Dear colleagues the latest issue of the 'New Review of Film and Television Studies' has just been published. It contains the following essays: Thomas Elsaesser James Cameron's 'Avatar': Access for All This essay is available as a FREE download from the journal's website (the link is to the right of the journal's cover): http://www.tandf.co.uk/journals/titles/17400309.asp Jim Whalley 'A process to learn something': 'Pearl Harbor' and the Producer’s Game in Contemporary Hollywood Aylish Wood Digital Afx: Digital Dressing and Affective Shifts in 'Sin City' and '300' Michael Williams 'Principles That Transcend Drugs or Money or Anything Like That': The Monstrosity of Morality in 'No Country for Old Men' Yannis Tzioumakis Academic Discourses and American Independent Cinema: In Search of a Field of Studies. Part 2: From the 1990s to date Barry Salt Reaction Time: How to Edit Movies Catherine Constable Seeing Lucy’s Perspective: Returning to Cavell, Wittgenstein and 'The Awful Truth'. Thomas Austin Figures in a landscape: work and beauty in 'sleep furiously' Review Warren Buckland Review of Richard Rushton, 'The Reality of Film' Please note: if you plan to submit an essay to the journal, we will not be able to publish it until the end of 2013 at the earliest, due to a long backlog. Yours sincerely, Warren Buckland Editor, 'New Review of Film and Television Studies' Reader in Film Studies, Oxford Brookes University ---- Online resources for film/TV studies may be found at ScreenSite http://www.ScreenSite.org