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Frank P. Tomasulo, Ph.D. deposited The Sounds of Silence: Minimalist Acting in BLOW-UP in the group
Film Studies on Humanities Commons 6 years, 6 months agoThis essay explores the use of understated modernist performance tropes in Michelangelo Antonioni’s film BLOW-UP. The filmmaker relies on directorial prerogatives such as camera angles, lighting mise-en-scene, editing. subtle gestures and facial expressions, and other minimalist cinematic techniques to convey meaning and mood — rather than overt…[Read more]
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Frank P. Tomasulo, Ph.D. deposited BICYCLE THIEVES: A Re-reading in the group
Film Studies on Humanities Commons 6 years, 6 months agoThis article investigates the mixed ideology of Vittorio DeSica’s classic neorealist film, BICYCLE THIEVES (1948) from a cinematic and political perspective.
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Frank P. Tomasulo, Ph.D. deposited The Politics of Ambivalence: APOCALYPSE NOW as Pro-War and Anti-War Film in the group
Film Studies on Humanities Commons 6 years, 6 months agoThis essay investigates the possibility that APOCALYPSE NOW presents “mixed messages” about the Vietnam War to a divided U.S. audience.
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Frank P. Tomasulo, Ph.D. deposited The Architectonics of Alienation: Antonioni’s Edifice Complex in the group
Film Studies on Humanities Commons 6 years, 6 months agoThis essay explores the use of architecture in the cinema of Michelangelo Antonioni.
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Frank P. Tomasulo, Ph.D. deposited ADAPTATION as Adaptation in the group
Film Studies on Humanities Commons 6 years, 6 months agoThis essay analyzes the process of adaptation from Susan Orlean’s book THE ORCHID THIEF to the motion picture ADAPTATION (directed by Spike Jonze)
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Frank P. Tomasulo, Ph.D. deposited 1976: Movies and Cultural Contradictions in the group
Film Studies on Humanities Commons 6 years, 6 months agoThis chapter traces the social and aesthetic implications of the five Academy Award contenders for Best Picture in America’s Bicentennial year, 1976.
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Frank P. Tomasulo, Ph.D. deposited The Maltese Phallcon: The Oedipal Trajectory of Classical Hollywood Cinema in the group
Film Studies on Humanities Commons 6 years, 6 months agoThis essay uses a psychoanalytic and Marxist methodology to analyze the appeal of Classical Hollywood Cinema.
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Irina Schulzki deposited ‘The Underlying Gesture’. Towards the Notion of Gesture in Jean d’Udine and Sergei Eisenstein in the group
Film Studies on Humanities Commons 6 years, 7 months ago“‘The Underlying Gesture’. Towards the Notion of Gesture in Jean d’Udine and Sergei Eisenstein”. In: Rossella Catanese, Francesca Scotto Lavina, Valentina Valente (eds.), From Sensation to Synaesthesia in Film and New Media. Cambridge Scholars Publishing 2019, 102-115.
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Flavio Gregori started the topic CFP – Adaptation of (English) literary works in the discussion
Film Studies on Humanities Commons 6 years, 7 months agoThe journal English Literature: Theories, Interpretations, Contexts, published at the University of Venice Ca’ Foscari, invites scholars to send article proposals on “Adapting literary works“.
We’ll be happy to consider essays on all aspects of the relationship between English literature/literatures in English and their adaptations for vari…[Read more] -
Adelheid Heftberger deposited Linked Open Data for Filmarchives – Organised by the LOD-Task Force of the FIAF Cataloging and Documentation Commission (CDC) in the group
Film Studies on Humanities Commons 6 years, 9 months agoIt is of interest to discuss options, necessary actions and, most importantly, the most useful infrastructure for film archives (e.g. an ontology for audiovisual media which is adapted to the requirements of film heritage institutions), it seems advisable to discuss options in a workshop dedicated to this topic. The workshop brought together…[Read more]
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Derek Johnston deposited The Sublime Horror of the English Countryside in the group
Film Studies on Humanities Commons 6 years, 9 months agoThis paper will explore the use of the English landscape as a source of sublime horror, particularly through a shift in perception from idyllic to ominous. Where Peter Hutchings has indicated the importance of the ‘uncanny landscape’ as a fairly stable location for wrestling with modernity, this chapter will investigate those moments of slippage…[Read more]
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Birk Weiberg deposited Image as Collective: A History of Optical Effects in Hollywood’s Studio System in the group
Film Studies on Humanities Commons 6 years, 10 months agoThis dissertation provides a historical account of a until now neglected field of moving image production. It identifies and focuses on optical effects as a practice of montage within moving images as opposed to the montage of like images in time. Drawing on a wide range of new archival material, my dissertation presents previously unknown reasons…[Read more]
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Kendra Leonard deposited Phantoms of the Archives slides in the group
Film Studies on Humanities Commons 6 years, 10 months agoArchives are full of ghosts—the ghosts of music long-forgotten, technologies now superseded, practices that have faded away with time. This talk examines music used to accompany and signify the supernatural the silent film, as well as what can be learned by excavating the ghosts of musicians’ lives and careers now held in archives both at the Uni…[Read more]
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Kendra Leonard deposited Phantoms of the Archives: Music for the Early Cinematic Supernatural and Other Tales in the group
Film Studies on Humanities Commons 6 years, 10 months agoArchives are full of ghosts—the ghosts of music long-forgotten, technologies now superseded, practices that have faded away with time. This talk examines music used to accompany and signify the supernatural the silent film, as well as what can be learned by excavating the ghosts of musicians’ lives and careers now held in archives both at the Uni…[Read more]
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Jaimie Baron deposited The Ethics of Appropriation: ‘Misusing’ the Found Document in Suitcase of Love and Shame and A Film Unfinished in the group
Film Studies on Humanities Commons 6 years, 11 months agoWhile found documents have long been marshalled as evidence in documentary, several recent films have interrogated the found document’s evidentiary status and raised questions about the ethics of appropriation. This essay examines two films — Yael Hersonski’s A Film Unfinished (2010) and Jane Gillooly’s Suitcase of Love and Shame (2013) – in rela…[Read more]
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Jaimie Baron deposited The Ethics of Appropriation: ‘Misusing’ the Found Document in Suitcase of Love and Shame and A Film Unfinished in the group
Film-Philosophy on Humanities Commons 6 years, 11 months agoWhile found documents have long been marshalled as evidence in documentary, several recent films have interrogated the found document’s evidentiary status and raised questions about the ethics of appropriation. This essay examines two films — Yael Hersonski’s A Film Unfinished (2010) and Jane Gillooly’s Suitcase of Love and Shame (2013) – in rela…[Read more]
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Jaimie Baron deposited Subverted Intentions and the Potential for “Found” Collectivity in Natalie Bookchin’s Mass Ornament in the group
Film Studies on Humanities Commons 6 years, 11 months agoThis paper explores the ways in which Natalie Bookchin’s video loop installation entitled Mass Ornament (2009) both replicates and diverges from the notion of the mass ornament articulated by Siegfried Kracauer in the 1930s. By appropriating YouTube videos of many anonymous amateurs dancing alone in their homes and synchronizing them so that the d…[Read more]
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Jaimie Baron deposited Subverted Intentions and the Potential for “Found” Collectivity in Natalie Bookchin’s Mass Ornament in the group
Film-Philosophy on Humanities Commons 6 years, 11 months agoThis paper explores the ways in which Natalie Bookchin’s video loop installation entitled Mass Ornament (2009) both replicates and diverges from the notion of the mass ornament articulated by Siegfried Kracauer in the 1930s. By appropriating YouTube videos of many anonymous amateurs dancing alone in their homes and synchronizing them so that the d…[Read more]
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Jaimie Baron deposited (In)appropriation: Productions of Laughter in Contemporary Experimental Found Footage Films in the group
Film Studies on Humanities Commons 6 years, 11 months agoFound footage filmmaking often generates novel juxtapositions and produces new meanings unintended by the footage’s original makers – meanings that are, in other words, “inappropriate.” One response to many such films is laughter. Through an examination of several experimental found footage videos made in the past decade, this chapter explore…[Read more]
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