Description
About the Author
Thomas Leitch is professor of English and director of the Film Studies Program at the University of Delaware. He is author of several books, including Crime Films (Cambridge University Press, 2002) and The Alfred Hitchcock Encyclopedia (Facts on File, 2002).
Reviews
It could be called 'The Case of the Creative Critic' or 'The Case of the Stylish Scholar,' but by any name this book offers illuminating television history at its page-turning bost. Thomas Leitch traces the long history of America's most successful mass-media attorney from his beginnings in Erle Stanley Gardner's imagination through his radio, movie, and television incarnations. In arguing his brief, Leitch casts light on everything from popular notions of justice to the hero's distinctive vocal patterns and the amazingly fixed formulas his television series invariably followed. He also unveils Raymond Burr's status as the television program's true auteur, explores the show's relationship to 1950s versions of patriarchy and paternalism, and explains how Mason's professional exploits saddled postwar Americans with a wildly skewed conception of how the legal system really works. Keep a copy on your nightstand next to a pile of pulp fiction and your lawyer's phone number. It's more engrossing than any dozen episodes of the show itself. - David Sterritt, Columbia University and Long Island University
Book Information
ISBN 9780814331217
Author Thomas M. Leitch
Format Paperback
Page Count 128
Imprint Wayne State University Press
Publisher Wayne State University Press
Weight(grams) 180g
Dimensions(mm) 182mm * 129mm * 9mm