Apr 27, 2024  
Catalogue 2021-2022 
    
Catalogue 2021-2022 [ARCHIVED CATALOG]

Film Department


Chair: Shane Slattery-Quintanilla;

Professor: Mia Mask;

Associate Professor: Sophia Harvey, Shane Slattery-Quintanilla;

Assistant Professors: Denise Iris, Erica Steina

Visiting Assistant Professor: Alex Kupfer;

Adjunct Instructor: Joseph Muszynski.

a On leave 2021/22, first semester

Programs

Major

Correlate Sequence in Film

The correlate sequence in Film offers the opportunity to investigate Film as an adjunct to another major through a coherent sequence of study. Through the progression of courses at the 100-, 200-, and 300-level, students develop a foundational understanding of cinema studies methodology and–if room allows– basic filmmaking and/or screenwriting techniques.

Courses

Film: I. Introductory

  • FILM 175 - Introduction to Screen Arts

    Semester Offered: Spring
    1 unit(s)
    An introductory exploration of central features of film and television aesthetics, including formal and stylistic elements, such as color, lighting, editing, sound, narrative structure, etc. Students are exposed to a wide spectrum of types of films and television shows, including: silent, abstract, non-narrative, foreign, and documentaries, and the artistic choices manifested by each. We look at issues pertaining to production, distribution, and exhibition. Subjects are treated topically rather than historically, and emphasis is placed on mastering key vocabulary and concepts. Alex Kupfer, Erica Stein.

    Open only to first-year students. 

    Two 75-minute periods plus outside screenings.

    Course Format: CLS

Film: II. Intermediate

  • FILM 209 - World Cinema

    Semester Offered: Fall and Spring
    1 unit(s)
    An international history of film with a greater emphasis on world cinemas from the 1930s to the contemporary period. The course focuses on major directors, industrial organization, and the contributions of various national movements. In addition to the historical survey, this course introduces students to the major issues of classical and contemporary film theory. Sophia Harvey.

    Two 75-minute periods plus outside screenings.

    Course Format: CLS
  • FILM 212 - Genre: The Musical


    1 unit(s)
    Examines the development of American film musicals from The Jazz Singer to the present day. The course looks at major stars such as Fred Astaire and Ginger Rogers, Gene Kelly, and Judy Garland, and the contributions of directors such as Vincente Minnelli and Bob Fosse. Students examine the interrelationships between Broadway and Hollywood, the influence of the rise and fall of the Production Code, the shaping hand of different studios, the tensions between narrative and spectacle, sincerity and camp. Reading assignments expose students to a wide range of literature about film, from production histories to feminist theory. Sarah Kozloff. 

    Prerequisite(s): FILM 175  or FILM 209  and permission of the instructor.

    Two 75-minute periods plus outside screenings.

    Not offered in 2021/22.

  • FILM 214 - Genre: The War Film


    1 unit(s)
    An examination of how American films have represented World War I, World War II, the Vietnam War and the Gulf Wars. Films chosen include both those made while the conflicts rages (Bataan, 1942), and those made many years later (Saving Private Ryan, 1998, and Three Kings, 1999). This class focuses on such issues as: propaganda and patriotism, pacifism and sensationalism, the reliance on genre conventions and the role of changing film technologies. For comparison, we look also at documentaries, television, “home front” stories at war-time poetry, posters, and music. Reading assignments cover topics such as the government’s Office of War Information, the influence of John Wayne, the racism of the Vietnam films, the ways in which the Iraq war movies have been influenced by the genre. Sarah Kozloff.

    Prerequisite(s): FILM 175  or FILM 209  and permission of the instructor.

    Two 75-minute periods plus outside screenings.

    Not offered in 2021/22.

  • FILM 215 - Genre: Science Fiction


    1 unit(s)
    T​he course presents a survey of global science-fiction cinema from its beginnings in the silent period to the advent of digital technologies. Topics include subgenres (end of the world, time travel, space exploration, cyborgs), the relation of science-fiction films to their ​socio-political context and their function in popular culture​. We contextualize these topics within discourses of postmodernism, postcolonialism, and feminism. Screenings may include: Metropolis (Fritz Lang, 1927, Germany), Robocop (Paul Verhoeven, 1987, USA), Enthiran (S. Shankar, 2010, India), Cyber Wars (Kuo Jian Hong, 2004, Singapore) and Nuoc ​2030 (Nghiem-Minh Nguyen-Vo​, 2014, Vietnam).​ Sophia Harvey.

    Prerequisite(s): FILM 175  or FILM 209  and permission of the instructor.

    Two 75-minute periods plus outside screenings.

    Not offered in 2021/22.

  • FILM 216 - Genre: Romantic Comedy


    1 unit(s)
    This class studies the genre of romantic comedy in American film from the “screwball comedies” of the 1930s (It Happened One Night, Bringing Up Baby) to the resurgence of the genre in the 1990s and the 21st century. The course focuses on the work of major stars such as Cary Grant, Katharine Hepburn, and Meg Ryan, as well as the contribution of such directors as Ernst Lubitsch, George Cukor, Preston Sturges, Howard Hawks, Billy Wilder, or Nora Ephron. We place these films in the context of other representations of romance—such as Shakespeare’s comedies—and in the context of the changes in American culture, particularly in the role of women. Readings lead students to a deeper understanding of the history of American film, genre, and the star system. Sarah Kozloff.

    Prerequisite(s): FILM 175  or FILM 209  and permission of the instructor.

    Two 75-minute periods plus outside screenings.

    Not offered in 2021/22.

    Course Format: CLS
  • FILM 217 - Video Art

    Semester Offered: Fall and Spring
    1 unit(s)
    (Same as ART 217 ) Video continues to document, illuminate, and instruct our lives daily. New channels of accessibility have opened it to a broad range of alternative practices, always in relation to its online or televised utility. In this studio, students make videos to better understand the affects and formal potential of video as an opportunity for critique. Technical experimentation covers the major tools of video production and post-production. Workshops examine set, keying, montage, sound, pacing, composition, and the cut. Regular assignments address a range of structural problems, at once conceptual and plastic (topics include the question of the subject, politics of visibility, satire, abjection, abstraction, psychedelia, performance and humiliation). Work by artists who have harnessed or perverted video’s components is screened bi-weekly.  Abigail Gunnels.

    Prerequisite(s): Permission of the instructor.

    Two 2-hour periods.

    Course Format: CLS
  • FILM 218 - Genre: The Western


    1 unit(s)
    This course offers an historical and cultural exploration of the Western film genre. There is emphasis on the relationship between the Western and the central myths of the American experience. The changing nature of masculinity, the representation of violence, and the roles designated to women are addressed. The course examines Westerns directed by filmmakers D. W. Griffith, John Ford, Howard Hawks, George Stevens, John Huston, Fred Zinnemann, Sidney Poitier, Sam Peckinpah, and Clint Eastwood. Mia Mask.

    Prerequisite(s): FILM 175  or FILM 209  and permission of the instructor.

    Two 75-minute periods plus outside screenings.

    Not offered in 2021/22.

    Course Format: CLS
  • FILM 221 - American Avant-Garde Film


    1 unit(s)


    This course offers a survey of American avant-garde film in all its modes, ranging from experimental work like Jennifer Proctor’s Jen Proctor: A Movie, to surrealist-influenced documentary like Joshua Yates’s The Bags, to innovative narrative cinema like Agnes Varda’s Lions Love (…and Lies). While the course covers major avant-garde movements like mytho-poeticism and structuralism, it is organized thematically rather than chronologically. The course is divided into three units, each of which interrogates one of the terms in the title. The first unit explores films that expand our perception of what it means to be American and challenge received ideas about individual and collective identity. The second unit examines how the avant-garde constitutes itself both in opposition to commercial film and as its own industrial form. The third unit investigates film itself – how and why medium specificity and technology are important to these moving images. Assignments include an historical presentation, a short analytic essay, a take-home exam, and a final position paper on the future of the American avant-garde film. Erica Stein.

    Prerequisite(s): FILM 175  or FILM 209 , and permission of the instructor.

     

    Corequisite(s): FILM 222 .

    Two 75-minute periods accompanied by film screenings.

    Not offered in 2021/22.

    Course Format: CLS

  • FILM 222 - Curating Microcinemas


    0.5 unit(s)
    The course meets for a total of six weeks, two weeks in the first third of the semester, and the final four weeks of the semester. In this intensive component, students learn about microcinemas, a key exhibition site in contemporary American avant-garde film, and then develop and program their own at an off-campus site. Students have the responsibility of selecting, pitching, and securing the titles to be screened, developing the space, performing audience outreach, composing program notes, and introducing the films at the screening. The intensive component is configured as one hour of additional in-class workshop and consultations plus three hours of independent research, outreach, and pitching during the initial two weeks of the intensive. During the last four weeks, the intensive is configured as half-hour small-group check-ins with the professor every week, as well as independent, out-of-class work to financially and logistically assemble the microcinema, finalize programming, publicize the screening, and produce the program. Erica Stein.

    Prerequisite(s): FILM 209 .

    Corequisite(s): FILM 221 .

    Required for students enrolled in FILM 221 American Avant-Garde Film .

    Not offered in 2021/22.

    Course Format: INT
  • FILM 230 - European Women’s Cinema


    1 unit(s)


    (Same as WMST 230 ) This course examines contemporary European culture and history through film; various critical theories (feminist, queer, post-colonial), are studied and applied to films, through selected readings and other relevant resources. Using a multidisciplinary approach, the purpose of this course is to provide critical models for interpreting social and cultural constructions of meaning. We consider the ways in which images of women and the concept of “woman” are invested with culturally and historically specific meanings that intersect with other categories of difference/identity such as: class, sexual orientation, excess, war, and the state. Essential to the discussion of difference will be the analysis of the cultural and linguistic differences introduced by the otherness of film itself, and of the specific films we study. Cinematic interpretive skills are developed through visual and linguistic exercises, group projects, and film-making. Film directors may include: Lina Wertmüller, Liliana Cavani, Margarethe von Trotta, Monika Treut, Ulrike Öttinger, Claire Denis, Coline Serreau, Céline Sciamma, Gurinder Chadha, Ngozi Onwurah. Rodica Blumenfeld.

    Prerequisite(s): WMST 130  preferable but not obligatory.

     

    Open to Sophomores and above.

    Two 75-minute periods plus outside screenings.

    Not offered in 2021/22.

  • FILM 231 - Minorities in the Media


    1 unit(s)
    This course examines the dynamics of race, class, gender and sexuality as they are represented in American society. Throughout the semester, we analyze films, television programs, videos and advertisements, as well as other mediated discourse, to assess the way categories of “minority” identity have been constructed in mainstream society. In addition to examining images of those persons collective known as “minorities,” we consider the representation of those defined as “majority” Americans. In addition to scholarship by black British cultural theorists, African American scholars, critical race theorists and sociologists, this course enlists scholarship from the growing field of whiteness studies. Issues and topics may include “model minorities” (Henry Louis Gates, Jennifer Lopez, Rahm Emmanuel, Tiger Woods, Ellen DeGeneres, The Williams Sisters, Barack Obama), global advertising, racial profiling, police brutality (Rodney King, Abner Louima, Amadou Diallo, Sean Bell), Trayvon Martin, Eric Garner, Tamir Rice), the Proposition 209 conflict, the WNBA, gay marriage, Islamaphobia, and the representation of the Middle East. Readings, screenings and papers required. Mia Mask.

    Prerequisite(s): FILM 175  or FILM 209 , and permission of the instructor.

    Two 75-minute periods plus outside screenings.

    Not offered in 2021/22.

    Course Format: CLS
  • FILM 232 - African American Cinema

    Semester Offered: Fall
    1 unit(s)
    (Same as AFRS 232 ) This course provides a survey of the history and theory of African American representation in cinema. It begins with the silent films of Oscar Micheaux and examines early Black cast westerns (Harlem Rides the Range, The Bronze Buckaroo, Harlem on the Prairie) and musicals (St. Louis Blues, Black and Tan, Hi De Ho, Sweethearts of Rhythm). Political debate circulating around cross over stars (Paul Robeson, Sidney Poitier, Dorothy Dandridge, Eartha Kitt, and Harry Belafonte) are central to the course. Special consideration is given to Blaxploitation cinema of the seventies (Shaft, Coffy, Foxy Brown, Cleopatra Jones) in an attempt to understand its impact on filmmakers and the historical contexts for contemporary filmmaking. The course covers “Los Angeles Rebellion” filmmakers such as Julie Dash, Charles Burnett, and Haile Gerima. Realist cinema of the 80’s and 90’s (Do the Right Thing, Boyz N the Hood, Menace II Society, and Set it off),is examined before the transition to Black romantic comedies, family films, and genre pictures (Coming to America, Love and Basketball, The Best Man, Akeelah and the Bee, 12 Years a Slave, The Great Debaters). Mia Mask.

    Prerequisite(s): FILM 209  and permission of the instructor.

    Two 75-minute periods plus outside screenings.

  • FILM 233 - The McCarthy Era and Film


    1 unit(s)
    This class focuses both on the history of anti-communist involvement with the American film industry and on the reflection of this troubled era in post-war films. We trace the factors that led to The House on Un-American Activities Committee’s investigation of communist influence in Hollywood, the case of the Hollywood Ten, the operation of the blacklist and its final demise at the end of the 1950s. We look at films overtly taking sides in this ideological conflict, such as the anti-Communist I Was a Communist for the FBI and the pro-labor Salt of the Earth, as well as the indirect allegories in film noirs and science fiction. Reading assignments are drawn from a wide range of sources, including HUAC transcripts, government documents, production histories, and genre studies. The course concludes with a look at how more contemporary films such as Good Night and Good Luck have sought to frame our understanding of this era. Sarah Kozloff.

    Prerequisite(s): FILM 175  or FILM 210  and permission of the instructor.

    Two 75-minute periods plus outside screenings.

    Not offered in 2021/22.

  • FILM 234 - The Coen Brothers as Postmodern Auteurs


    1 unit(s)
    This class considers the career and work of Joel and Ethan Coen from Blood Simple (1984) to The Ballad of Buster Scruggs (2018) through the lenses of industry, culture, and aesthetics. We learn how the Coens came to typify the association of auteurism with festival-based promotional strategies and revisionist genre films in post-classical Hollywood. At the same time, we also discuss the two ways in which they question and destabilize the very notion of auteurism. First, as we explore the role adaptation, quotation, and genre mixing play in their acquisition and development of film properties, we ask how these prototypically postmodern qualities call the notion of the director as author into question. Second, as we investigate the formal aspects of their films, we ask how their work critiques the notion of any kind of authorial or authority figure being present or useful in modern life. Assignments include short reaction papers, a genre or adaptation presentation, and a final research paper. Erica Stein.

    Prerequisite(s): FILM 175  or FILM 209  and permission of the instructor.

    Two 75-minute periods plus outside screenings.

    Not offered in 2021/22.

    Course Format: CLS
  • FILM 238 - Music in Film

    Semester Offered: Spring
    1 unit(s)
    (Same as MUSI 238 ) Why do films have music?  How do music and sound influence (and sometimes even control) what we see and experience in film?  This course delves into the terminology and methodologies for analyzing and interpreting the interaction between filmic image and sound. Tahirih Motazedian.

    Prerequisite(s): One course in Music (not performance) or Film.

    Two 75-minute periods plus outside screenings.

    Course Format: CLS
  • FILM 240 - Sculpting Images in Time

    Semester Offered: Fall
    1 unit(s)
    This course introduces students to the basic concepts and skills involved in digital film production such as camerawork and video editing. We begin with the image, exploring in great detail its formal qualities: composition, light, color, movement, mise-en-scène, juxtapositions and temporal dimensions. Sound is introduced as a way to complicate the image – first as sound design and finally as dialogue. Denise Iris.

    Prerequisite(s): FILM 209  and permission of the instructor.

    Corequisite(s): FILM 209  can be taken concurrently.

    One 3-hour period; additional lab time required.

    Course Format: CLS
  • FILM 241 - Sound and Sight

    Semester Offered: Spring
    1 unit(s)
    The course introduces students to basic concepts and skills involved in film production but inverts the usual priority granted to the visual over the aural in film: here we focus on sound as the generative kernel behind a cinematic work. The course explores how sound can function as the driving force of story, character, and world-building, and the moving image is introduced as a way to extend the expressive possibilities of sound. Shane Slattery-Quintanilla.

    Prerequisite(s): FILM 209  and permission of the instructor.

    Corequisite(s): FILM 209  can be taken concurrently.

    One 3-hour period; additional lab time required.

    Course Format: CLS
  • FILM 242 - Fragile Presence: The Ultra Short Film as Personal Cinematic Practice

    Semester Offered: Spring
    0.5 unit(s)

    Can we use filmmaking to cultivate attentiveness and a playful sense of presence in everyday life? How does having a cinematic practice — a laboratory of ongoing audiovisual exploration — help us to develop confidence in our own creative process while also acting as a form of journaling? In this intensive, we search for the poetry, whimsy and depth of meaning in the daily unfolding of our outer and inner lives. We privilege the joy of discovery over an evaluative mindset through site-specific shooting prompts around campus and improvisational editing experiences. Outside meeting times, students shoot and edit on their own, creating five 1 min. films in six weeks. Prior filmmaking experience is helpful, but passionate self-starters are equally welcome. Denise Iris.

    Prerequisite(s): Permission of the instructor. Priority given to students with some shooting and editing experience.

    Second six-week course.

    One 2-hour period and individual conferences with the instructor.

    Course Format: INT

  • FILM 254 - Emotional Engagement with Film


    1 unit(s)
    (Same as MEDS 254  and PSYC 254 ) While movies engage our emotions in psychologically significant ways, scholarship on the psychological allure and impact of film has existed primarily at the interdisciplinary margins. This course aims to bring such scholarship into the foreground. We begin with a careful examination of the appeal and power of narrative, as well as processes of identification and imagined intimacy with characters, before taking a closer analytical look at specific film genres (e.g., melodrama, horror, comedy, action, social commentary) both in their own right and in terms of their psychological significance (e.g., why do we enjoy sad movies? How do violent movies influence viewer aggression? How might socially conscious films inspire activism or altruism?) In addition to delving into theoretical and empirical papers, a secondary goal of the course is to engage students as collaborators; brainstorm and propose innovative experimental methods for testing research questions and hypotheses that emerge in step with course materials. Dara Greenwood and Sarah Kozloff.

    Prerequisite(s): For Psychology majors - PSYC 105 ; for Film majors - FILM 175  or FILM 209 ; for Media Studies majors - MEDS 160 .

    Two 75-minute periods plus outside screenings.

    Not offered in 2021/22.

    Course Format: CLS
  • FILM 255 - Four Italian Filmmakers (in English)

    Semester Offered: Spring
    1 unit(s)
    (Same as ITAL 255 ) Close analysis of the narrative and visual styles of Bernardo Bertolucci, Federico Fellini, Gianni Amelio and Nanni Moretti, in the context of post-war Italian cinema and culture. Theoretical literature on these directors and on approaches to the interpretation of film-such as psychoanalytic film theory, feminist theory, deconstruction, and post-colonial analyses of dominant discourses-aid us in addressing questions of style and of political and social significance. Cinematic interpretive skills are developed through visual and linguistic exercises, group projects, and film-making. Conducted in English.  Rodica Blumenfeld.

    Open to sophomores, juniors, and seniors. May be counted towards the Italian major.

    Two 75-minute periods and two film screenings.

  • FILM 256 - American Television History

    Semester Offered: Fall
    1 unit(s)
    (Same as MEDS 256 ) This course surveys the history of television in the United States from the 1940s to the present. It examines the social and industrial significance of television and its impact on issues such as class, race, gender, consumerism, and national identity. We investigate changes in televisual aesthetics and narrative paradigms and the ways that television responded to significant cultural, political and technological changes in American society. Throughout the semester we draw upon a range of critical frameworks including media industry studies, genre theory, and celebrity studies as we address topics such as the attempts to develop alternate models of broadcasting, networks’ efforts to bolster television’s cultural status, media convergence, and the formal characteristics of different television genres. Screenings include I Love Lucy, The Twilight Zone, Star Trek, The Smothers Brothers Comedy Hour, The Simpsons, Buffy the Vampire Slayer, and Orange is the New Black. Alex Kupfer.

    Prerequisite(s): FILM 175  or FILM 209  for students registering for FILM 256. MEDS 160  for students registering for MEDS 256.

    Two 75-minute periods plus outside screenings.

    Course Format: CLS
  • FILM 260 - Documentary: History and Aesthetics

    Semester Offered: Spring
    1 unit(s)
    This course explores the history, theory, and aesthetics of documentary cinema from its emergence to the present day. We examine the ways that cultural, political and technological factors have shaped the development of non-fiction film. In addition, the interrelationships between documentary and narrative cinema as well as other media including photography, comic books, and television are considered. The class places documentary in its broader contexts to include forms such as sponsored, experimental, scientific, and amateur films. Throughout the semester, students read primary historical sources along with scholarly approaches to the development, uses, and meanings of documentary cinema. Screenings include films by Michael Moore, George Stoney, Robert Drew, Agnes Varda, Chick Strand, Errol Morris, and many others. Alexander Kupfer.

    Prerequisite(s): FILM 175  or FILM 209 , and permission of the instructor.

    Two 75-minute periods plus outside screenings.

    Course Format: CLS
  • FILM 265 - German Film in English Translation

    Semester Offered: Spring
    1 unit(s)


    (Same as GERM 265 ) Topic for 2021/22b: From Caligari to Hitler? Tracing the Roots of Fascism in German Cinema between the Two World Wars. In his seminal work on German film history during the Weimar Republic, Siegfried Kracauer drew a direct line from the titular madman-manipulator in the silent horror classic The Cabinet of Dr. Caligari to Adolf Hitler. This course scrutinizes Kracauer’s approach as part of our own analysis of the cinematic landscape of Germany’s first flawed attempt at democracy in the 1920s and early 1930s. In addition to examining a wide range of genres, from slapstick comedy to socialist drama, we explore aesthetic styles and technological developments in cinema as well as filmic forebodings of authoritarian and fascist structures. Authors and filmmakers include: Béla Balázs, Bert Brecht, Lotte Eisner, Fritz Lang, Ernst Lubitsch, F.W. Murnau, Leni Riefenstahl, and Josef von Sternberg. Lioba Gerhardi.

    Readings and discussions are in English, and all films have English subtitles.

    Open to all classes.

    Two 75-minute periods.

    Course Format: CLS

  • FILM 266 - Genre: Asian Horror


    1 unit(s)
    (Same as ASIA 266 ) This course examines contemporary Asian horror. Using a variety of critical perspectives, we deconstruct the pantheon of vampires, monsters, ghosts, and vampire ghosts inhabiting such diverse regions as Indonesia, Thailand, Singapore, Japan, Hong Kong, and the Philippines to explore constructions of national/cultural identity, gender, race, class, and sexuality. We ground these observations within a discussion of the nature of horror and the implications of horror as a trans/national genre. Sophia Harvey.

    Prerequisite(s): FILM 175  or FILM 209 , and permission of the instructor.

    Two 75-minute periods plus outside screenings.

    Not offered in 2021/22.

    Course Format: CLS
  • FILM 282 - Media Industries: Fox and Disney

    Semester Offered: Spring
    1 unit(s)
    (Same as MEDS 282 )  This course explores the history of Twentieth Century-Fox and Fox Broadcasting Company from its emergence in the 1910s to its present day position as one of the world’s largest media conglomerates. In light of Disney’s recent acquisition of most of Fox’s assets, about one-third of the class is also devoted to the history of Disney as a way of considering the relationship of independent producers to major studios as well as the changing conceptions of collaboration and convergence. The course uses Fox and Disney to examine changes in aesthetic paradigms, storytelling techniques, and the ways that media industries engage with important cultural, political and technological changes in American society. Throughout the semester, we draw upon different critical frameworks including media industry studies, genre and auteur theory, and celebrity studies and apply these to a series of historical case studies. Screenings include Sunrise, M*A*S*H, Deadpool, My Darling Clementine, Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs, In Living Color, and Star Wars. Alexander Kupfer.

    Prerequisite(s): FILM 175  or FILM 209  for students registering for FILM 282. MEDS 160  for students registering for MEDS 282.

    Two 75-minute periods plus outside screenings.

    Course Format: CLS
  • FILM 283 - Race and Gender in Sports Media Fandom

    Semester Offered: Spring
    1 unit(s)
    (Same as MEDS 283 )  This course examines representations of race and gender in North American sports media. It considers the ways in which different media (fiction films, documentary, and television) construct, reinforce, and/or challenge conceptions of race and gender. The definitions of sports media as a generic and industrial label are explored as are transformation of audiences into fan communities. Throughout the semester, we examine the role that conceptions of race, class, sexual identity, and gender have played in the historical and cultural development of sports media and fandom. We also consider more recent forms of cultural production and participation that engage the varied social, cultural, and political practices associated with fandom. Special attention is paid to the connections between media consumption and performances of identity and community. Screenings include A League of their Own, Girlfight, Raging Bull, Love & Basketball, Minding the Gap, and O.J.: Made in America. Since this course focuses on the relationship between media and fandom, students do not need to have any knowledge of sports to enroll. This course is not open to first-year students. Alexander Kupfer.

    Prerequisite(s): FILM 209  or MEDS 160 .

    Two 75-minute periods plus outside screenings.

    Course Format: CLS
  • FILM 284 - The Liberation Arts

    Semester Offered: Spring
    0.5 unit(s)
    What does it really mean to be free? Does one need to learn it? If so, how? In this intensive we reimagine the liberal arts as the arts of liberation: over the course of the semester, various students, staff, faculty, and guests will introduce us to the practices that best serve them in their pursuit of freedom, however they choose (or refuse) to define it. In addition to participating in the workshops, students can play a role in documenting, through sound, image, and text, the various perspectives and practices we encounter. This documentation culminates in the collaborative process of weaving these materials into works of art that reflect upon our shared experiences and discoveries. This intensive foregrounds experiential, interdisciplinary, and non-hierarchical collaborative practices. Shane Slattery-Quintanilla.

    Prerequisite(s): Permission of the instructor.

    Two hours every other week.

    Course Format: INT
  • FILM 286 - Creative Development

    Semester Offered: Fall
    1 unit(s)


    (Same as MEDS 286 ) This course explores various approaches to the conception and development of works of screen art, with special attention to the short form. Students explore the often unheralded role that research plays in the artistic process, as well as the types of critical and creative thinking across disciplines that can support us in the early stages of a creative project.

    While different forms of writing remain central to the work of development, we also explore non-textual traditions and techniques that have long been crucial to filmmakers and more broadly to artists of all kinds, including inspiration boards, mood reels, and various improvisational and collaborative exercises that can aid in the genesis of original artistic ideas. Students learn through practice, study, and reflection how these creative methodologies provide the foundation for later stages of development and pre-production. Open to students at all levels, including first-years with permission of the instructor. Shane Slattery-Quintanilla.

    Prerequisite(s): Permission of the instructor.

    One 3-hour period and additional lab time required.

    Course Format: CLS

  • FILM 290 - Community-Engaged Learning

    Semester Offered: Fall or Spring
    0.5 to 2 unit(s)


    To be elected in consultation with the adviser and the Office of Community-Engaged Learning.

    May not be used toward the Major requirements.

    Course Format: INT

  • FILM 298 - Independent Work

    Semester Offered: Fall or Spring
    0.5 to 1 unit(s)
    To be elected in consultation with the adviser.

    Course Format: OTH

Film: III. Advanced

  • FILM 300 - Film Research Thesis

    Semester Offered: Fall or Spring
    1 unit(s)
    An academic thesis in film history or theory, written under the supervision of a member of the department. Since writing a thesis during fall semester is preferable, film majors should talk to their advisers spring of junior year. In Film, a research thesis is recommended but not required, especially for those students not writing a FILM 301  or enrolled in FILM 327 Senior Project: Fiction  or FILM 326 Senior Project: Non-Fiction . The Department.

    Prerequisite(s): FILM 209 , two additional courses in film history and theory, and permission of the instructor.

    Course Format: OTH
  • FILM 301 - Film Screenplay Thesis

    Semester Offered: Fall or Spring
    1 unit(s)
    The creation of a feature-length original screenplay. Open only to students electing the concentration in film. Senior status required. Students wishing to write a screenplay instead of a research thesis must have produced work of distinction in FILM 317 Introduction to Screenwriting  and FILM 319 Advanced Screenwriting . No correlates are eligible to write a screenplay thesis. The Department.

    Prerequisite(s): Permission of the instructor.

    Course Format: OTH
  • FILM 310 - Film Authorship


    1 unit(s)
    This course examines the complications of authorship in film by analyzing various competing theoretical models. Then it tests these models against the work on an auteur. Students are expected to attend screenings, conduct independent research, and keep up with wide variety of historical and theoretical readings. Sarah Kozloff.

    Prerequisite(s): FILM 209 .

    Note that this class does not replace the major requirement of FILM 392 .

    One 2-hour period plus outside screenings.

    Not offered in 2021/22.

  • FILM 317 - Introduction to Screenwriting

    Semester Offered: Fall
    1 unit(s)


    (Same as DRAM 317 ) Study of dramatic construction as it applies to film, plus practice in story development and screenwriting.  Joseph Muszynski.

    Prerequisite(s): DRAM 102  or FILM 209 , and permission of the instructor.

    Writing sample required two weeks before preregistration.

    Open only to juniors and seniors.

    One 2-hour period plus outside screenings.

    Course Format: CLS

  • FILM 319 - Advanced Screenwriting

    Semester Offered: Spring
    1 unit(s)


    An in-depth exploration of the screenplay as a dramatic form and a workshop aimed at the development, writing, and rewriting of a feature-length screenplay. Students study the work of noted screenwriters and are required to complete a feature-length screenplay as their final project in the course. Film majors who have produced works of distinction in FILM 317  are given first priority. This course is not open to Film correlates. Joseph Muszynski.

    Prerequisite(s): FILM 209 , DRAM 317  or FILM 317 , and permission of the instructor. Film Majors are given first priority.

     

    One 2-hour period plus outside screenings.

    Course Format: CLS

  • FILM 324 - Cinema Modes

    Semester Offered: Spring
    1 unit(s)
    The course exposes students to narrative, documentary, and experimental approaches and explores how these modes mutually inform and fertilize one another. Prepares students for senior-level work as they create one narrative, one documentary, and one experimental film. The course culminates in a final project that can be any of the three modes or hybrid that fruitfully overlaps or evades these categories. Denise Iris.

    Prerequisite(s): FILM 240  or FILM 241  and permission of the instructor.

    One 3-hour period.

    Course Format: CLS
  • FILM 325 - Writing the Short Film

    Semester Offered: Fall
    1 unit(s)


    A screenwriting course that explores and celebrates the possibilities of the short form, not simply as subordinate or preliminary to the work of feature filmmaking, but as its own vital approach to the moving arts.

    Those wishing to take FILM 327  are strongly encouraged to take FILM 325. Denise Iris.

    Prerequisite(s): FILM 240  or FILM 241  and permission of the instructor. This course is closed to Film correlates.

    One 3-hour period.

    Course Format: CLS

  • FILM 326 - Senior Project: Non-Fiction

    Semester Offered: Fall
    1 unit(s)

    Students create short nonfiction films, from concept to final delivery. Participants offer reciprocal support of their peers’ projects by filling crew positions. Students wishing to enroll in the course must submit a project proposal in the preceding semester. Shane Slattery-Quintanilla.

    Prerequisite(s): FILM 240  or FILM 241  and permission of the instructor. Strong preference given to students who have completed FILM 324 Cinema Modes . This course is closed to Film correlates.

    One 3-hour period.

    Course Format: CLS

  • FILM 327 - Senior Project: Fiction

    Semester Offered: Spring
    1 unit(s)
    Students create short fiction films, from concept to final delivery. Participants offer reciprocal support of their peers’ projects by filling crew positions. Students wishing to enroll in the course must submit a project proposal in the preceding semester. Those wishing to make narrative films are strongly encouraged to take FILM 325 Writing the Short Film .  Denise Iris.

    Prerequisite(s): FILM 240  or FILM 241  and permission of the instructor.

    This course is not open to Film correlates.

    One 3-hour period.

  • FILM 335 - Celebrity and Power: Stardom in Contemporary Culture

    Semester Offered: Spring
    1 unit(s)
    Celebrity fascinates Americans. It informs popular culture, professional sport and national politics. Yet what defines celebrity? How are stars manufactured by the Culture Industry? Why is the ubiquitous cult of celebrity so important in contemporary Western culture and across global mediascapes? Through classic and contemporary theoretical writings, the course examines stardom and various brands of star charisma. We interrogate conventional forms of celebrity power as well as the conversion of entertainment industry charisma into forms of political charisma and cultural capital (i.e., the careers of Ronald Reagan, Clint Eastwood, Arnold Schwarzenegger, Sidney Poitier, Jennifer Lopez, John Leguizamo, the Brangelina trademark, and Beyonce Knowles). The course will address the rise of reality television celebrities. As intertextual signs, stars reveal the instabilities, ambiguities and contradictions within a given culture. The changing configuration of American society is revealed in an examination of celebrity and stardom as social phenomena. This course transverses from Mary Pickford to Oprah Winfrey and beyond. Readings, screenings and writing assignments required. Mia Mask.

    Prerequisite(s): FILM 175  or FILM 209 , and permission of the instructor.

    One 3-hour period.

  • FILM 336 - African Cinema: A Continental Survey


    1 unit(s)
    African national cinemas reflect the rich, complex history of the continent. These films from lands as diverse as Chad, Senegal, and South Africa reveal the various ways filmmakers have challenged the representation of Africa and Africans while simultaneously revising conventional cinematic syntax. This survey course examines the internal gaze of African-born auteurs like Ousmane Sembene (La Noir De, Xala, Mandabi), Djbril Diop Mambety (Hyenes), Desire Ecare (Faces of Women), Manthia Diawara (Conakry Kas), and Mahmat-Saleh Haroun (Bye-Bye Africa). It places these films alongside the external gaze of practitioners Euzan Palcy (A Dry White Season), Jean-Jacques Annaud (Noir et Blancs en Couleur) and Raoul Peck (Lumumba). The films of documentary filmmakers Anne Laure Folly, Ngozi Onwurah and Pratibah Parmaar are also examined. This course utilizes the post-colonial film theory and scholarship of Imruh Bakari, Mbye Cham, Nwachukwu Frank Ukadike and Manthia Diawara. Screenings, readings and papers required. Mia Mask.

    Prerequisite(s): FILM 175  or FILM 209 , and permission of the instructor.

    One 2-hour period plus outside screenings.

    Not offered in 2021/22.

  • FILM 339 - Contemporary Southeast Asian Cinemas

    Semester Offered: Spring
    1 unit(s)
    (Same as ASIA 339 ) This survey course is designed to introduce students to the dynamic and diverse film texts emerging from and about Southeast Asia. It examines how these texts imagine and image Southeast Asia and/or particular nations within the region. More specifically, the course focuses on the themes of urban spaces and memory/trauma as they operate within texts about Indonesia, Singapore, Thailand, Malaysia, Vietnam, Cambodia, and Timor-Leste. The course reading material is designed to provide (1) theoretical insights, (2) general socio-cultural and/or political overviews, and (3) more specific analyses of film texts and/or filmmakers. Sophia Harvey.

    Prerequisite(s): FILM 175  or FILM 209  and permission of the instructor.

    One 2-hour period plus outside screenings.

  • FILM 379 - Computer Animation: Art, Science and Criticism


    1 unit(s)
    (Same as ART 379 , CMPU 379 , and MEDS 379 ) An interdisciplinary course in Computer Animation aimed at students with previous experience in Computer Science, Studio Art, or Media Studies. The course introduces students to mathematical and computational principles and techniques for describing the shape, motion and shading of three-dimensional figures in Computer Animation. It introduces students to artistic principles and techniques used in drawing, painting and sculpture, as they are translated into the context of Computer Animation. It also encourages students to critically examine Computer Animation as a medium of communication. Finally, the course exposes students to issues that arise when people from different scholarly cultures attempt to collaborate on a project of mutual interest. The course is structured as a series of animation projects interleaved with screenings and classroom discussions. 

    Prerequisite(s): Permission of the instructor.

    Two 2-hour periods.

    Not offered in 2021/22.

    Course Format: CLS
  • FILM 391 - Sensuous Theory Writing Workshop

    Semester Offered: Fall
    0.5 unit(s)
    This intensive is attached to FILM 392 . The writing workshop is based upon peer review, works-in-progress presentations, writing accountability groups, in-workshop writing sessions, and end of the semester paper presentations. This intensive meets with the instructor five times throughout the semester. Sophia Harvey.

    Corequisite(s): FILM 392 .

    Required for students enrolled in FILM 392 Research Seminar in Film History and Theory .

    Course Format: INT
  • FILM 392 - Research Seminar in Film History and Theory

    Semester Offered: Fall and Spring
    1 unit(s)
    This course is designed as an in-depth exploration of a theoretical topic. Students contribute to the class through research projects and oral presentations. Their work culminates in lengthy research papers. Because topics change, students are permitted (encouraged) to take this course more than once. Preference is given to film majors who must take this class during their senior year; junior majors and others admitted if space permits.

    Topic for 2021/22a: Sensuous Theory. This seminar explores the relationship between film and the senses. How can film, an audio-visual medium, represent and engage with the proximal senses of touch, taste, and smell? How might films employ the senses to reconfigure the relationship between the cinema and the spectator? How can these sensuous films articulate senses of belonging, displacement, or exile? The seminar situates our discussions of these questions within discourses of film phenomenology, postmodernism, gender studies, and postcolonialism. Readings may include: Jennifer M. Barker (The Tactile Eye: Touch and the Cinematic Experience, 2009), Thomas Elsaesser and Malte Hagener (Film Theory: An Introduction Through the Senses, 2010), Laura U. Marks (The Skin of the Film: Intercultural Cinema, Embodiment and the Senses, 2000, and Sensuous Theory and Multisensory Media, 2002), Hamid Naficy (An Accented Cinema: Exilic and Diasporic Filmmaking, 2001), and Vivian Sobchack (Carnal Thoughts: Embodiment and Moving Image Culture, 2004). Film screenings may include: Un Chien Andalou (Luis Bu?uel, 1929), Daisies (Vera Chytilova, 1966), The Conversation (Francis Ford Coppola, 1974), Eraserhead (David Lynch, 1977), Tetsuo, the Iron Man (Shinya Tsukamoto, 1989), The Silence of the Lambs (Jonathan Demme, 1991), Daughters of the Dust (Julie Dash, 1992), Calendar (Atom Egoyan, 1993), Toy Story (John Lasseter, 1995), Fight Club (David Fincher, 1999), Martyrs (Pascal Laugier, 2008), and The Skin I Live In (Pedro Almodovar, 2011). Sophia Harvey.

    Topic for 2021/22b: Horror Cinema. An advanced seminar in American horror cinema. It facilitates in-depth analysis and close readings of classic horror films. This course explores the production, reception, aesthetics and politics of an evolving genre. We begin with the classic 1930’s studio monster movies like DraculaFrankenstein and Cat People. Next, we examine Cold War politics and its influence on films like, I Married a Monster from Outer Space. Landmark movies responsible for shifts in the genre’s paradigm (like Psycho) are contextualized. We trace the genealogy of zombie movies from the Vietnam era to the present - considering their relationship to the military industrial complex and the prison industrial complex. Teen slasher pictures reached their apex in the Seventies, only to be re-invented in the Nineties for the Scream franchise. Television also exploits the appeal and popularity of teen horror genres with programs like True Blood. The course concludes with post-apocalyptic horror and its expression of millenarian anxiety in films such as AvatarLegion and World War Z. The work of Alfred Hitchcock, Roman Polanski, Brian DePalma, David Cronenberg and Mary Harron, among others, is studied. Mia Mask. 

    Prerequisite(s): FILM 209 ; two additional units in film history and theory, and permission of the instructor.

    Corequisite(s): FILM 391 , Fall semester only.

    One 2-hour period plus outside screenings.

    Course Format: CLS
  • FILM 399 - Senior Independent Work

    Semester Offered: Fall or Spring
    0.5 to 1 unit(s)
    To be elected in consultation with the adviser.

    Course Format: OTH