Whether detailing Bela Tarr's signature panning shots or the role of flames in Vincente Minnelli, Rancière is a passionate and acute cinephile.
- Alberto Toscano, Film Quarterly
His art lies in the rigor of his argument-its careful, precise unfolding-and at the same time not treating his reader, whether university professor or unemployed actress, as an imbecile.
- Kristin Ross,
In the face of impossible attempts to proceed with progressive ideas within the terms of postmodernist discourse, Rancière shows a way out of the malaise.
- Liam Gillick,
"Rancière's writing is remarkably clear, in keeping with his highly egalitarian politics. This is not to say that his writing is not as beautiful as some of the most linguistically pyrotechnic of French philosophers: Cixous, Kristeva, Barthes, Foucault, Derrida. Its beauty emerges not from the play of the signifier, but from a passionate belief that his arguments-in this case, these readings of moments in the history of cinema, collected under the title The Intervals of Cinema-are accessible to anybody."
- 3:AM Magazine,
"The Intervals of Cinema restores something vital to political thought and practice that the pursuit of a perspective free from ideology often suppressed: the positive capacity we all share to forge or reshape our own fictions. Whether we are prepared to make the leap to equality remains to be seen. But with Intervals, Rancière proves that there is cinema waiting for us if we do."
- Canadian Society for Continental Philosophy,
Rancière presents a compelling argument for the true value of film and how the cinematic apparatus operates outside of its narrative and artistic influences.
- Pop Matters,
"This is a welcome addition to the growing body of work by Rancière in translation, and will be essential and enjoyable reading for students of the theory of cinema."
- Review 31,