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CSI: Crime Scene Investigation

Hodnotenie knihy

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  • 159 stránok
  • 6 hodin čítania

Viac o knihe

Cohan examines the status of evidence in relation to truth and justice in the television series CSI, using the story arc involving the Blue Paint Killer as a main example, and assesses the series' impact through the much discussed 'CSI Effect'. He addresses the series' visual style, the attention to both cutting-edge forensic technology and CGI close ups to represent the effects of weapons on the human body, and goes on to consider the series' locale, in which the fantasy delights of the New Las Vegas exist alongside echoes of its gangster-ridden past, and crimes bring out the contrast between the flashy spectacle of the Strip, suburban Clark County and the arid landscapes of the Mojave desert. Cohan analyses CSI's consistent questioning of identity and 'normality' in the numerous episodes that feature subcultural groups and questions if mainstream success has affected the show's edginess, particularly as it approaches a future without the key character of Grissom.--Publisher's note

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CSI: Crime Scene Investigation, Steven Cohan

Jazyk
Rok vydania
2008
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Titul
CSI: Crime Scene Investigation
Jazyk
anglicky
Rok vydania
2008
Väzba
mäkká
Počet strán
159
ISBN10
1844572552
ISBN13
9781844572557
Série
Hodnotenie
3,65 z 5
Anotácia
Cohan examines the status of evidence in relation to truth and justice in the television series CSI, using the story arc involving the Blue Paint Killer as a main example, and assesses the series' impact through the much discussed 'CSI Effect'. He addresses the series' visual style, the attention to both cutting-edge forensic technology and CGI close ups to represent the effects of weapons on the human body, and goes on to consider the series' locale, in which the fantasy delights of the New Las Vegas exist alongside echoes of its gangster-ridden past, and crimes bring out the contrast between the flashy spectacle of the Strip, suburban Clark County and the arid landscapes of the Mojave desert. Cohan analyses CSI's consistent questioning of identity and 'normality' in the numerous episodes that feature subcultural groups and questions if mainstream success has affected the show's edginess, particularly as it approaches a future without the key character of Grissom.--Publisher's note