Introduction to Film Studies FILM 20A, Summer 2018

Similar documents
Film 100A-1: Introduction to the Moving Image Brandeis University Spring 2019

Film 100: Introduction to the Moving Image Brandeis University Spring 2018

ARTH 1112 Introduction to Film Fall 2015 SYLLABUS

AMERICAN FILM, Revised Syllabus Prof. Shelley Stamp

Introduction to Cinema

Introduction to International Relations POLI 65 Summer 2016

Additional readings and films will be provided via Moodle.

FILM 201 Introduction to Cinema Fall To Shoot a Film is to Organize an Entire Universe -Ingmar Bergman

2. Readings that are available on the class ELMS website are designated ELMS. Assignments 10pts. each) 60% (300 pts.

DEPARTMENT OF FINE ARTS COURSE OUTLINE WINTER 2016 TR 14:30-15:50, L123

Wuhan University SUMMER 2018

East China Normal University International Summer Session. FIM 11 Introduction to Film Studies

ENG 026:Introduction to Film

East China Normal University International Summer Session. FIM 11 Introduction to Film Studies

Course Requirements The class meets once a week for three hours of lecture, discussion and screenings. Attendance is obligatory.

ILLINOIS VALLEY COMMUNITY COLLEGE Course Syllabus for Music 1000

Philosophy of Art and Aesthetic Experience in Rome PHIL 277 Fall 2018

ENG 2300 Film Analysis Section 1809 Tues 4/Thurs 4-5 (Screenings Thurs 9-11)

Course Description: Analysis of selected, significant motion pictures of the world's cinema, from the silent period to the present.

MUS122: Ear Training and Sight Singing II Spring 2017 M/W/F 11:00 11:50 am / 2:00 2:50 pm Fine Arts Center C100

BASIC FILM PRODUCTION (CINEMA 24) City College of San Francisco

HUM Values in American Life Genre Mise-en-scène Melodrama, Noir, Women s film

MUS : SURVEY OF MUSIC LITERATURE Cultural Arts Building, 1023 TTR 5:00-6:15 p.m.

Article on Internet: The Cinema of Poetry Pier Paolo Pasolini

Shanghai University of Finance & Economics Summer Program. ENG 105 Introduction to Film and Film Theory. Course Outline

Don't let the technical emphasis of the class lectures misguide you: In the end, I hope to see films that have something to say.

FILM 130 Spring Silent Cinema

Don't let the technical emphasis of the class lectures misguide you: In the end, I hope to see films that have something to say.

Instructor: Dr. Cassie Ambutter Office Hours: Wednesdays, 1:30-3:30PM, The Abbey Coffee Shop (at Vintage Faith)

Performance Dates on Jazz Band Website

SCAND 360A/COMP LIT 315A Scandinavian Cinema Winter

CINE 212 Film History II Post-World War II Fall 2013

Modern Poetry and the Experience of Time (LTMO 145-A) MWF, 9 11:30am, HUM 2, 250 Instructor: Tim Willcutts

Introduction to Acting Syllabus THTR 105 Assistant Professor Susan Pfeffer

ENGL 245 INTRODUCTION TO CINEMA STUDIES Fall 2017 Section 1 Tues/Thurs: 2:00-3:15 pm, Combs Hall 139

University of Florida Jazz Band Syllabus and Student Handbook (MUN 1710, MUN 3713 and MUN 6715 ) Fall Website:

Functional Piano MUSI 1181 Mondays & Wednesdays FALL 2018

Westminster College School of Music Fall, 2018

Globalization and Folk Craft Production

A-H 624 section 001. Theory and Methods: Kant and Hegel on Art and Culture. Wednesday 5:00 7:30 pm. Fine Arts 308A. Prof.


RTV3320 ELECTRONIC FIELD PRODUCTION

FILM STUDIES Reimagining Europe, Prague, Czech Republic

Office: Krannert Level Office Hours: MW 12:00-12:50 Meeting time: MWF, 11-11:50 Classroom: Armory 242

University of Florida School of Music Woodwind Skills 1 - Clarinet Section Course Syllabus

Music World Music - the art of listening -

What is Film Studies? What s in the Course?

THE 1041 MT: INTRODUCTION TO THEATER ARTS Hybrid Traditional / Online Course

Functional Piano MUSI 1180 Monday, Wednesday Sessions FALL Course Number, Section Number, and Course Title: MUSI 1180 Functional Piano

Winthrop University Department of Theatre and Dance Fall Course Title: DANT 205 Music for Dance Credit Hours: 3

San José State University School of Music and Dance MUSC 147A, Beginning Conducting, Fall 2014

Challenging Form. Experimental Film & New Media

ENG 2300: Film Analysis Metacinema

Hollywood and America

DEPARTMENT OF FINE ARTS COURSE OUTLINE FALL DR 1010 (A2): INTRODUCTION TO THEATRE ART (3-0-0) 45 Hours for 15 Weeks

MUS 131 Basic Theory (3 credits) Fall 2012

BEGINNING VIDEO PRODUCTION. Total Classroom Laboratory/CC/CVE

LC 150, Reading Film: Introduction to Film Studies Department of Languages, Literature, and Cultures, Fall 2018

SOC University of New Orleans. Vern Baxter University of New Orleans. University of New Orleans Syllabi.

Music 111 Music Appreciation I, 3 Units

Music 111 Music Appreciation I, 3 Units

Major Film Movements English 344L Class Unique Number: 34845

Latin American History through Film N.B.:

Prof. Kim Neuendorf Office: MU 253, Office hours: Tues. 3:30-5:30; Wed. 10:30-12:30

TEXAS A&M UNIVERSITY-COMMERCE MUSIC DEPARTMENT APPLIED MUSIC: VOICE JENNIFER GLIDDEN, INSTRUCTOR COURSE SYLLABUS

FS 102: The History of Film, Spring 2018

CHIN 385 Advanced Chinese Cultural Communication

English 598: Rhetoric, Argument, and Writing. Fall 2017 Section A-01.

Michele Schreiber Department of Film and Media Studies Emory University Introduction to Film Through the Lens of Sustainability 6/17/11

Stephen F. Austin State University School of Music

College of the Desert

CALIFORNIA STATE UNIVERSITY, NORTHRIDGE DEPARTMENT OF CINEMA AND TELEVISION ARTS. CTVA 309: Film as Literature Spring units #11438

Dr. Jeffrey Peters. French Cinema

Music 4 - Exploring Music Fall 2016

COLLEGE OF THE CANYONS SYLLABUS: 2014FA MUSIC POPULAR SONGWRITING

Before the conclusion of this course, students should be able to:

Syllabus Snapshot. by Amazing Brains. Exam Body: CCEA Level: GCSE Subject: Moving Image Arts

Course Description: Textbooks Highly Recommended:

SYLLABUS - Office: Bouillon 231)

Film and Television. 318 Film and Television. Program Student Learning Outcomes. Faculty and Offices. Degrees Awarded

African American Cinema CTCS 407

Film and Television. Program Learning Outcomes. Certificate Program Certificate not applicable.

HISTORY 3800 (The Historian s Craft), Spring :00 MWF, Haley 2196

DEPARTMENT OF FINE ARTS COURSE OUTLINE FALL DR 1010 (A2): INTRODUCTION TO THEATRE ART 3(3-0-0) 45 Hours for 15 Weeks

UCSC Summer Session MUSIC 11D Introduction to World Music. Class Times: TTH 1:00 4:30 pm Class Location: Music Center 138 (DARC 340 July10 21)

Instructor: Lorraine Affourtit Office Hours: McHenry Library cafe, T/Th 4:30-5:30 pm

History of American Cinema. Course Description HIST 399

Drama H Gogebic Community College Fall 2016

Course: Film, Higher Level (HL)

LTRS 270, FALL DR. IRINA ERMAN, RUSSIAN STUDIES PROGRAM College of Charleston, School of Languages, Cultures and World Affairs.

MUS Chamber Choir (TR 2-250) Spring 2014 COURSE SYLLABUS

ENGLISH 1130, SECTION 007, Spring 2010 Instructor: Dr. Jana Davis Phone Office: A302 Office Hours: Mon. 2:30-3:25

LSC 606 Cataloging and Classification Summer 2007

Learning Outcomes By the end of this class, students should be able to:

Los Angeles Valley College MUS 200: INTRO TO MUSIC THEORY

HUMANITIES, ARTS AND DESIGN [HU]

Units. Year 1. Unit 3: There Was This Guy. Unit 1: Course Overview. 1:1 - Getting started 1:2 - Introducing Film SL 1:3 - Assessment and Tools

Art of Listening (MUAR ) p. 1

This course fulfills the second half of the legislative requirement for Government.

UGS 303: Introduction to Music and Film Sound

Transcription:

Introduction to Film Studies FILM 20A, Summer 2018 Instructor: Laimir Fano Class: M/W 9:00AM 12:30PM Email: lfano@ucsc.edu Screenings: M 12:30 3:00pm Office Hours: T 10:00AM 12:00PM Location: Soc Sci 2 075 Amazon Café (McHenry Library) Section A: W 01:00PM-02:00PM TA: Alessia Cecchet Email: alcecche@ucsc.edu Section B: W 02:00PM-03:00PM TA: Laimir Fano Email: lfano@ucsc.edu Course Description This course is an introduction to the formal elements of cinema (mise-en-scène, cinematography, editing, sound) as well as to principles of categorization and organization including narrative, documentary, experimental film, and several generic conventions. You will learn how to use the appropriate terminology to perform critical analyses that connect movies to broader cultural, social, and ideological issues. Information about important technological innovations and relevant moments in film history such as early cinema, classical Hollywood, German expressionism, and Italian Neorealism will also be presented in order to contextualize the concepts. Required Text Timothy Corrigan and Patricia White, The Film Experience. 5 th ed. Boston: Bedford/St. Martins, 2017. Assignments Participation and Attendance (15%): All lectures, discussion sections, and screenings are mandatory. No more than one absence from discussion sections and one absence from lectures will be permitted. Three or more absences will result in a failing grade for the course. Sequence Analysis Essay (25%): This assignment consists of two parts. First, you will create a shot log describing each shot in a given film sequence. Then, you will write an 800-word essay analyzing the ways in which cinematic techniques generate meaning in the sequence. Due in class Wednesday, August 15 th 1

Final Exam (30%): You will be asked to define and provide examples of some of the concepts studied in class. You will also write a short essay analyzing a film sequence screened during the exam. Held in class on Wednesday, August 29 th Film Analysis Essay (30%): You will choose a film (that was not discussed in class or sections) and write a 1,200-word essay analyzing how cinematic techniques work together to produce meaning. Due in class Wednesday, August 29 th Class Policies Laptop / Cell Phones Policy: Cell phones must be set to mute or turned off upon entering class. It is strictly prohibited to access your phone during a class lecture or screening. Laptop computers are not to be used in lectures or screenings. Exceptions will be granted for use of a computer to those with a documented need. Lateness Policy: All papers are due in hard copy at the beginning of class on the dates indicated. Extensions can only be granted in exceptional circumstances. Grade Disputes: If you have questions about the grading of your work, please make arrangements to meet with your teaching assistant (TA). If your questions are not resolved, please see me in office hours. If the matter still remains unresolved, I will advise you on further options. Academic Misconduct Policy: Academic misconduct includes but is not limited to cheating, fabrication, plagiarism, or facilitating academic dishonesty. Acts of academic misconduct during the course, including plagiarism, can and usually do result in failure of the course, at the sole discretion of the instructor of record. Your case will be reported to the College Provost as per the Academic Integrity guidelines found on the web at: https://www.ue.ucsc.edu/academic_misconduct Information on subject specific research guidelines is available at: http://guides.library.ucsc.edu/ Classroom Civility: Speaking to your peers, your instructor, your TA and administrative staff with respect is essential for creating a positive learning environment. Issues surrounding gender, race and class are integral to film analysis and appreciating that each of us maintains a different subject position in relation to these social elements is important. Respectfully engaging diverse ideas will create a sense of inclusion for all of us participating in the course. Graphic/Explicit Materials: In Film and Digital Media courses you will often be assigned films or other material that could contain difficult ideas, uncomfortable language, or graphic depictions of sex or violence. You will be asked to treat these portrayals critically, to consider what is being expressed by the maker, or to examine the potential social impact, and to evaluate the works in a given context. Instructors are always happy to speak with you about your work, and might direct you to CAPS (Counseling and Psychological Services) at 831-459-2628 or the Disability 2

Resource Center (drc@ucsc.edu or 831-459-2089) should you need additional support in order to do your best work. Disability Resources: UC Santa Cruz is committed to creating an academic environment that supports its diverse student body. If you are a student with a disability who requires accommodations to achieve equal access in this course, please submit your Accommodation Authorization Letter from the Disability Resource Center (DRC) to me privately during my office hours or by appointment, preferably within the first two weeks of the quarter. At this time, I would also like us to discuss ways we can ensure your full participation in the course. I encourage all students who may benefit from learning more about DRC services to contact DRC by phone at 831-459-2089 or by email at drc@ucsc.edu. Week 1 Mise-en-Scène / Cinematography Course Schedule July 30 Introduction to the Course. Elements of the Mise-en-Scène Topics: Sets and settings, props, costumes, make-up and hair, performance, blocking, lighting, styles of mise-en-scène. Reading: The Film Experience, Chapter 3, Mise-en-Scène: Exploring the Material World p.97-127 Screenings: Hotel Chevalier, dir. Wes Anderson, US/France, 2007. (13 mins) The Diving Bell and the Butterfly, dir. Julian Schnabel, France, 2007. (112 mins) August 1 st Fundamentals of Cinematography Topics: Framing, aspect ratio, camera distance, camera angles, depth of field, camera movements, point of view. Reading: The Film Experience, Chapter 4, Cinematography: Framing What We See p. 129-165 Week 2 Editing & Narrative August 6 th Hollywood s Editing System Topics: Transitions, devices and rules of continuity editing, classical film narrative. Readings: The Film Experience, Chapter 5, Editing: Relating Images p. 167-202 The Film Experience, Chapter 7 [excerpt], Classical Film Narrative p. 276-277 Screening: Memories of Underdevelopment, dir. Tomás Gutiérrez Alea, Cuba, 1968. (104 mins) August 8 th Alternatives to Hollywood s Editing System Topics: Disjunctive editing practices, alternative film narrative. 3

Readings: The Film Experience, Chapter 5 Editing: Relating Images p. 202-207 The Film Experience, Chapter 7 [excerpt], Alternative Film Narrative p. 277-281 Week 3 Sound / Documentary August 13 th Film Sound Topics: Synchronization, diegetic/non-diegetic sound, voice, music, sound effects, sound bridge, the expressive use of silence. Reading: The Film Experience, Chapter 6, Film Sound: Listening to the Cinema p. 209-239 Screening: Nostalgia for the Light, dir. Patricio Guzmán, Chile, 2010. (107 mins) August 15 th Documentary Topics: Documentary organizations, rhetorical positions, documentary genres. Reading: The Film Experience, Chapter 8, Documentary Films: Representing the Real p. 283-309 In Class Screening: Island of Flowers, dir. Jorge Furtado, Brazil, 1989. (13 mins) ***Sequence Analysis and Shot Log due in class: Wednesday, August 15 th *** Week 4 Experimental Cinema / Movie Genres August 20 th Experimental Cinema Topics: Formal strategies, experimental organizations, themes and styles. Reading: The Film Experience, Chapter 9, Experimental Film and New Media: Challenging Form p. 311-337 In Class Screening: Meshes of the Afternoon, dir. Maya Deren, US, 1943. (14 mins) A Movie, dir. Bruce Conner, US, 1958. (12 mins) Mothlight, dir. Stan Brakhage, US, 1963. (3 mins) Kustom Kar Kommandos, dir. Kenneth Anger, US, 1970. (3mins) Removed, dir. Naomi Uman, US, 1999. (6 mins) The Kiss, Jaco Van Dormael, Belgium/France, 1995. (1 min) Walking Under the Sun, dir. Diana Fonseca, Cuba, 2007. (3 mins) Screening: Dancer in the Dark, dir. Lars von Trier, Denmark/US, 2000. (140 mins) August 22 th Movie Genres 4

Topics: Generic conventions, iconography, main functions of a genre, hybrid genres, subgenres, generic reflexivity, revisionist genre traditions, the musical (case study). Reading: The Film Experience, Chapter 10, Movie Genres: Conventions, Formulas, and Audience Expectations p. 339-373 Week 5 Film History / Final Exam August 27 th Film Historiography Topics: Historiography, periodization, canon, auteur theory, orphan films. Reading: The Film Experience, Chapter 2, History and Historiography: Hollywood and Beyond p. 55-93 Screening: Within our Gates, dir. Oscar Micheaux, US, 1920. (80 mins) August 29 th Final Exam Final Exam held in class ***Film Analysis Essay also due on Wednesday, August 29 th *** 5