About The Book

From one of cinema’s wisest and most penetrating observers, an arresting new perspective on the sweep of film history.

David Thomson has been called “the greatest living writer on the movies.” Here is a career capstone of sorts—a one-volume history of film and screens as illuminating and provocative as his classic Biographical Dictionary of Film. In tracing the progress, from the Lumiere Brothers to the Coens, Thomson glories in the great movies, but admits to increasing unease over what the medium has done to us—promoting fantasy, misleading models of sexual identity, the cult of authority, power, and happy endings.

This revisionist history is as alert to technology and business as it is to art and fun in tracing our pursuit of the lifelike instead of life. By turns trenchant, lyrical, and comic, Thomson uncovers our addiction to voyeurism and villainy, and a habit of passivity that has betrayed our political and cultural identity. In a survey that reaches from Metropolis to Rear Window to Anora, this will redirect ideas about film everywhere. As The New York Times has put it, “Thomson proves anew that he is irreplaceable.”

Appearances

JUL 12
3:00PM
In Person

Introducing Jean-Luc Godard’s "Pierrot le fou" (1965) with post-screening book signing

Learn More
Berkeley Art Museum and Pacific Film Archive
2155 Center St
Berkeley, CA 94720

About The Author

Photograph by Lucy Gray

David Thomson is the author of more than twenty books, including biographies of David O. Selznick and Orson Welles, and The New Biographical Dictionary of Film. His writing and his books have been featured in The New York TimesThe Guardian, the Los Angeles TimesThe AtlanticEsquireSlate, and many more. He lives in San Francisco.

Product Details

  • Publisher: Simon & Schuster (July 7, 2026)
  • Length: 368 pages
  • ISBN13: 9781668205723

Browse Related Books

Raves and Reviews

"Thomson is widely regarded as the greatest living writer on film, which gives him the right to indict it. Rather than simply a history of cinema, A Sudden Flicker of Light argues that film has spent a century training audiences toward passivity and fantasy, which has had consequences for culture and politics."
Cultured Magazine

“Thomson is considered a preeminent film critic and historian, and this absolutely essential, indispensable book shows us why.”
Booklist (starred review)

“A feast for cinephiles.” 
Publishers Weekly

"More than a flicker of light: a flood of illumination."
Kirkus Reviews

Resources and Downloads

High Resolution Images

BACK TO TOP