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movie that aims to inform viewers about truth/fact |
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documentary films function on name of intellectual/spiritual/cultural development |
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present (presumed) factual descriptions of actual events, persons, places |
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eschews/de-emphasizes stories/narratives |
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documentary organizations |
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formal expositional strategies used in documentary movies |
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present a catalog of images/sounds throughout the course of the films |
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contrastive organizations |
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present a series of contrasts/oppositions meant to indicate the different point of views on its subject |
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developemental organizations |
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places/objects/individuals/experiences are presented through a pattern that has a non-narrative logic/structure but still follows a logic of change/progression |
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organizational point of views that shape their formal practices according to certain perspectives -explorative, interrogative, persuasive, reflexive/performative |
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announce/suggest that the film's driving perspective is a scientific search into particular social, psychological physical phenomena -cumulative, contrastive, developmental |
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interrogative/analytic positions |
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rhetorically structures a movie so that it identifies the subject as being under investigation |
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articulates a perspective that expresses a personal/social position using emotions/beliefs and aim to persuade viewers to feel a certain way |
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reflexive/performative positions |
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call attention to the filmmaking process/perspective of the filmmaker in determining/shaping the material being presented |
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examine/present both familiar/unfamiliar peoples/cultures as social activities |
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aimed to investigate/celebrate the political activities of people as they appear within the struggles of small/large social spheres |
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concentrates largely on recovering/representing events/figures in history |
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conventional documentaries histories |
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assume the facts/realities of a past history can be more or less recovered/accurately represented |
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reflexive documentary histories |
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adopts a dual point of view describing event + awareness that film/etc can never fully retrieve the reality of the lost history |
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ethnographic documentaries |
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second major tradition in documentary film |
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explore different global cultures ad peoples (living and extinct) |
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('cinema truth') insists on filming real objects/people/events in a confrontational way (reality of subject acknowledges reality of camera recording it) |
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(american cinema verite) more observational, less confrontational than french version |
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personal/subjective documentaries |
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films that look more like autobiographical/diaries |
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use documentary techniques to present a theatrical staging of presumably true events |
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humorous approach to the question of truth/fact by using documentary style/structure to present and stage fictional realities |
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more serious version of rockumentary |
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('kind') category/classification of a group of movies in which the individual films share similar subject matter and ways of organizing the subject through narrative/stylistic patterns |
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repetition of formulas that help coordinate our needs/desires |
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-private models for producing other works -to direct audience expectations -to create categories for judging/evaluating a work |
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-fordism --> formula for creating movies -studio era --> each studio had a certain niche |
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1948: paramount antitrust act -film noir/blaxpoitation/fragmentation |
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new hollywood --> big blockbuster genres -genres, special effects, large advertising budgets -hong kong/bollywood |
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properties/features that identify a genre (ex. character types, settings, props, etc) |
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images/image patterns with specific connotations or meanings |
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spiritual/psychological/cultural models expressing certain virtues/values/timeless realities |
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patterns for developing stories in a particular genre -myths |
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spiritual/cultural stories that describe a defining action/event for a group of people/community |
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describe a viewer's experience and knowledge while watching a film that help to anticipate the meaning of particular conventions or direction of certain narrative formulas |
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(1940s/1950s) religious spanish films |
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mixing different genres to make a fusion -ex. rocky horror (musical + horror) |
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specific versions of a genre denoted by an adjective -ex. slapstick comedy |
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1) characters with distinctive physical features 2) episodic narratives emphasizing gags 3) theatrical acting styles in which characters interact with mise en scene -celebrate harmony/resilience of life -social reconciliation -comedia dell'arte -slapstick, screwball, romcom |
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marked by physical humor or stunts -ex. mr bean |
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fast-talking verbal gymnastics ex. the hangover? |
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happiness first, humor second romance will eventually overcome and lead to happy ending |
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travelogue of a recent but now historically lost period 1) male characters whose physical/mental toughness separates them from crowds of modern civilization 2)narratives follow quest into natural world 3) stylistic emphasis on open, natural spaces and settings -epic, existential, political |
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(1950s) traditional western hero is troubled by his changing social status and self doubts |
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action/movement, developing a heroic character whose quests/battles serve to define the nation and origins |
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(1960s/1970s) troubled territory of existential westerns; heroism associated with individual independence/use of violence |
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intensity of music + interaction of human conflict 1) characters defined by their situations/basic traits who struggle to express emotion 2) narratives relying on coincidences --> emotional climaxes 3) visual style emphasizing emotion/elemental struggle -man vs. society -physical, family, social |
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physical plight and material conditions repress/control protagonist's desires/emotions |
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elaborate the confines and restrictions of protagonist by investigating psychological/gendered forces of family |
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extends melodramatic crisis of family to include entire community |
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songs support/punctuate story 1) characters act out/express emotion via song/dance 2) plots interrupted/moved forward by musical numbers 3) spectacular sets/settings musicals vs. melodrama -theatrical, animated |
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situates the musical convention onstage of "backstage" |
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1) characters with physical/psychological/spiritual deformities 2) narratives built on suspense, surprise, shock 3) visual compositions that move between dread of not seeing and horror of seeing -supernatural, psychological, physical (slasher) |
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spiritual evil erupts in human realms |
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locates dangers and distortions that threaten normal life in the minds of bizarre/deranged individuals |
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films about ghastly killings |
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1) characters who live on edge of a mysterious/violent society 2) plots of crime, mystery, ambiguous resolution 3) urban (dark/shadowy) settings -gangster, detective, film noir |
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(1930s) underworld criminal societies thriving in defiance of prohibition |
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hard-boiled detective films |
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protagonist that represents the law (like a PI) |
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(!940s) elevates legal/moral/atmospheric ambiguity and confusion -femme fatales -weak men |
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prescriptive approaches (to genre) |
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model for a genre preexists any particular films films deviate as little as possible from model |
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descriptive approaches (to genre) |
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genre changes over time by building on older films and developing new ways |
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classical genre traditions |
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(prescriptive) -places film in relation to a paradigm that remains the same over time -fixed sets of formulas/conventions -historical, structural paradigms |
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(classical genre tradition) presumes that a genre evolved to a point of perfection at some point in history one or more fils describe the generic ideal |
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(classical genre tradition) formal/structural ideal that may or may not be seen in any specific film |
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revisionist genre tradition |
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sees a film as a function of changing historical/cultural contexts that modify the conventions/formulas of that genre -generic reflexivity |
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usually self-conscious about their generic identity and clearly comments on such visual paradigms ex. young frankenstein |
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characters/crises/rituals of contemporary american youth |
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period films/costume dramas set before 1868 japan -class unrest, social rebellion |
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depicts world of traditional folk values where love and family triumph over evil -traditional german folk songs |
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systematic set of beliefs that is not necessarily conscious -with new understanding of structures of representation in order to explain how people come to accept ideas and conditions contrary to their interests |
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questions rational methodology and fixed definitions that structuralists bring to their various objects of study and includes thoughts of psychoanalysis, postcolonial, and feminist theory |
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imaginary: images symbolic: language real: real |
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mirror stage (psychoanalysis) |
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infant comes to recognize itself as a human individual |
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explores values built into film technology through particular context of its historical development |
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using psychoanalysis to explain the mind's role in making sense of movies |
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vision of woman as "other" by attributing camera to the "male gaze" -woman as image, man as bearer of the look -MULVEY |
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scrutinizes aspects of cinema embedded in everyday lives of individuals or groups at particular historical junctures and in social contexts |
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focuses on how film is received by audiences,rather than on who made a film or its filmic/thematic features |
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stresses that any act of perception involves a mutuality of viewer and viewed |
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idea that filmic images refer to actual objects, events, phenomena |
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1) incorporates many other styles through fragments or references known as pastiche 2) cultural period in which political, cultural, economic shifts challenges tenets of modernism |
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suggest economic exploitation of black film audiences -urban market likely to attend films about streetwise black protagonists -black power movement |
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reinforcing stereotypes of non-western people as simple, childlike, outside process of history |
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films abandoned by owners or copyright holders, neglected |
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NICHOLS ESSAY What types of documentaries are there? |
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-poetic -expository -observational (direct cinema, cinema vérité) -participatory -reflexive -performative |
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poetic documentary (nichols) |
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-modernism, avant-garde -patterns that resist temporality, continuity -mood/tone/affect over rhetoric -alternative knowledge |
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expository documentary (nichols) |
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-argumentative/rhetorical -'voice of god' -values of objectivity, essay style |
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observational documentary (nichols) |
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-direct cinema, cinema vérité -backlash against authoritative style of expository mode -stresses non-interventive style of director (no voiceovers) |
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participatory documentary (nichols) |
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-rejects pretense that filmmaker's not there -interviews -overlaps with 'social documentary' |
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-includes role of filmmaker, difficulty of representation of medium -self-conscious (questions realism and access to world) |
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performative documentary (nichols) |
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-stresses personal experience/embodied knowledge -undercuts realism, conveys lived realities |
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textual properties (Experimental film) |
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-non narrative form -avant garde -demanding something of viewer -reflexive |
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reflect on material specificity of film medium and condition its experienced by audiences |
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referring to an array of technologies |
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identifies an attitude toward progress and science centered on human capacity to shape history |
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1910-1920 experimental film |
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-dada/expressionist art movements -soviet montage |
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-sound vs silent film -personal film with 16mm |
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1950-1960 experimental film |
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stan brakhage, andy warhol -underground film -gender/sexual politics |
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1968-after experimental film |
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-narrative filmmaking and theatrical exhibition -student unrest/anti-war/etc -third world cinema (rejected norm) |
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-electronic video technology -inexpensive video formats -mtv -video games and computer technology |
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countercultural impulses of many US filmmakers of 1960s |
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video game engines to modify computer animations, creating new narratives from the game worlds |
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concerned with problems of form over issues of content |
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formal experiments that are also nonrepresentational |
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associative organizations |
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create psychological/formal resonances giving these films a dreamlike quality that engages viewers' emotions/curiosity |
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link/associate different objects/images/events/individuals in order to generate a new perception/emotion/idea |
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isolate discrete objects/singular images that can generate or be assigned abstract meanings - either those already given by culture or created by film itself |
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reject illusionism of narrative film and challenge audiences' perceptions with a focus on material of the film |
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participatory experiences |
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centrality of viewer and time and place of exhibition to cinematic phenomenon |
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video and computer tech would allow moving image media to extend consciousness |
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recognizable imagery in strange contexts (mostly france) -ETERNAL SUNSHINE~SPIRITED AWAY~ |
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expresses emotions/beliefs/other personal position in films |
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structure a film or media work through interrogation of its form, content, communication with viewer |
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encourage audiences to take up critical positions that expose them to formal experiements (late 60s) |
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images themselves taken out of a context were only way to transform society |
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employs confrontational style -peaked during AIDS crisis |
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experimental organziations |
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1)associative 2)structural 3) participatory |
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semiotics, structuralism, marxism, louis althusser |
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-C.S. Pierce, ferdinand de saussure signifier + signified, referrent |
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claude levi strauss -narratology, russian formalism, narrative analysis of myth, causality/diegesis |
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karl marx, Frankfurt school -economics of society is scientific -how people are put in different socioeconomical positions |
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ideology 'hails' us back -subjects of class relations -national subjects -gendered subjects |
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the imaginary representation of the real relations in which we live |
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films by north african/nigerian french people |
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1) theories of authorship 2) author as 'auteur' 3) La Politique des Auteurs (cinephilia, critical writing, genre, etc) --> 'metteurs en scene' vs. auteurs 4) influences of auteur theory 5) problems with author theory |
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STANLEY DONEN, USA, 1952 -studio era, genre film (musical) (MGM) -mise-en-scene allows for theatrical mies-en-scene |
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ORSON WELLES, USA, 1941 -mise-en-scene, cinematography, the long take -almost close to film noir but not exactly -unlike most classic hollywood films --> unusual, inventive, complex narrative -fragmented subject/self-reflexivity/multiple flashback narrative (modernist) |
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D.W. GRIFFITH, USA, 1911 -cross-cutting editing "narrativizes" the spaces -editing enables narration -unrestricted narration creates suspense |
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ALFRED HITCHCOCK, USA, 1959 -restricted 3rd person narrative -work plot overtaken by romance plot -continuity editing |
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SERGEI EISENSTEIN, USSR, 1925 -soviet montage --> discontinuity editing -montage as DIDACTIC: art's task to make manifest the conditions of being -montage as CONFLICT: from collision of two given shots/factors arises a concept -also not about a singular character |
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FRANCIS FORD COPPOLA, USA, 1974 -sound is an integral part of the story and the plot -little sound, but lots of depth of the perceptual sound of the main character |
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MAHMOUD-AL-MASSAD, JORDAN, 2008 -largely semi-observational/participatory? -not ethnographic since filmmaker is part of the culture (not 'outside looking in') -TV screen within doc is always contextualized via framing |
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KELLY REICHARDT, USA, 2011 -michelle williams <3 -an unusual type of wester --> revealing isolation and desperation of moving west rather than exploration and conquer as with traditional westerns -sound mix is very quiet -complication of gender hierarchies/ideology of settlement -treatment of space, racial hierarchy, etc |
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NIKI CARO, NEW ZEALAND, 2002 -small Maori community -local or universal narrative (global funding) -branding New Zealand as "100% pure" for filmmakers to use as "Middle Earth" type places -feminist within 'traditional' culture |
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LEGER, 1924 -relating machine to human body -b/w, 11 min. -repeating footage, abstract shapes, upside down footage, kaleidoscope effect |
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MAYA DEREN, 1943-1959 -'logic of a dream' -idk man this was weird af |
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