Featuring interviews with filmmaker Ken Burns, Oscar-nominated editor Jay Cassidy, producer John Sloss, and more, this masterpiece provides insights into how a Midwestern college town developed a robust underground art film community that inspired those across the country. Variety's Owen Glieberman says, "Frank Uhle has captured the moment when cinema became, for a new generation, a kind of religion, with its own rituals and sacred texts and a spirit of exploratory mystery that has all but vanished from the culture."
This is a must-have book for cinema and media aficionados, film archivists, and anyone interested in the cultural history of Ann Arbor.
This book was published in collaboration with Fifth Avenue Press at Ann Arbor District Library. Learn more about their publishing program here. You can also see their collection, including vintage flyers, photos, film schedules, here.
Innovative, thoughtful, digitally-forward books in partnership with @M_Publishing and @fulcrumpub. (Not here for books? You might want @UMPublicAffairs)
Listen to this wonderful interview from WEMU about Frank Uhle and his new book "Cinema Ann Arbor: How Campus Rebels Forged a Singular Film Culture" https://t.co/6ZCa5ldjoL
"Frank Uhle's Cinema Ann Arbor is a whopping big gift--to historians, archivists, and film lovers of every shape. Mind-bogglingly comprehensive, it is also deeply emotional for all the lucky folks, like me, who wandered through Ann Arbor's magical portal into a life in the movies. Priceless, delightful, and necessary."
--Lawrence Kasdan, writer, producer, and filmmaker
"An invaluable and brilliantly detailed history of a unique regional film culture that touched the world, continuing to influence the lives of those who've been a part of it in any way. An absolute joy to read."
--Elliot Wilhelm, Curator of Film, Detroit Institute of Arts
"Peek inside the robust legacy of student-powered cinema groups that enriched the cultural scene both on campus and off. This enthralling saga recounts the dynamic moxie, gutsy programming, lucrative operations, and many colorful characters that sustained Ann Arbor's incredibly rich cinema culture for nearly a century."
--Leslie Raymond, director, the Ann Arbor Film Festival
"Frank Uhle's deeply researched and spectacularly informative book is an essential read for all movie lovers. Seeing thought-provoking art films on the U of M campus before the advent of videotapes, DVDs, and streaming was always a special event for me, and Cinema Ann Arbor perfectly captures the pioneering spirit of film presenters who kept me spellbound in the dark."
--Martin Bandyke, morning drive host on Ann Arbor's 107one
"If you love movies, history, campus life, or just a good, original yarn, you'll love Cinema Ann Arbor."
--John U. Bacon, best-selling author, The Great Halifax Explosion
-- "John U. Bacon"