"…a fascinating academic treatise on how classical music adds layers of meaning upon many of the most important films of the twentieth century." — Quarter Notes"Lau … makes engaging connections between music, film, and a variety of literary works." — CHOICE"To learn how classical music and modernist cinema were destined to be lovers, long before Adorno learned to talk, read Matthew Lau's inventive book, which shows us how to see music, and how to hear cinema. After taking a spin with Isabelle Huppert, Franz Schubert will never be the same again, thanks to the meticulous Lau, who shows us how some of classical music's not-yet-kindled radicalism required modernist cinema's perversely revivifying touch. What's more, Lau manages to offer, in his conclusion, a subtle, stirring plea for a society—a politics—that makes room for difficult cinema and complex music. For such a society's emergence, Lau's book may be the instruction manual, teaching salvific, insurrectional solfège." — Wayne Koestenbaum, author of The Anatomy of Harpo Marx