What is Film Studies? What s in the Course?

Similar documents
A Level Film Studies Scheme of work 2017 / 2018

COMPONENT 1 Varieties of film and filmmaking

GCE A LEVEL. WJEC Eduqas GCE A LEVEL in FILM STUDIES ACCREDITED BY OFQUAL DESIGNATED BY QUALIFICATIONS WALES SAMPLE ASSESSMENT MATERIALS

GCE A LEVEL. WJEC Eduqas GCE A LEVEL in FILM STUDIES. A level Course models

GCE AS. WJEC Eduqas GCE AS in FILM STUDIES ACCREDITED BY OFQUAL DESIGNATED BY QUALIFICATIONS WALES SAMPLE ASSESSMENT MATERIALS

GCE AS. WJEC Eduqas GCE AS in FILM STUDIES ACCREDITED BY OFQUAL DESIGNATED BY QUALIFICATIONS WALES SPECIFICATION

COMPONENT 2 Introduction to Film Movements: Silent Cinema Teacher Resource

FILM STUDIES SPECIFICATION GCE A LEVEL. WJEC Eduqas GCE A LEVEL in. Teaching from 2017 For award from 2019 ACCREDITED BY OFQUAL

COMPONENT 2 Introduction to Film Movements: Silent Cinema Student Resource

GCE A LEVEL. WJEC Eduqas GCE A LEVEL in FILM STUDIES COMPONENT 2. Experimental Film Teacher Resource GLOBAL FILMMAKING PERSPECTIVES

GCE A LEVEL. WJEC Eduqas GCE A LEVEL in FILM STUDIES. COMPONENT 2 Global filmmaking perspectives ADDITIONAL SAMPLE QUESTIONS: 2

GCE A LEVEL. WJEC Eduqas GCE A LEVEL in FILM STUDIES ACCREDITED BY OFQUAL DESIGNATED BY QUALIFICATIONS WALES GUIDANCE FOR TEACHING

Silent Cinema Student Resource

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

GCE A level 1184/01 FILM STUDIES FM4 Varieties of Film Experience Issues and Debates

SPECIMEN. Date Morning/Afternoon Time allowed: 2 hours. A Level Film Studies H410/01 Film History Sample Question Paper

Additional readings and films will be provided via Moodle.

Introduction to Film Studies FILM 20A, Summer 2018

GCSE (9-1) WJEC Eduqas GCSE (9-1) in FILM STUDIES ACCREDITED BY OFQUAL DESIGNATED BY QUALIFICATIONS WALES SPECIFICATION

NATIONAL DIPLOMA: FILM AND TELEVISION PRODUCTION Qualification code: NDFM08 - NQF Level 6

HUMN-130 COURSE SYLLABUS FOR HISTORY AND DEVELOPMENT OF MOTION PICTURES. Dirk Andrews Instructor

Film. lancaster.ac.uk/film

A LEVEL. Film Studies A LEVEL. Specification FILM STUDIES. H410 For first assessment in ocr.org.uk/alevelfilmstudies

Why study film? Is it not just about: Light form of entertainment? Plots & characters? A show: celebrities, festivals, reviewers?

ENG 026:Introduction to Film

Global filmmaking perspectives Section C: Film movements Silent cinema

BEGINNING VIDEO PRODUCTION. Total Classroom Laboratory/CC/CVE

Wuhan University SUMMER 2018

Calendar Proof. Calendar submission Oct 2013

FI: Film and Media. FI 111 Introduction to Film 3 credits; 2 lecture and 2 lab hours

Exploring film production roles

Course: Film, Higher Level (HL)

Film Lecture: Film Form and Elements of Narrative-09/09/13

ARTH 1112 Introduction to Film Fall 2015 SYLLABUS

Introduction to ComS 142

Curriculum Scope & Sequence. Subject/Grade Level: SOCIAL STUDIES /GRADE Course: History, Hollywood Cinema & the Media

COURSE DESCRIPTION EUROPEAN BACHELOR OF FINE ARTS CINEMA & TELEVISION

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

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

Alternatives to. Live-Action Fiction Films

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

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

Introduction to Cinema

Analysing Spectatorship. Is this engagement with spectatorship active or passive?

BFA: Digital Filmmaking Course Descriptions

CIEE Global Institute Paris Contemporary French Cinema (in English)

For the first time, in 2012, Vertigo, made in 1958, was voted the greatest film ever made by Sight and Sound magazine. Why should the film be so

Transfer Model Curriculum

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

FI: Film and Media. FI 111 Introduction to Film 3 credits; 2 lecture and 2 lab hours

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

We Need to Talk About Kevin

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

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

Case Study: Vivre Sa Vie / My Life to Live (Godard, 1962) Student Resource

I am excited to take this journey with you. It is my honor and privilege to teach this class. -Harrison

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

Editing. Editing is part of the postproduction. Editing is the art of assembling shots together to tell the visual story of a film.

DEPARTMENT of CINEMA STUDIES Spring 2019 Course List (See page 2 for CINE course descriptions.) Core B: Theory and Criticism

10 Day Lesson Plan. John Harris Unit Lesson Plans EDU 312. Prepared by: John Harris. December 6, 2008

SCREEN THEORY (RTF 331K, UNIQUE # 08100) Fall 2012 University of Texas at Austin

Introduction. So students of film are often misled by this Hollywood standard. In school we are taught

GCE Media Studies. Mark Scheme for June Unit F633: Global Cinema and Critical Perspectives. Advanced GCE. Oxford Cambridge and RSA Examinations

John Cassavetes. The Killing of a Chinese Bookie 1976

THE SYNERGY OF FILM AND MUSIC: SIGHT AND SOUND IN FIVE HOLLYWOOD FILMS BY PETER ROTHBART

Israel Film & Television Industry Facts and Figures at a Glance 2017

TTC Catalog - Film Production (FLM)

2015 General Education Program

Masters in Film Studies

Department of Cinema/Television MFA Producing

Week. 11 Examine different genres of film, identifying. 13 Examine different genres of film, identifying

VOCABULARY F I L M S T U D I E S

PRIMARY SCHOOLS, SECONDARY SCHOOLS AND COLLEGES

ENG 2300: Film Analysis Metacinema

Film Studies (FILM_S)

SYLLABUS AND POLICIES (UPDATED 1/22/17) FST 200 INTRODUCTION TO FILM STUDY Spring Discussion Section Leaders: Chas Andres and Adam Gnuse

Elementary & Secondary School Programmes 2016/2017

MT. DIABLO UNIFIED SCHOOL DISTRICT COURSE OF STUDY DRAFT

THE SYNERGY OF FILM AND MUSIC: SIGHT AND SOUND IN FIVE HOLLYWOOD FILMS BY PETER ROTHBART

Film and Television. 300 Film and Television. Program Student Learning Outcomes

Theatre, Cinema, & Film Production. Segment One EXAM REVIEW

German Department Course Selection Guide. Fall 03

School of Philosophical, Anthropological & Film Studies

DEPARTMENT of CINEMA STUDIES Winter 2019 Course List (See page 2 for CINE course descriptions.)

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

Film. Overview. Choice of topic

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

Film and Media. Overview

PREREQUISITES: None, but you need regular computer access to Canvas

Research Literacies Critical Review Task: Film and History

FILM STUDIES. Component 1: Section A Film Form in US Cinema from the Silent Era to 1990 A LEVEL. Delivery Guide. H410 For first teaching in 2017

All FMS Courses. ENG 191/ILVS 191 Metaphors of Globalization E (Additional) F15 ONLY

SIBELIUS ACADEMY, UNIARTS. BACHELOR OF GLOBAL MUSIC 180 cr

Film and Media Studies (FLM&MDA)

GUIDELINES FOR SUBMISSIONS OF FILMS

THE SYNERGY OF FILM AND MUSIC: SIGHT AND SOUND IN FIVE HOLLYWOOD FILMS BY PETER ROTHBART

Introduction to Film CMST Section 3 Spring 2015

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

Silent Echoes: Discovering Early Hollywood Through The Films Of Buster Keaton By John Bengston, John Bengtson

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

Transcription:

What is Film Studies? That s basic: you get to come to class and watch some of the best films of the last onehundred years films that say more about civilization and what it means to be human than most of the novels in the English curriculum. Then you talk about them, appreciate them, figure out why they are in fact works of genius, and then you make your own. You ll also learn to write like a pro, and it won t ever feel like work. That is Film Studies. Most people ask, Where will Film Studies get me? In terms of University, it feeds nicely into the humanities and the arts the kind of tracks you might want to take if you re looking (obviously) at the film industry itself, or if you re looking at anything like teaching, academia, journalism or history. But it s more than that. We live in a visual culture, and Film Studies is a mainline into the pressing issues, a direct window into its soul. The ideas that spark from the films taught are sociological, historical, political and philosophical. They cover the big questions of society and humanity, and the best questions of art. More than anything, the aim of Film Studies is to facilitate your path to being an active thinker. It will sharpen your visual literacy, widen your knowledge base, and help you become the kind of person worth talking to at parties, job interviews and on dates. No hyperbole: it makes being in the world more worthwhile. What s in the Course? Using the WJEC Eduquas specification, the two-year study is divided into three overall components. Two components of the course involve the academic study of films, and one involves actively making films. Component 1 covers varieties of film and filmmaking, specifically looking at Hollywood from 1930-1990, American film since 2005, and British film since 1995. Component 2 looks at global filmmaking perspectives, documentary films, and film movements like silent cinema and experimental film. These two components make up the content for the written exams at the end of the course. Although there are specific (critically acclaimed/mind-blowing) films we will study as a class, promising students will be given the opportunity to expand their academic investigations further afield. As for Component 3, students will make a film of their own because what s the point in learning the theory if you never put it into practice? As this counts for 30% of the final mark, due time will be given during lessons to the active practice of filmmaking and the creation of short films. Boom!

Overview: What s Taught When Autumn 2017: Introduction to Film Terminology Hollywood 1930 1990 (Comparative Study: Vertigo vs Apocalypse Now) - Key Elements, Meaning and Response, Film Contexts, Auteur Theory Introduction to Production: Making the Basics Spring 2018: American Film since 2005: Two film study: No Country for Old Men & Boyhood - Key Elements, Meaning and Response, Film Contexts, Spectatorship, Ideology British Film since 1995: Two film study: Trainspotting & Moon - Key Elements, Meaning and Response, Film Contexts, Narrative, Ideology Production Practice: Making a Narrative Summer 2018: Global Film: Two film study Inside and Outside Europe: Victoria and City of God - Key Elements, Meaning and Response, Film Contexts Short Film: A Complete Review of WJEC s Short Film List Production Planning for Internal Assessment Autumn 2018 Documentary Film: 20,000 Days on Earth - Key Elements, Meaning and Response, Film Contexts, Critical Debates, Filmmakers Theories Experimental Film: Pulp Fiction - Key Elements, Meaning and Response, Film Contexts, Narrative, Auteur Production Assessment Begins Spring 2019 Silent Film: The Varied Work of Buster Keaton - Key Elements, Meaning and Response, Film Contexts, Critical Debates Production Assessment Due Summer 2019 Exam Revision

Summary of Course Assessment Component 1: Varieties of film and filmmaking Written examination: 2½ hours 35% of qualification This component assesses knowledge and understanding of six feature-length films. Section A: Hollywood 1930-1990 (comparative study) One question from a choice of two, requiring reference to two Hollywood films, one from the Classical Hollywood period (1930-1960) and the other from the New Hollywood period (1961-1990). Section B: American film since 2005 (two-film study) One question from a choice of two, requiring reference to two American films, one mainstream film and one contemporary independent film. Section C: British film since 1995 (two-film study) One question from a choice of two, requiring reference to two British films. Component 2: Global filmmaking perspectives Written examination: 2½ hours 35% of qualification This component assesses knowledge and understanding of five feature-length films (or their equivalent). Section A: Global film (two-film study) One question from a choice of two, requiring reference to two global films: one European and one produced outside Europe. Section B: Documentary film One question from a choice of two, requiring reference to one documentary film. Section C: Film movements Silent cinema One question from a choice of two, requiring reference to one silent film or group of films. Section D: Film movements Experimental film (1960-2000) One question from a choice of two, requiring reference to one film option. Component 3: Production Non-exam assessment 30% of qualification This component assesses one production and its evaluative analysis. Learners produce: a short film (4-5 minutes) plus an evaluative analysis (1600-1800 words).

Subject Content! At the root of all film studies is a recognition that films are made: they are constructed using a range of elements cinematography, mise-en-scène, sound, editing and performance (the key elements of film form) which are organised structurally in terms of narrative and often genre (the structural elements of film form). How filmmakers use these elements, frequently in complex and highly artistic ways, is a large part of what constitutes the formal study of film. Equally important is how spectators respond to the work filmmakers create and how learners interpret the films with reference to spectator response, relevant contexts, critical approaches and debates. In turn, these formal studies have a direct impact on learners' own work as filmmakers. For each film we look at, we re going to look at different aspects, or areas, in order to make sure we get the full scope of analysis. To make it easy, these areas have been spilt into Core Areas (1-3) and Specialist Study Areas (4-9). All films we study will be examined through the Core Areas, and the Specialist Study Areas will be applied to individual films. For example: after watching Hitchcock s Vertigo, we will examine the Core Areas: 1) its filmic elements (the shots and sounds that make it); 2) the meanings we can take from the film (is it a film about the director s hatred of his mother?); 3) the context in which it was made (what was happening at the time). These make up the Core Areas. However, we might also look at Auteur Theory (the idea that the director is the driving creative force of the work) as that is a Specialist Area and relevant to Hitchcock. Core Areas Area 1. The key elements of film form: cinematography, mise-en-scène, editing, sound and performance the building blocks. Area 2. Meaning and response: how film functions as both a medium of representation and as an aesthetic medium what s it saying, and why does it look like it looks? Area 3. The contexts of film: social, cultural, political, historical and institutional, including production e.g. Is it true star had a heart attack on set and they had to shut down production for six weeks? Specialist Areas of Study. Area 4. Spectatorship Area 5. Narrative Area 6. Ideology Area 7. Auteur Area 8. Critical debates Area 9. Filmmakers' theories.

Production The production assessment amounts to the practical side of the A Level course and gives students a chance to put what they ve learned into practice. Across the two years of study students will be given many opportunities to hone their skills as both editors and directors of photography; the production assessment itself should be seen simply as the final product. The will also be given a large list of acclaimed short films to watch and study in or to enhance and inform their own practice. (See the end of this document for a full list of these films.) Brief: Students will create short film of between 4 and 5 minutes which includes one of the following: a narrative twist a narrative which begins with an enigma a narrative which establishes and develops a single character a narrative which portrays a conflict between two central characters. Learners must also complete an evaluative analysis of their production of between 1600 and 1800 words and make reference to all short films selected for study from the compilation set. The evaluative analysis will include: narrative structure of the short film an analysis of how the narrative features and dramatic qualities of all short films studied are constructed, including through dialogue, highlighting key ideas which informed learners' own production cinematic influences an analysis of how visual/audio elements of other professionally produced films or screenplays, including short films, influenced their short film or screenplay. creating meaning and effect an evaluative analysis of how their production creates meanings and generates responses for the spectator in relation to other professionally produced films or screenplays, including at least one of the short films studied.

Principal Texts (This list in not exhaustive substitutions are available) Vertigo (Hitchcock, 1958), PG Apocalypse Now (Coppola, 1979), 15 No Country for Old Men (Coen Brothers, 2007), 15 Boyhood (Linklater, 2015), 15 Trainspotting (Boyle, 1996), 18 Moon (Jones, 2009), 15 Victoria (Schipper, Germany, 2015), 15 City of God (Mereilles, Brazil, 2002) 20,000 Days on Earth (Forsyth and Pollard, UK, 2014), 15 One Week (1920), U and The Scarecrow (1920), U and The 'High Sign' (1921), U and Cops (1922), U, (Keaton, US) Pulp Fiction (Tarantino, US, 1994), 18 Short Films (Students must self-select 80 minutes worth) Meshes in the Afternoon (Deren, US, 1946) 14 La Jetée (Marker, France, 1962) 28 La Ricotta (Pasolini, Italy, 1963) 34 The Grandmother (Lynch, US, 1970) 34 A Girl s Own Story (Campion, Australia, 1987) 26 Elephant (Clarke, UK, 1989) 39 The Wrong Trousers (Park, UK, 1993) 30' When the Day Breaks (Forbis/Tilby, Canada, 1999) 09' About a Girl (Percival, UK, 2001) 09' Wasp (Arnold, UK, 2003) 24' High Maintenance (Van, Germany, 2006) 09' Connect (Abrahams, UK, 2010) 05' Night Fishing (Park, South Korea, 2011) 33 Pitch Black Heist (Maclean, UK, 2012) 13 Curfew (Christensen, US, 2012) 19' Swimmer (Ramsay, UK, 2012) 18 The Gunfighter (Kissack, US, 2014) 09' Stutterer (Cleary, UK, 2015) 12'