Melbourne Masterclass. Turning Points in Cinema to Die For. Faculty of Arts

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Melbourne Masterclass Turning Points in Cinema to Die For Faculty of Arts

Melbourne Masterclass Turning Points in Cinema to Die For Wednesdays 9 & 23 August, 6 & 20 September, 11 & 18 October, 6.30 8.30pm The Faculty of Arts is proud to present Turning Points in Cinema to Die For. For this masterclass we have invited seven Melbourne scholars, critics and artists to account for the profound and enduring impact of cinema on their lives. Each of our speakers has chosen a beloved film which represents a turning point in their professional and personal experience and which has brought them to a new and inspiring understanding of the world and their place in it. Unsurprisingly all six films have a history of significant audience and critical appeal. Above all, these films have distinguished themselves for their ability to reach out to and influence creative and performing artists and audiences well beyond the realms of the movie business. Studied together, they make up a new and refreshingly eclectic set of films to add to your essential viewing list. Join us in the discussion with our experts as they reveal why these are not only films to see before you die, but films to die for. Hosted by Dr Mark Nicholls, Senior Lecturer in Cinema Studies at The University of Melbourne. Each session includes a 50-minute lecture discussing the speaker s chosen film, followed by a break with light refreshments, and concluding with a discussion and Q&A with the speaker and host. Wednesday 9 August 42nd Street, Lloyd Bacon, 1933 Speaker: Professor Barbara Creed Wednesday 20 September Blow Up, Michelangelo Antonioni, 1966 Speaker: Kelly Gellatly Wednesday 23 August Voyage to Italy, Roberto Rossellini, 1954 Speaker: Dr Mark Nicholls Wednesday 11 October The Turning Point Herbert Ross, 1977 Speaker: David McAlister AM Wednesday 6 September La Grande Vadrouille, Gérard Oury, 1966 Speakers: Professor Véronique Duché and Dr Andrew McGregor Wednesday 18 October Julieta, Pedro Almodovar, 2016 Speaker: Professor Alfredo Martinez-Exposito

Speaker: Professor Barbara Creed Speaker: Dr Mark Nicholls Wednesday 9 August 42nd Street, Lloyd Bacon, 1933 Choreographed by Busby Berkeley, master of the musical, '42nd Street' has long been regarded as a cinematic classic. Replete with tap-dancing chorines, wearing exotic costumes, 42nd Street continues to fascinate film lovers. Kaleidoscopic patterns, beautiful geometric designs, assemblyline precision - these are the famous features of the classic Busby Berkeley dance sequence. Set during the great Depression, 42nd Street offers both crowd-pleasing entertainment and a wonderful example of Charles Darwin's theory of evolution in relation to sexual selection. In 1998 the Library of Congress selected 42nd Street as being 'culturally, historically or aesthetically significant' and recommended it for preservation in the United States National Film Registry. The American Film Institute ranked it 13th on its list of best musicals ever. Professor Barbara Creed is Redmond Barry Distinguished Professor at the University of Melbourne. She is the author of six books in feminist film theory, gender and media including The Monstrous-Feminine (1993) and Darwin s Screens (2009). She has been on the boards of Writers Week, The Melbourne International Film Festival, the Melbourne Queer Film Festival & film critic for The Age, ABC radio, The Australian Book Review and The Big Issue. Wednesday 23 August Voyage to Italy, Roberto Rossellini, 1954 Ingrid Bergman scandalised the world when she left her husband and Hollywood to make low budget films in Italy with Roberto Rossellini. Celebrated as the "father of Neo-Realism", by the early 1950s Rossellini was leading Italian cinema away from social realism and towards new expressions of psychological realism. Voyage to Italy observes an English couple, played by Bergman and George Sanders, as they journey though Naples, Capri and Pompeii in search of the happiness that continues to allude them. This masterclass shows how Voyage to Italy is as much about the search for meaning in the cinema as it is about relationships. Perhaps one of the most influential films of the post-war period, Voyage to Italy is one of the essential reasons film critics and scholars agree with Italian director Bernardo Bertolucci when he says "Remember, one cannot live without Rossellini." Dr Mark Nicholls is Senior Lecturer in Cinema Studies at the University of Melbourne where he has taught film since 1993. He is the author of Scorsese s Men: Melancholia and the Mob, Pluto and Indiana (2004) and Lost Object of Desire: The Performances of Jeremy Irons (2012). He has published a rage of articles and essays for journals and publishers. Mark is a film journalist and worked for many years on ABC Radio and for The Age newspaper, for which he wrote a weekly film column between 2007 and 2009. Mark has an extensive list of stage credits as a playwright, performer, producer and director.

Speakers: Professor Véronique Duché and Dr Andrew McGregor Wednesday 6 September La Grande Vadrouille, Gérard Oury, 1966 For four decades following its release in 1966, La Grande Vadrouille was the most commercially successful French film in France. This masterclass will explore the reasons behind the film s success and why, despite the international renown of the French New Wave and the gravitas of French auteur cinema, all of the top-ten most commercially successful French films ever released in France are comedies. R. Chisholm Professor of French, Véronique Duché has extensive experience in teaching French literature and linguistics. She has published many articles on French Renaissance literature and edited several 16th century novels. Her research explores theoretical problems and issues concerning genre as well as translation into French during the Renaissance. Dr Andrew McGregor lectures in French Studies in the School of Languages & Linguistics at The University of Melbourne. He completed a Masters in Film Studies at the Université de Paris I Panthéon-Sorbonne and is the founding coeditor of the Film Cultures series for Peter Lang Publishing, Switzerland. He lectures and publishes on French and European cinema and particularly on the representation and interpretation of cultural identities in film. Speaker: Kelly Gellatly Wednesday 20 September Blow Up, Michelangelo Antonioni, 1966 Evocatively capturing the excitement, fashion, music, and new sexual freedoms of Swinging London in the 1960s, Michelangelo Antonioni s Blowup was described by film critic Arthur Knight at the time as having the ability to become as an "important and germinal a film as Citizen Kane, Open City and Hiroshima, Mon Amour perhaps even more so." Starring David Hemmings as a free-wheeling fashion photographer based on the life of celebrity photographer David Bailey, and peppered with cameos by some of the 1960s most influential players, Blowup encapsulates and indeed, embodies, many of the seminal shifts in photographic practice that occurred during this decade and the rise of the cult of celebrity that continues to flood our screens and fill our social media accounts today. Kelly Gellatly is the Director of the Ian Potter Museum of Art at the University of Melbourne. Over the four years of Kelly s appointment the Potter has seen major organisational change, increased its public profile and witnessed a significant growth in visitors from within the University community and wider public and has curated several notable exhibitions. Prior to the Potter, Kelly was Curator of Contemporary Art (Australian and International) at the National Gallery of Victoria, Melbourne.

Speaker: David McAlister AM Speaker: Professor Alfredo Martinez-Exposito Wednesday 11 October The Turning Point, Herbert Ross, 1977 The Turning Point was a film that ignited my teenage boy's passion to be a professional dancer. While having danced for several years, seeing a glimpse behind the scenes and watching Mikhail Baryshnikov soaring through the air and doing endless turns, I knew that was the life for me. I saw the first trailer at a cinema visit for an English Literature film with school. While all the other boys were jeering, my heart soared and that feeling stays with me every time I see this movie. The cast is amazing and Ann Bancroft is the most convincing Ballerina for a non-dancer and Shirley MacLaine so convincing as the ballet Mum. Big call but I think this is the best 'ballet' movie ever made! David McAllister joined The Australian Ballet in 1983 and was promoted to principal artist in 1989. During his time with the company, he danced many principal roles and in 1985 won Bronze at the Fifth International Ballet Competition in Moscow. Throughout his career, David made numerous guest appearances worldwide, dancing with Bolshoi Ballet, the Kirov Ballet, the Georgian State Ballet, The National Ballet of Canada, Birmingham Royal Ballet, Singapore Dance Theatre and, in 1992, as part of a Royal Gala performance in London in the presence of the Princess of Wales. In 2000 David became Artistic Director of The Australian Ballet and was awarded a Member of the Order of Australia in the 2004 Australia Day Honours List. Wednesday 18 October Julieta, Pedro Almodovar, 2016 Julieta is loosely based on three short stories by Alice Munro (Chance, Solo and Silence). At the centre of a characteristically Almodovarian convoluted plot, a mother longs for her absent daughter. Masterfully and tastefully, the film slowly reveals the reasons of their traumatic separation as well as the secret, upsetting circumstances of the life-changing chance encounter on a train many years before. Professor Alfredo Martinez-Exposito joined the University of Melbourne in 2011 as Professor of Spanish and Head of the School of Languages and Linguistics. He has published widely on Spanish cinema post-1992. His most recent book project focuses on the intersection between Nation Brading and film aesthetics: "Cuestión de imagen: cine y Marca España" (2015). Alfredo is a Fellow of the Australian Academy of Humanities and was awarded the Order of Civil Merit for his contribution to the promotion of Spain s culture in Australia.

Event Details Cost Refreshments are included each week Individual session, 2 hours each $55*/ $65 Series Pass: 6 sessions, 12 hours $300*/ $350 *University of Melbourne alumni, staff, and students Venue Forum Theatre, Arts West Building, The University of Melbourne, Parkville Enquiries: Caterina Sciacca, Community Education Manager, Faculty of Arts caterina.sciacca@unimelb.edu.au 03 8344 3996 Registrations alumni.online.unimelb.edu.au/cinema2017 arts.unimelb.edu.au/engage/community-education