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Critical Filmmaking

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An interdisciplinary exploration of critical filmmaking as creative practice research from current and former editors of audio visual journals, examining the journals, platforms, peer review system...
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  • 03 May 2027
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Critical Filmmaking: Creative Practice Research in the Screen Industries examines the emergence of filmmaking as a form of scholarly and creative inquiry within contemporary research culture. Bringing together current and former editors of Screenworks (UK), Sightlines (Australia), and the Journal for Artistic Research (Switzerland), the collection explores how moving-image practice operates at the intersection of screen production, critical reflection, and knowledge formation.

Focusing on the journals, dissemination platforms, and peer review systems that have shaped this developing field, the book offers a timely account of how critical filmmaking has evolved as both a creative methodology and a mode of academic research. Across discussions of fiction and non-fiction practice, experimental form, publication cultures, and research infrastructures, the contributors examine how filmmakers and practice-researchers use the moving image not simply to illustrate ideas, but to generate, test, and communicate new forms of understanding.

The collection pays particular attention to independently produced and research-driven screen works - often short-form, exploratory, and interdisciplinary in nature - that circulate through emerging scholarly and audiovisual publication ecologies. In doing so, the book maps the institutional, methodological, and creative conditions that have enabled critical filmmaking to gain increasing visibility within contemporary screen practice research.

Distinctive in its focus on dissemination and infrastructure as much as on creative work itself, Critical Filmmaking situates filmmaking within broader debates around artistic research, practice-based inquiry, peer review, and the future of scholarly communication. Combining reflective essays, editorial perspectives, and analyses of published works, the collection provides one of the clearest accounts to date of how moving-image practice functions as a form of critical and research-led experimentation within and beyond the academy.

The book will be valuable to scholars, postgraduate students, filmmakers, artist-researchers, and anyone interested in the evolving relationship between creative practice, critical inquiry, and academic publishing.

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Price: £79.95
Publisher: Intellect Books
Imprint: Intellect Books
Publication Date: 03 May 2027
ISBN: 9781835954379
Format: eBook
BISACs:

ART / Film & Video, Films, cinema, PERFORMING ARTS / Film / General, PERFORMING ARTS / Film / History & Criticism, Film history, theory or criticism

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Catherine Gough-Brady is an award-winning documentary producer and director who explores the relational nature of filmmaking in her research.

Alexander Nevill is a cinematographer, filmmaker and lecturer at Edinburgh College of Art, The University of Edinburgh. In conjunction with his practice, Alex is the author of a short book Towards a Philosophy of Cinematography, and has published work in the Journal of Artistic Research, the Journal of Media Practice and Alphaville Journal of Film and Screen Media.

List of Figures
Foreword: Creative Practice Research in the Screen Industries 20 Years On …
Charlotte Crofts and Jon Dovey
Introduction: Some Thoughts on Critical Filmmaking
Catherine Gough-Brady and Alexander Nevill


Part 1: Critical Filmmaking Contexts
1. Upload First, Finish Later: Towards a History of Videographic Criticism as Communal Practice
Will DiGravio
2. Looking Forward, Looking Back: A Manifesto for the Publication of Screen Production Research Drawn from Reflections on Sightlines Journal
Bettina Frankham, Pieter Aquilia, Marsha Berry, Kath Dooley, Phoebe Hart, James Verdon and Kim Munro
3. Film Technology as Enquiry: Practices of Critical Making and Viewing
Alexander Nevill
4. Dialogic Peer Review and the Development of Academic Filmmaking Across Screenworks’s Publications
Charlotte Crofts, Catherine Gough-Brady and Shweta Ghosh
5. The Fictional Lens: Unpacking the Potential of Fiction Filmmaking as a Research Method, a Screenworks Case Study
Matthew Hawkins

Part 2: Making with the Non-Human
6. Digital Wayfaring and a Constellation of Filmmaking Practices
Marsha Berry
7. Video Essays with Trees – Four ’Models’ and Some Examples
Annette Arlander
8. The Non-Human Influence on Film Processes and Language
Catherine Gough-Brady

Part 3: Identity and Experience Shaping Filmmaking
9. Nothing Echoes Here: Conveying embodied grief in fiction film
10. Dissolve Into: Screenwriting as Post-Traumatic Methodology
Elan Gamaker
11. We (all) Make Film: Film Practice Research for Advocacy and Social Change
Shweta Ghosh


Notes on Contributors