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DECEMBER 10

Enjoy the break!

Film:


They Live By Night (Ray, 1949) DVD 2981

Excerpts from:

Bigger Than Life (Ray, 1956) Blu-Ray 023 – 1:06:52  to 1:25:12

Johnny Guitar (Ray, 1954) Blu-Ray 146 – 00:03:24 to 00:23:20

Reading (to be done over the break): 

Richard Corliss. “The Hollywood Screenwriter.”  (in course reader)



DECEMBER 3

Films:


Rules of the Game (Renoir 1939) BluRay 068
Hillbilly Hare (McKimson 1951) DVD 3171   

Excerpt from:

Grand Illusion (Renoir 1937) Blu-Ray 245 (26:55 to 29:48)


Reading (to be done by December 9): 


Terrence Rafferty. "The Essence of Landscape." (in course reader)

Assignment for December 10: 


Final paper due.
NOVEMBER 26

Enjoy the Holiday break!

Films:

Sisters of the Gion (Mizoguchi1936) DVD 3636
A Page of Madness (Kinugasa 1926) personal DVD (on class reserve shelf in film library)   

Reading (to be done by December 2): 


Jasper Sharp and Mariann Lewinsky. “A Page of Madness.”  

Assignment for December 3: 

All the short papers that you have not yet turned in are due by 4 pm on Wednesday, December 3. You will be penalized one full FINAL grade for each missing short paper. 

Thus, if you have attended every class and write a brilliant final paper but have failed to turn in one of the short papers, the highest grade you can hope for is a P. 

I will email everyone this week to let you know where you stand – what papers you have not turned in and how many absences you have had thus far. Please be sure to get all the missing work in before class Wednesday!


NOVEMBER 19

Films:

Zero For Conduct (Vigo, 1932)  Blu-Ray 039
Mädchen in Uniform (Sagan, 1931) personal DVD (on class reserve shelf in film library)   

Reading (to be done by November 25): 


Paper topic (paper due November 26 by 4 p.m. All papers to be emailed to gmairs@calarts.edu): 

Two more pages of progress on your final paper. This week, I care about what you turn in – I would like two pages of solid analysis of one of the films you’re discussing, working from a scene within the film. Since I’ve asked all of you to dedicate at least some of your paper to working with the films themselves, breaking down and discussing scenes in cinematic terms, THAT is what I expect in this week’s paper. Consider it another two pages out of the way to finishing your final.  Next Wednesday’s deadline is STRICT, even if you are skipping class to leave for Thanksgiving.



NOVEMBER 12 

Films:

L’Atalante (Vigo 1934) Blu-Ray 039   
Land Without Bread (Buñuel 1933) DVD 463

Singin’ in the Rain (Donen/Kelly, 1952) DVD 015 – (51:22 to 59:36)
Love Me Tonight (Mamoulian, 1932) DVD 1286 – (1:43 to 7:29 and 11:14 to 18:52)
Une Femme est une femme (Godard, 1960) DVD 1106 (opening to 6:00)


Reading (to be done by November 18): 

Robin Wood. “L’Atalante: The Limits of Liberation.” (in course reader)
Maximillion Le Cain. “Jean Vigo.”

Paper topic (paper due November 19 by 4 p.m. All papers to be emailed to gmairs@calarts.edu): 

You need to produce two pages of work towards your final paper. This can be anything – research notes, an outline, a bibliography – but it is absolutely due next week. Please note that these pages are a REQUIRED assignment; it is impossible to pass the class without turning them both in.


NOVEMBER 5

Films:

Black and Tan Fantasy (Murphy 1929) DVD 2743
Trouble in Paradise (Lubitsch, 1932) DVD 622

Gold Diggers of 1933 (LeRoy, 1933) – DVD 2459 (00:00 to 5:33)
Design For Living (Lubitsch, 1933) – DVD 1896 (1:16 to 8:41)

Notorious (Hitchcock, 1946) – DVD 2026 (23:08 – 26:01)


Reading (to be done by November 11):

Thomas Schatz. “Hollywood: The Triumph of the Studio System.” (in course reader)

Paper topic (paper due November 12 by 4 p.m. Graduate papers to be emailed to gmairs@calarts.edu; undergraduates email papers to T.A. Matthew Lax at laxco@outlook.com): 


Compare two performances from films screened thus far this semester. This is best done through careful consideration of two short scenes. Issues to consider might include your sense of the authenticity or naturalism of the performance, the level of theatricality or artifice and the extent to which the performance leads you to identify with the character. Please define your terms carefully: don’t expect your reader to understand what you mean by a “real” or “natural” performance.

OCTOBER 22

Films:

Un Chien Andalou (Buñuel/Dali, 1929) DVD 1905          
Les Vampires, ep. 2: The Ring That Kills (Feuillade, 1916) DVD 1645 
The Smiling Madame Beudet (Dulac, 1922) reserve DVD 
Ballet Mecanique (Léger/Murphy, 1926) DVD 1636
The Life and Death of 9413, a Hollywood Extra (Vorkapich/Florey, 1928) DVD 1636
At Land (Deren, 1945) DVD 1620
Fireworks (Anger, 1947) DVD 3937

Reading (to be done by October 28):

Luis Buñuel. “Cinema, Instrument of Poetry,”" in course reader.
Germaine Dulac. “The Avant-Garde Cinema,”  in course reader.
Ed Gonzalez. "Les Vampires."

Paper topic (paper due October 29. Graduate students send papers via email to gmairs@calarts.edu; undergraduates send papers to TA Matthew Lax at laxco@outlook.com): 

Take one small moment in any of the films we’ve screened today, and discuss it at length. The idea is to begin with formal analysis – how is this moment shot, lit, edited, etc – and move from there to a discussion of what marks that moment as unusual. These films aren’t simply weird, they’re carefully crafted in ways that challenge our ideas about how films are “supposed” to work, and I want you to discuss how. You’re going to need to see whatever scene you discuss again – luckily, they are all available on YouTube.



“If cinema is to take its place besides the others as a full-fledged art form, it must cease merely to record realities that owe nothing of their actual existence to the film instrument. Instead, it must create a total experience so much out of the very nature of the instrument as to be inseparable from its means. It must relinquish the narrative disciplines it has borrowed from literature and its timid imitation of the causal logic of narrative plots, a form which flowered as a celebration of the earth-bound, step-by-step concept of time, space and relationship which was part of the primitive materialism of the nineteenth century. Instead, it must develop the vocabulary of filmic images and evolve the syntax of filmic techniques which relate those. It must determine the disciplines inherent in the medium, discover its own structural modes, explore the new realms and dimensions accessible to it and so enrich our culture artistically as science has done in its own province.” - Maya Deren




OCTOBER 15

Films:
Sherlock, Junior (Keaton 1924) Blu-Ray 041
City Lights (Chaplin 1921) DVD 2665
One Week (Keaton/Cline 1920) Blu-Ray 153

Reading (to be done by October 21):

Walter Kerr. “The Keaton Quiet,” in course reader. 
J. Hoberman. “After the Gold Rush: Chaplin at One Hundred,” in course reader. 

Paper topic (paper due October 22):

Take whatever single moment made you laugh the hardest in today’s films and talk about how it works as CINEMA – how is the gag framed or edited (or not edited) or choreographed to make it funny. A good starting point might be to imagine the same joke shot or edited in a different way.

PLEASE NOTE THAT NEXT WEEK, OCTOBER 22, IS THE DROP DEAD DATE - THE FIRST FOUR PAPERS (INCLUDING THIS WEEK'S ASSIGNMENT) MUST HAVE BEEN TURNED IN OR YOU WILL BE DROPPED FROM THE CLASS WITH A GRADE OF "NC." EMAIL ME AT gmairs@calarts.edu IF YOU HAVE ANY QUESTIONS!

OCTOBER 8

Films:


Bed and Sofa (Room 1927) VHS 1554

excerpts from:

Battleship Potemkin (Eisenstein 1925) DVD 984 (chapters  7 - 9,  44:35 to 56:25)

The Man With the Movie Camera (Vertov 1927) DVD 930 (first 25 minutes)

Reading (to be done by October 14):

Sergei Eisenstein, “A Dialectic Approach to Film Form,” online.

Dziga Vertov, “Provisional Instructions to Kino-Eye Groups (1926),” in course reader.


No new paper this week. You are expected to turn in any missing work and to catch up on ALL the readings this week!

The drop dead date is two weeks from today, October 22. The four papers which will have been assigned by that date MUST BE TURNED IN BY CLASS TIME OCTOBER 22 in order for you to avoid being dropped from the class.








OCTOBER 1

Films:
The Last Laugh (Murnau 1924) DVD 377
Cabinet of Dr. Caligari (Wiene 1920) DVD 3299

Readings (to be done by October 7):
Thomas Elsaesser. “Germany: The Weimar Years,” in course reader.           
Janet Bergstrom.  “Friedrich Wilheim Murnau,” in course reader.


Paper topic (paper due October 8. Graduate students send papers via email to gmairs@calarts.edu; undergraduates send papers to TA Matthew Lax at laxco@outlook.com): 

Your assignment for today is to compare the visual styles of one of the films screened tonight to Broken Blossoms. You only have two pages, so you should think very small – take one short scene (or even a single shot) from Broken Blossoms and compare it to a short scene from The Last Laugh or The Cabinet of Doctor Caligari, making very specific, concrete reference to the framing, the editing, the lighting , the makeup, the performance style– any element that intrigues you. DO NOT compare the stories but instead how the films function in visual terms.


SEPTEMBER 24 

BEGINNING THIS WEEK, UNDERGRADUATES ARE TO EMAIL THEIR ESSAYS DIRECTLY TO T.A. MATTHEW LAX AT LAXCO@OUTLOOK.COM  

GRADUATE STUDENTS SEND THEIR PAPERS TO GARY AT GMAIRS@CALARTS.EDU 

Films: 

Musketeers of Pig Alley (Griffith 1912) DVD 536 
Broken Blossoms (Griffith 1919) DVD 244 

Reading (to be done by September 30): 

Tom Gunning, “Weaving a Narrative: Style and Economic Background in Griffithʼs Biograph Films,” in course reader. 

Paper topic (paper due October 1. Graduate students send papers via email to gmairs@calarts.edu; undergraduates send papers to TA Matthew Lax at laxco@outlook.com): 

Write again about the scene you explored last week, this time focusing on the editing. Instead of describing the content of each shot, talk about how the shots work together. The crucial questions are: how long is each shot, and why? And why do you think the filmmakers change from one camera position to the next in the course of the scene – what does the audience get from these shifts in perspective? Finally, how noticeable are these cuts as you watch the film?

SEPTEMBER 17

Films:
Workers Leaving the Factory; Train Arriving at a Station; The Sprinkler Sprinkled; Snowball Fight (Lumières 1895-1897) DVD 467

Four Troublesome Heads; The Astronomer's Dream; The Skipping Cheese; Eclipse: or, the Courtship of the Sun and Moon (Méliès 1898, 1898, 1907, 1907) DVD 3303, disks 1 and 4

Automatic Hat and Sausage Machine; How Monsieur Takes His Bath; Alice Guy Films a “Phonoscène” in the Studio at Buttes-Chaumont, Paris; Indiscreet Questions (Guy 1900, 1903, 1907, 1906)  DVD 4408 

The Dancing Pig (Pathé company 1907) DVD 2743

The Golden Beetle (Zecca 1907) DVD 467

The Great Train Robbery (Porter 1903) DVD 467

Making an American Citizen (Guy 1912) DVD 467

A Corner in Wheat (Griffith 1909) DVD 1180

Heart of the World (Maddin 2000) DVD 2025

Premonition Following an Evil Deed aka Lumière (Lynch 2000) DVD 810

Fire and Rain (Benning 2009): 





Reading (to be done by September 23):

Roberta Pearson, "Early Cinema," in course reader.




Paper topic (paper due September 24. Send all papers via email to gmairs@calarts.edu):

Discuss the use of composition in a single scene from one of your favorite movies, focusing in particular on whether the framing is open or closed (most films use a combination of both styles), what these choices say about the world surrounding the story, and why the scene is composed in such a way. Keep it very simple: no more than two or three consecutive shots. Begin with description and please follow the guidelines laid out in "Writing Film Essays" in the reader.




SEPTEMBER 10

Films:

Pickup On South Street (Samuel Fuller 1953) DVD 1007

"The Po River Valley" from Paisan (Rossellini 1946) DVD 3701 (1:42:31 to end)

Reading (to be done by September 16):

Manny Farber. "White Elephant Art vs. Termite Art." (in course reader)

André Bazin. "The Evolution of the Language of Cinema." (in course reader)

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And that is all...see you in the Bijou next week

MAY 7

Films:

Borom Sarret (Ousmane Sembène 1963) DVD 2150

Mooladé (Ousmane Sembène 2004) DVD 2009




THANK YOU ALL FOR YOUR HARD WORK AND COMMITMENT TO THE CLASS THIS SEMESTER!

APRIL 30

Films:

Poto and Cabengo (Jean-Pierre Gorin 1980) DVD 4520

La Libertad (Lisandro Alonso 2001) DVD 4571 

Reading (to be done by May 6):


Paper topic (Paper due May 7 via email to elkrugamigos@earthlink.net, attached as a .doc, .docx, .rtf or .odt file):

The final long paper is due before the last class session on May 7.


"The irony," Robert Koehler concludes, "is that there's nothing absolutely Argentine about La libertad. Its freedom is a freedom from nationality, time-space, narrative laws, camera laws and the expectations that audiences instinctively impose on themselves. But pay attention to the actual translation of the Spanish title: 'Liberty'--a harder, more profound word than 'freedom,' a word pointing to a greater leap, a commitment to an ideal, an identifier for an equation that even describes its opposition--oppression. Liberty is harder-won. Liberty is that thing that the films that really matter aspire to. This one just has the balls to take it as its own name."


APRIL 23

Films:

The Apple (Samira Makhmalbaf 1998) DVD 2189

The House is Black (Farrokhzad 1962) DVD 5056 

Reading (to be done by April 29):



Paper topic (Paper due April 30 - undergraduates print copy and bring to class, graduates send via email to elkrugamigos@earthlink.net, attached as a .doc, .docx, .rtf or .odt file):

All short papers due. Please check your email; I will contact people who still owe papers.

The final long paper is due before the last class session on May 7.


APRIL 16

Film:

Young Soul Rebels (Julien 1991) DVD 5339    

Excerpts:

The Filth and the Fury (Temple 2000) DVD 891 (00:00:24 - 00:04:59; 00:56:48 - 01:00:49)


Reading (to be done by April 22):

Paper topic (Paper due April 30 - undergraduates print copy and bring to class, graduates send via email to elkrugamigos@earthlink.net, attached as a .doc, .docx, .rtf or .odt file):

Two more pages of progress on your final paper. This week, I care about what you turn in – I would like two pages of solid analysis of whatever film you’re discussing, working from a scene within the film. Since I’ve asked all of you to dedicate at least some of your paper to working with the films themselves, breaking down and discussing scenes in cinematic terms, THAT is what I expect in this week’s paper. Consider it another two pages out of the way to finishing your finals.  

It is due the Wednesday after next, on April 30, along with ALL short papers. If you are behind, you need to catch up and have two weeks to do it.