Sunday, April 26, 2009

Week 11- Chills and Thrills: Horror Films



My name is Robert Hawkins. It's 6:42 AM on Saturday, May 23rd.
Approximately seven hours ago, some thing attacked the city.
I don't know what it is. If you found this tape, I mean if
you're watching this right now, then you probably know more about it
than I do. Whatever it is, it killed my brother Jason Hawkins,
it killed my best friend Hudson Platt and Marlena Diamond,
and many many others. We've crashed into Central Park
and we've taken shelter underneath this bridge. The military has
begun bombing the creature and we're caught in the middle...

-Michael Stahl-David as Rob in Cloverfield

M 4.27/W 4.29
Lecture: Classics of Horror—An Overview
Screening: Cloverfield (Reeves, 2008 USA)

Wednesday, April 22, 2009

Suggested Auteurship Paper Outline


Here is a suggested outline for your auteur research paper:

Part 1: The Introduction
Your introduction should be at least one page long. Remember to have a strong thesis on which to ground your paper. In other words, what is it you want to say about this director? Whatever it is, say it here simply and clearly.

Part 2: Auteur Theory
In this brief section, discuss what auteur theory is and how it applies to your director. Also, identify the three areas on which you will be concentrating (i.e. setting, theme, characterization).

Part 3: The Biography
Begin exploring your director’s life and work experience. Use your director's specific biographical evidence to support your thesis.

Part 4: The Films
Now that you’ve discussed what auteur theory is (and why it applies) and explored some of your director’s personal and professional history, its time to examine the films themselves. You must examine at least three films in this section. Remember, keep film summaries to a minimum and keep your analysis focused. Your task here is to draw connections between "the life" and "the work."

Part 5: The Analysis
In this section, you begin to "connect the dots" about your director's work and life; here is where you explore your findings. For example,
what reasonable assumptions can be drawn about your director? What conclusions have you come to? What does an examination of the life and work reveal about the director as a person?

Part 6: The Conclusion
Your closing should be about one page. Remember to reword your thesis, and summarize your findings about your director. In concluding, inform the reader about your insights into the director. Keep in mind, there should be no new information in your closing.

Sunday, April 19, 2009

Week 10- Chills and Thrills: Horror Films



Can't you feel it? It's alive ... watching.

-Julie Harris as Eleanor in The Haunting
M 4.20/W 4.22
Lecture: Introduction to Horror
Screening: The Haunting (Wise, 1863 USA)
Due: OSR 6 (Documentary Film)

Sunday, March 29, 2009

Week 9- Out of the Celluloid Closet: Gay Cinema



My body may be a work-in-progress, but there is nothing wrong with my soul.
-Felicity Huffman as Bree in Transamerica
M 3.30/W 4.1
Lecture: History of Gay Cinema, Pt. 2
Screening: Transamerica (Tucker, 2005 USA)
Due: OSR 5 (Foreign Film)

Tuesday, March 24, 2009

"Twilight" dawns on DVD with big bow


By Carl DiOrio, Reuters


LOS ANGELES (Hollywood Reporter) - "Twilight" is off to a bright start on shiny disc.

Summit Entertainment said more than 3 million DVDs of its teen vampire-romance title jumped off store shelves during its first day on sale. The first-day haul for "Twilight" came via an unusual Saturday launch as discs generally debut on Tuesdays.


The "Twilight" sales rank among the top five best-selling DVD titles of the past two years, executives at the closely held studio said. The big DVD tally follows an outsized theatrical run for the first in a planned trio of pictures based on the "Twilight" book series.


"Twilight" has earned $373 million at the worldwide box office since its debut last November.


Two "Twilight" sequels have been announced: "New Moon," set to premiere November 20, and "Eclipse," recently scheduled for a June 30, 2010, opening.


Sacha Baron Cohen's Guerilla Tactics


How shell companies, web sites help trick rubes for new film "Bruno"


MARCH 19, TheSmokingGun.com

As he travels the country searching for Americans to dupe into appearing in his next film, comedian Sacha Baron Cohen is operating behind a series of dummy companies and web sites intended to mask his involvement in the follow-up to the hit "Borat" movie. Claiming to be preparing a documentary for German television, Cohen and his production team have recently approached interview subjects (ballroom dancers, Alabama National Guard officials, and a white supremacist) claiming to be affiliated with Amesbury Chase, a Los Angeles-based production company. In his new film, Cohen appears as "Bruno," a gay Austrian journalist who asks embarrassing (and sexually charged) questions. Prospective interviewees have been directed to the Amesbury Chase web site, which describes the firm as having "world class facilities, and state-of-the art equipment to help you create dynamic and compelling content." The firm's address is actually a box at Sunset Blvd. Mailboxes. And the company and its web site were both created within the last 18 months. Three other Cohen front companies--Chromium Films, Cold Stream Productions, and Coral Blue Productions--use the same mailbox drop and phone number as Amesbury Chase. The four firms have nearly identical web sites, all of which originate from the same web hosting firm (on the following pages you'll find screen grabs from Cohen's Amesbury Chase site). In a brief interview, Stephen Strick, a Los Angeles lawyer who formed Cohen's straw firms, told TSG that, "I'm no longer involved in those" and said he would see if "the production's lawyer" would get back to a reporter. Last year, Cohen as "Bruno" interviewed Glenn Miller, a 68-year-old Missouri man who describes himself as a Nazi who hates "filthy Jews." Miller, who told TSG that he was paid $2000 in cash for an on-camera interview, claimed that he knew the interview was a set-up and that his interviewer was "a faggot." Before meeting with "Bruno," Miller crowed on a bulletin board that a German TV station would be paying him for an interview in which he could "air my racist and anti-semitic 'ravings' far and wide." In follow-up posts, Miller, a convicted felon who spent three years in prison for weapons possession and mailing a "declaration of war" to fellow white supremacists, noted that he had met with two female production coordinators who told him that "a German fellow will do the actual interview." He also reported that, according to the two "gorgeous young chicks," the "interviewer is not a jew." In two posts, Miller included the phone number he was given by Cohen's deputies. The number is listed on the contact page of each of Cohen's four front companies.

Sunday, March 22, 2009

Week 8- Out of the Celluloid Closet: Gay Cinema



It's not you, Billy. It's me.

-Brad Row as Gabriel in Billy's Hollywood Screen Kiss

M 3.23/W 3.25
Lecture: History of Gay Cinema, Pt. 1
Screening: Billy's Hollywood Screen Kiss (O’Haver, 1998 USA)