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Rainer Werner Fassbinder und seine filmästhetische StilisierungBae, Sang-Joon, January 2005 (has links)
Thesis (doctoral)--Universität, Marburg. / Includes bibliographical references (p. 381-391) and index.
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Modern tragedy : Michael Cacoyannis' early filmsPapageorgopoulou, Maria Aikaterini January 2015 (has links)
This thesis is an interpretation of three films by the Greek Cypriot director Michael Cacoyannis: Stella, 1955), To koritsi me ta mavra/A Girl in Black, 1956 and To teleftaio psema/A Matter of Dignity, 1958. These films appear early in Cacoyannis' career and very little has been written on them. My thesis seeks to show that they are accomplished and complex films, which merit close attention, both in virtue of their dramatic form and because of the ethical questions they raise regarding individual autonomy and the force of archaic ethical norms. The aim of this thesis is to interpret these films by examining the evolving motivations of their protagonists. The thesis seeks to show that the dramatic form of the films renders the agency of the protagonist partly intransparent. In order to show this, my thesis examines, on the one hand, how characterisation, perspective, character relationships and the development of the drama provide an internal context for agency in each film. On the other hand, the interpretation seeks to tease out the ethical implications and stakes of the dramatic action in each film. These implications, I argue, are structured by a thematic ambivalence running through these films between modernity, understood as subjective freedom, and archaic ethical norms, implying a limit to subjective freedom. In the approach to the films' dramatic form and their ethical implications, I am indebted to Hegel's aesthetic and ethical theory. I use the Hegelian term 'modern tragedy' to characterise both the dramatic form of these films and the ethical situation of their protagonists. I also situate these films within international auteur cinema of the 1950s and early 1960s. The thesis aims, thus, to contribute to scholarship on European auteur cinema of the mid-20th century. It also aims to be a contribution to the study of agency and ethics in film in general.
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The interrelationships between meaning(s), form, cinematic technology and surrealist ideology in Luis Buñuel's, Un Chien Andalou (1929)Kritzinger, Christiaan Cornelius January 2012 (has links)
This study sets out to determine the interrelationship between meaning(s), form (specifically framing and composition), cinematic technology and the surrealist ideology with specific reference to Luis Buñuel’s film, Un Chien Andalou (1929). The study utilises a semiotic framework to analyse the seminal film, as well as the researcher’s short film Facebrick (2012). The semiotic reading is conducted according to key surrealist tenets namely, spatio-‐temporal disruption, the use of free-‐association and the inclusion of cultural, religious and sexual symbols as a revolutionary tool. Gillian Rose’s (2007) semiotic framework underpinned by James Monaco’s (1977) schema for analysing the moving image, was utilised to read the selected film texts. A comparative analysis reveals that although the researcher employed different cinematic technology to construct the short film than that available to Buñuel in the 1920s; similar cinematic techniques could be recreated, as the analysis shows, through the use of key surrealist characteristics. Not only did this allow mere reproduction of these techniques, but rather a full appropriation of these techniques within a contemporary context. Thus the techniques, communicate the surreal, both aesthetically and intellectually. The theoretical study provides the foundation for the practical output, creating a conceptual framework that guides the creation of a short film. The practical research component relies on the parameters identified in the semiotic reading. This was facilitated by the characteristics of Surrealism: the disruption of time and space, the inclusion of archetypal symbols and the use of free association. The short film, Facebrick (2012), follows a voyeur obsessed with gazing at three characters. The film explores the human condition in an urban environment drawing from themes such as Jean-‐Paul Sartre’s gaze theory as well as Freudian themes of identity and sexuality.
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Investigating the feminist significance of Lars von Trier's representation of women in his Golden Heart Trilogy (1996/1998/2000) and Antichrist (2009)Evans, Melissa Albie January 2012 (has links)
Despite critics‟ negative appraisal of Lars Von Trier's Antichrist (2009) for its ostensible misogyny, a deep thematic resonance exists between its representation of women as historical victims of patriarchal discourse, and the positive representations of women as Christ-like figures found in his Golden Heart Trilogy (1996/1998/2000). Arguably, it is important to recognize this, because these films together comprise an exercise in cinematic resistance to the narratives of the „backlash‟ against women's rights, thematized by Susan Faludi in her Backlash: The Undeclared War Against American Women; resistance which is undermined when these films are considered disparate or incongruous.
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The post-2000 Hong Kong film workersChen, Fangyu 19 February 2020 (has links)
This thesis is an interdisciplinary study that traces the commerce-art-politics nexus of Hong Kong cinema since the new millennium, through investigating the current young generation of film workers who joined the industry as it gradually entered an era marked by the domination of Hong Kong/Mainland co-productions. It reveals the filmmaking ideologies of emerging filmmakers from both within and beyond their film texts, and uncovers the artistic and ideological discrepancies between this young generation and their predecessors - the established generation who contributed to the glory days of Hong Kong cinema during its economic boom. By tracing the studies of national cinema and transnational cinema in the last three decades, I debunk the national/transnational antagonism with the case of the post-2000 Hong Kong cinema. It does not only prove that the binary is far more complicated than one being superseded by the other, or them coexisting with each other, but rather evolving into each other from a historical perspective. In this vein, the current Hong Kong cinema has split into two: a transnational cinema represented by the established generation of filmmakers; and a national cinema that is driven by the emerging generation who struggle for better preservation of Hong Kong local culture and their own cultural identities. Furthermore, this thesis scrutinizes the working and material conditions of these young film practitioners, in which employment and economic opportunity are primarily derived from co-productions and mainland productions. It expands the discussion over the concept of precarity and argues that the Hong Kong case demonstrates two extra dimensions of labour precarity: an excessive reliance on an external market (i.e. mainland market), and the workers' dissenting political attitudes towards a politically sensitive regime, namely mainland China under the ruling of the Communist Party. Lastly, developments in Hong Kong film policy since the handover are examined. As its longstanding managing philosophy of "minimal intervention" has largely remained unchanged in Hong Kong, the government has turned from a "laissez-faire" approach to what Mark Purcell terms an "aidez-faire" approach in the local film industry, yet it still failed to meet the industry's expectations of creating a holistic film policy. Nevertheless, film policy in the post-handover era had an undeniable impact in terms of cultivating young filmmakers. To research the topic, 47 in-depth interviews were conducted. These first-hand interviews, combined with data gathered from multiple resources, as well as a text analysis of the 107 films made by young directors between 2000 and 2018, form the factual basis of this thesis. Employing a Hong Kong/Mainland Film dynamics perspective, this study aims to fill a gap in the academic study of Hong Kong cinema, which has paid scant attention to the material conditions and artistic visions of craft labour in the industry, and especially of the young generation of filmmakers who are facing the decline of a once prosperous but currently diminishing local film industry.
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David Lynch as a postmodern filmakerElsdon, Kerry-Jane January 1992 (has links)
A dissertation submitted to the Faculty of Arts, University of the Witwatersrand,
Johannesburg, for the degree of Master of Arts in Dramatic Art.
Johannesburg 1992. / It is the intention of this thesis to provide a reasoned analysis of the films of David
Lynch, in order to locate Lynch as a Postmodern filmmaker.
Although other filmmakers have been seen to include elements of Postmodernism
in their work (Tim Burton is an example), few directors have attained Lynch's recent
prominence or popularity. His recent television series, Twin Peaks, has created an even larger audience for his filmic style, and the guest directors employed
were obviously encouraged to employ a similar technique, in order to create a coherent
filmic philosophy. [Abbreviated Abstract. Open document to view full version] / MT2017
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Women, film, and oceans a/part: the critical humor of Tracey Moffatt, Monica Pellizzari, and Clara LawUnknown Date (has links)
The politicized use of humor in accented cinema is a tool for negotiating particular formations of identity, such as sexuality, gender, ethnicity, and class. The body of work produced by contemporary women filmmakers working in Australia, specifically Tracey Moffatt, Monica Pellizzari, and Clara Law, illustrates how these directors have employed critical humor as a response to their multiple marginalization as women, Australian, and accented filmmakers. In their works, humor functions as a critical tool to deconstruct the contradictions in dominant discourses as they relate to (neo)colonial, racist, globalized, patriarchal, and displaced pasts and presents. Produced within Australian national cinema, but emerging from experiences of geographical displacements that defy territorial borders, their films illuminate how critical humor can inflect such accepted categories as the national constitution of a cinema, film genre, and questions of exile and diaspora. Critical humor thus consti tutes a cinematic signifying practice able, following Luigi Pirandello's description of umorismo, to decompose the filmic text, and as a tool for an ideological critique of cinema and its role in (re)producing discourses of the nation predicated on the dominant categories of whiteness and masculinity. The study offers a theoretical framework for decoding humor in a film text, focusing on the manipulation of cinematic language, and it provides a model for a criticism that wishes to heighten the counter-hegemonic potential of cinematic texts, by picking up on the humorous, contradictory openings of the text and widening them through a parallel dissociating process. / Finally, critical humor in the accented cinema of women filmmakers like Moffatt, Pellizzari, and Law is shown to constitute a form of translation and negotiation performed between the national, monologic constraints of film production and cinematic language, the heteroglossia of the global imaginaries that have traveled since the beginning with film technology, and the local and diasporic accents informing a filmmaker's unique style and perspective. / by Alessandra Senzani. / Thesis (Ph.D.)--Florida Atlantic University, 2008. / Includes bibliography and filmography. / Electronic reproduction. Boca Raton, Fla., 2008. Mode of access: World Wide Web.
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Melodramatizing Hong Kong cinema: imag(in)ing Hong Kong in the work of Ringo Lam Ling-tung.January 2011 (has links)
Loi, Ho Man. / "August 2011." / Thesis (M.Phil.)--Chinese University of Hong Kong, 2011. / Includes bibliographical references. / Abstracts in English and Chinese. / Acknowledgement --- p.iii / Abstract (English and Chinese) --- p.iv / Note on Transcription --- p.vi / Table of Contents --- p.vii / Introduction --- p.1 / Chapter Chapter One: --- National Allegory of Aesthetics? Narrative Cinema as a Standstill Image in Hong Kong Film Scholarship --- p.11-54 / Chapter ´ؤ --- Hong Kong Narrative Cinema as Allegory and Aesthetics --- p.15 / Chapter ´ؤ --- Ringo Lam and Crisis Cinema Revisited --- p.44 / Chapter Chapter Two: --- "Mobilization of Narrative and Spectacle in Hong Kong Cinema: The Image of the ""Depressive Hero"" in the Work of Ringo Lam" --- p.55-99 / Chapter ´ؤ --- Narrative and Spectacle in Hong Kong Film Studies --- p.56 / Chapter ´ؤ --- "Ringo Lam and the Screening of ""Depressive Heroes"" in Cinema" --- p.68 / Chapter Chapter Three: --- "Jerking Tear, Shedding Blood: The Genre of ""Heroic Bloodshed"" as Melodrama in Hong Kong Cinema" --- p.100-133 / Chapter ´ؤ --- Melodrama and Its Vicissitudes in Film Studies --- p.102 / Chapter ´ؤ --- "The Mystery of Yi: The Melodramatic Nature of the Genre of ""Heroic Bloodshed""" --- p.116 / Chapter Chapter Four: --- Thou Shalt Love Thy Neighbour as Thy Son: Prison on Fire (1987) below the Lion Rock --- p.134-163 / Chapter ´ؤ --- Let There be Friendship as Light in Prison --- p.135 / Chapter ´ؤ --- "Visualities as Biopolitics in the Genre of ""Heroic Bloodshed""" --- p.148 / Chapter Chapter Five: --- No Bloodshed after Tiananmen: Full Alert (1997) and the Postmodern Dialectic of Stability and Prosperity --- p.164-198 / Chapter ´ؤ --- Melodramatic Pathos and Action Revisited in Full Alert --- p.166 / Chapter ´ؤ --- Full Alert as False Alarm: The Stable Prosperity of Postmodern Hong Kong --- p.180 / Chapter ´ؤ --- "Excursus/Excursion: Hong Kong Cinema after ""Heroic Bloodshed""" --- p.191 / Conclusion --- p.199 / Bibliography --- p.229 / Filmography --- p.247
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Working through the ambiguities of focalization with the films of Edward YangBenoit, James. January 2005 (has links)
This thesis is an evaluation of the extent to which theories of focalization are useful for the analysis of point of view in film. In it, I apply the small number of focalization models advanced within film studies to an analysis of the works of an internationally acclaimed Taiwanese director, Edward Yang. I reveal that Yang's films serve well to demonstrate how the conventional typologies of external and internal focalization are convenient labels that mask the considerable degree of ambiguity that is reflected by processes of focalization and narration in many films. Furthermore, I illustrate how an application of the alternative theory of auto-focalization to film analysis can generally free us from the limitations of these typologies, by drawing our attention to the iconic implications of film imagery. Finally, I determine that both models of focalization are largely useful for highlighting the degree to which the functions of character-focalizers and narrators can be indistinguishable, particularly in self-reflexive films.
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A dramatic interpretation of reality for democratic purposes : John Grierson's DriftersParsons, Brenda M. January 1983 (has links)
No description available.
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