America", MOVIE No. 19, Winter, 1971–1972
  • Film as Film, Penguin Books, 1972.
  • "Moments of Choice" in The Movie, ch. 58, reprinted in Ann Lloyd (ed.), Movie Book of the Fifties, Orbis, 1982.
  • "Letter from an Unknown Woman" [on the Linz sequence] in MOVIE 29/30, Summer 1982
  • "Must We Say What They Mean ? Film criticism and interpretation" in MOVIE No. 34, October 1990
  • "Film Authorship - the premature burial" in CineAction, No. 21/22, November, 1990
  • "In a Lonely Place" in Ian Cameron (ed.) The Movie Book of Film Noir, Studio Vista, 1992
  • "Johnny Guitar", in Ian Cameron & Douglas Pye (eds.) The Movie Book of the Western, Studio Vista, 1996.
  • The Magnificent Ambersons, British Film Institute, 1999.
  • "Ophuls contra Wagner and Others" in MOVIE No 36, January 2000.
  • "I Confess - Photographs of People Speaking" in CineAction No 52, September 2000.
  • "'Same Tune Again!' - Repetition and Framing in Letter from an Unknown Woman " in CineAction No 52, September 2000.
  • “Where is the world? The horizon of events in movie fiction” in John Gibbs and Douglas Pye (eds.) Style and meaning: studies in the detailed analysis of film, Manchester U.P., 2005.

For an in-depth examination of Perkins' career, see: Jeffrey Crouse, "Fueled by Enthusiasms: Jeffrey Crouse Interviews V. F. Perkins," Film International, 2004:3, pp. 14–27.

References

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  1. ^ "Victor F Perkins - University of Warwick". warwick.ac.uk. Retrieved 29 July 2016.
  2. ^ Konstan, Helen (25 October 2013). "Victor F. Perkins: Film Critic. Author. Educator". the-scenarist.com. Retrieved 29 July 2016.[unreliable source?]
  3. ^ V.F. (Victor Francis) Perkins, 1936-2016 Archived 2016-08-05 at the Wayback Machine
  4. ^ "Coventry Hospital 'sent home' MP's dying father". BBC News. 12 January 2017. Retrieved 14 January 2017.
  5. ^ Tessa Perkins, obituary in The Guardian, 4 November 2004