Colin Gardner
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Introduction
Joseph Losey and the crisis of historical rupture
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This introduction presents an overview of the key concepts discussed in this book. The very structure of Joseph Losey's cinematic language, as well as his narrative style and content, are directly related to the artist's attempt to create a new, post-Cold War vision for radicalism and social change, as well as a personal atonement for the mistakes and misjudgements produced by the Old Left's dogmatic loyalty to an inhuman Stalinism. The chapter first explores the issue of film language. Having forged a cinematic connection between immanence and impulse, the chapter turns to their relevance to the Cold War politics of dislocation. While his The Boy with Green Hair constructed an ambivalent tension between the naturalism of absolute goodness and the spectre of violent impulse, the remaining films from Losey's brief stint in Hollywood, from 1947 to 1952, are largely devoted to analysing the psychology of this dark flipside.

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