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SAC 455
Topics in Film Studies
Studies various film topics: includes the study of films of specific historical periods (such as early cinema or films of World War II) or study of specific issues (such as the studio system, the star system or film censorship) or historical events (the Hollywood Blacklist).
Recent examples include:
The Godfather and other Great Trilogies
For reasons we will explore, many giants of
filmmaking have created film trilogies. Containing
some of the most provocative and affective
films ever made, this unusual artistic form raises
unique dramatic and aesthetic questions. Thematically,
the films that make up these
trilogies range across human experience e.g., murder and the
ruthless acquisition of power (Francis Ford Coppola's
Godfather trilogy), personal combat and war (Hiroshi Inagaki's Samurai
trilogy and Andrzej
Wajda's War [WWII] Trilogy), questioning God's
nature and justice (Ingmar Bergman's The Virgin Spring, Through a
Glass Darkly, Winter
Night. Other trilogies include Korda's Pagnol
trilogy, Antonioni's L'Aventura, La Notte, and L'Eclisse, and Mark
Donskoy's Gorky trilogy.
Additional trilogies can be selected from Sayajit
Ray, Sergio Leone, and Krzyztof Kieslowski.
From Kabuki to Kitano: Japanese Cinema History
(Also
Japanese 475.001)
From kabuki films to Kitano Takeshi, Japanese
cinema has come a long way in the past 100 years.
This course traces the history of Japanese
cinema from the silent films, with their extraordinary
benshi performances, to recent Japanese cinema
as shown at international film festivals.
Along the way, we will take in avant-garde and
social protest films, fascist entertainments,
rock and roll youth films, animations, and
trendy idol dramas. We’ll even see the occasional tea ceremony!
Most importantly, we will learn to see Japanese
cinema as more than a pictoral version of famous novels, or an expression
of artistic
sensibility; it is a vibrant strand within the
ongoing history of Japanese popular culture.
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