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Point Break
Movies Minute by Minute
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Description
Point Break, in Bloomsbury's Timecodes Series, is a detailed, minute-by-minute critical exploration of Kathryn Bigelow's 1991 action film Point Break.
Moving sequentially through the film's two-hour runtime, the book blends formal analysis, cultural history and theory, action genre study, and personal reflection and interpretation. It positions Point Break as both a quintessential action spectacle and a film layered with thematic tensions: masculinity, spirituality, individual risk, personal freedom, environmental awareness, and the search for one's identity. Each minute of the film is treated as a self-contained unit. The cinematography, editing, sound design, performances, and narrative beats are discussed in relation to broader social contexts including surfing subculture, mid-to-late-20th-century American politics, post-Vietnam War attitudes, and the evolving media images of Keanu Reeves and Patrick Swayze.
Drawing on a wide array of sources, such as film theory, cultural criticism, and surf memoirs, the book
reframes Point Break as not merely an adrenaline-driven thriller, but as a work rich in symbolism, mythology, homoerotic desires, and philosophical inquiry. This approach reveals how Bigelow crafts a kinetic, expressive cinema where bodies, landscapes, and motion collide, and how the film's characters operate within intersecting personal, cultural, and ideological currents. The result is a hybrid of scholarship and creative writing that reanimates the film by slowing it down, revealing layers of meaning often obscured by its velocity.
Table of Contents
Immersion: Minutes 1-60
Revelation: Minutes 61-119
Postscript
Endnotes
Index
Product details
| Published | 06 Aug 2026 |
|---|---|
| Format | Ebook (PDF) |
| Edition | 1st |
| Pages | 152 |
| ISBN | 9798216374176 |
| Imprint | Bloomsbury Academic |
| Illustrations | 13 bw illus |
| Series | Timecodes |
| Publisher | Bloomsbury Publishing |
About the contributors
Reviews
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A task as daunting as riding a monster wave, and Stephen Lee Naish pulls it off with grace and aplomb: a minute-by-minute analysis-a rigorous celebration-of Kathryn Bigelow's enduring masterpiece Point Break. I read this book avidly, marveling anew at the film and relishing Naish's consistent, thrilling insights.
David Greven, Professor of English, University of South Carolina, USA, and author of Manhood in Hollywood from Bush to Bush (2009)
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Stephen Lee Naish writes so vividly and with such precision that we are not so much reading about Point Break as we are re-experiencing the film in our mind's eye, guided along the way by thoughtful insights into the film's characters, themes, and socio-political context. It is a book as exciting to read as Kathryn Bigelow's film is to watch.
Daniel Simpson, Video Essayist, Eyebrow Cinema
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A lovely, beat-by-beat recounting of how a famous film portrays the immersive ocean rhythms that every surfer knows.
Aaron James, Professor of Philosophy, University of California, USA, and author of Assholes: A Theory (2014) and Surfing with Sartre: An Aquatic Inquiry into a Life of Meaning (2017)
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In Point Break: Movies Minute by Minute, Stephen Lee Naish provides readers with a fresh and compelling model of how to experience movies-all movies-more deeply and with a richer, more nuanced engagement of intellect and emotion. The book is an elegantly written call to see popular cinema as an informative window into the complex, precarious, and confusing world we all share.
Clarke Mackey, Emeritus Professor in Film and Media, Queen's University, Canada

























