"In The Love of Cinema, Rinella Cere provides a fascinating account of the various and sometimes conflicting impulses, interests and policies behind the development of film museums as sites for the presentation of cinema’s history and heritage. While some museums have been primarily devoted to preserving the technologies for film production and exhibition, others like the Cinémathèque Française have seen their principal role as being the acquisition, preservation and display of films of the past. Still others have sought to curate the social history of cinema and its audiences, while the critics of film museums – among them Francois Truffaut and Joseph Losey – have seen them as futile attempts "to preserve a transient art," no more than "a gimmick for tourists." The Love of Cinema explores the diverse conceptions of what a film museum might be and the motives and personalities of the dedicated individuals who created five of the world’s leading film museums, largely without state support or public funding, in France, Britain, Italy, Catalonia and the US. In the breadth of its coverage and its illuminating detail, Cere’s work demonstrates how our understanding of cinema’s archaeology and evolution has been deepened by the archival and museological activities of the institutions she examines." – Richard Maltby, Flinders University, South Australia
"An important work on the world of the film museum based on original research on institutions including the Cinémathèque Française, Britain’s National Science and Media Museum, and the George Eastman Museum in the United States, and key individuals such as Ernest Lindgren and Henri Langlois. Dr Cere deftly combines accounts of the historical development of her case studies with critical reflection on the different and contrasting notions of the film museum embodied in their practices. The cultural enterprise of establishing an institution incorporating a film archive, physical apparatuses such as cameras and projectors, and the numerous forms of documentation (studio records, memoirs) relevant to the cinema, is a complex process and Dr Cere’s work reveals the ways in which it has been interpreted in different ways in different countries with different film heritages." – Tom Ryall, Sheffield Hallam University, UK
"In An International Study of Film Museums, Rinella Cere provides a fascinating account of the various and sometimes conflicting impulses, interests and policies behind the development of film museums as sites for the presentation of cinema’s history and heritage. While some museums have been primarily devoted to preserving the technologies for film production and exhibition, others like the Cinémathèque Française have seen their principal role as being the acquisition, preservation and display of films of the past. Still others have sought to curate the social history of cinema and its audiences, while the critics of film museums – among them Francois Truffaut and Joseph Losey – have seen them as futile attempts "to preserve a transient art," no more than "a gimmick for tourists." The Love of Cinema explores the diverse conceptions of what a film museum might be and the motives and personalities of the dedicated individuals who created five of the world’s leading film museums, largely without state support or public funding, in France, Britain, Italy, Catalonia and the US. In the breadth of its coverage and its illuminating detail, Cere’s work demonstrates how our understanding of cinema’s archaeology and evolution has been deepened by the archival and museological activities of the institutions she examines." – Richard Maltby, Flinders University, South Australia
"An important work on the world of the film museum based on original research on institutions including the Cinémathèque Française, Britain’s National Science and Media Museum, and the George Eastman Museum in the United States, and key individuals such as Ernest Lindgren and Henri Langlois. Dr Cere deftly combines accounts of the historical development of her case studies with critical reflection on the different and contrasting notions of the film museum embodied in their practices. The cultural enterprise of establishing an institution incorporating a film archive, physical apparatuses such as cameras and projectors, and the numerous forms of documentation (studio records, memoirs) relevant to the cinema, is a complex process and Dr Cere’s work reveals the ways in which it has been interpreted in different ways in different countries with different film heritages." – Tom Ryall, Sheffield Hallam University, UK
"Matters that run as a red thread through all the chapters include the relationship between archives/cinematheques and museums, the interplay between permanent collections and temporary exhibitions, the ratio between displaying technology and artefacts related to films and stars, the inclusion of photography and television, the integration of educational and research functions, the reconciling of museum and memorial, as well as matters of who gets credit and how. As this is a primarily historical study, I appreciated Cere’s consistent investigation of the relationship of various museums with FIAF, the international organisation of film archivists." - Dina Iordanova, University of St Andrews, UK