Wednesday, January 31, 2007

la Jetee online

Google Video has two versions of la Jetee: One with the English language narration, and one with the original French.

"What interests me is history, and politics only interests me to the degree that it is the mark history makes on the present."


One of the few known portraits of Chris Marker.

Here is a fascinating recent interview of Chris Marker, a man who almost never gives interviews and has rarely even allowed himself to be photographed. Marker has worked in nearly every medium during his over 60-year career----his work, Immemory was released in CD-ROM form and makes use of hypertext non-linearity. Some of his most interesting comments in this interview address the history and continued development of image capture technology:

"Godard nailed it once and for all: at the cinema, you raise your eyes to the screen; in front of the television, you lower them...Out of the two hours you spend in a movie theater, you spend one of them in the dark. It's this nocturnal portion that stays with us, that fixes our memory of a film in a different way than the same film seen on television or on a monitor. But having said that, let's be honest. I've just watched the ballet from An American in Paris on the screen of my iBook, and I very nearly rediscovered the lightness that we felt in London in 1952, when I was there with [Alain] Resnais and [Ghislain] Cloquet during the filming of Statues Also Die, when we started every day by seeing the 10 a.m. show of An American in Paris at a theater in Leicester Square. I thought I'd lost that lightness forever when I saw it on cassette."

Tuesday, January 30, 2007

Quay Brothers


A few students stayed behind and watched me run through some bits and bobs including some snippets of animation by the Quay Brothers. For those that wanted further information, here is some general background and an interview. Both are from the very worthwhile online journal Senses of Cinema.

After tonight's class....

I just sent out the invites to the "team blog" where the reading/viewing logs will be posted. If you don't get one it means I mistyped your email address. Email me, or tell me next class so I can take care of it and you can start posting. Hopefully all will go smoothly.

Remember to check this blog from time to time for updates and things of interest .

See you all next Tuesday.

Tuesday, January 23, 2007

Sleepwalkers


Students in this course may be interested in seeing Doug Aitken's video project, Sleepwalkers. Projected on the exterior walls of the Museum of Modern Art, Sleepwalkers can be seen daily through February 12, from 5 to 10 p.m.

Thursday, January 18, 2007

A short glossary of basic film terms

Animation - The process of photographing drawings or objects a frame at a time; by changing a drawing or moving an object slightly before each frame is taken, the illusion of motion is realized.

Auteur (French for author) - literally the director, who is regarded as the "author" of a film because he/she has primary control and responsibility for the final product. The Auteur theory insists that a film be considered in terms of the entire canon of a director and that each Auteur earns that title by displaying a unique cinematic style.

Background Music- Music accompanying action on the screen, but coming from no discernible source within the film.

Blocking - The arrangements made for the composition of a scene, especially the placement and movements of actors.

Boom - A long mobile beam or pole used to hold a microphone or camera.

Cinema Verite - A candid-camera style of filmmaking using hand-held cameras, natural sound, grainy high-contrast black-and-white film, and the appearance of no rehearsal and only basic editing.

Cinematographer (Director of Photography) - The person who supervises all aspects of photography from the operation of cameras to lighting.

Clip - A brief segment excerpted from a film.

Commentator - A voice (the person speaking may be either seen or unseen) commenting on the action of a film. A commentator, unlike a narrator, provides supposedly unbiased information, maintaining apparent perspective and distance from what occurs on the screen.

Composition - The placement of people or objects within the frame and the arrangements for actual movements within the frame or by the camera.

Continuity - The narrative growth of a film created through a combination of visuals and sound (resembling the "story" in print literature).

Crane Shot - A shot taken from a boom that can move both horizontally and vertically.

Cross-Cutting (Parallel Editing) - A method of editing in which the point of view (p.o.v.) switches alternately from events at one location to those of another related action. The action is usually simultaneous and used to create a dynamic tension. (See Intercutting for the distinction between cuts.)

Cut - An individual strip of film consisting of a single shot; the separation of two pieces of action as a "transition" (used when one says "cut from the shot of the boy to the shot of the girl"); a verb meaning to join shots together in the editing process; or an order to end a take ("cut!").

Cutter - (See Editor).

Dailies - (See Rushes).

Deep Focus - Keeping images close by and far away in sharp focus simultaneously.

Depth of Field - The area within which objects are in focus; a large depth of field allows a great range of objects to be in focus simultaneously, while a shallow depth of field offers a very limited area in focus. Depth of field normally depends on how far "open" a lens is (a lens works much like an eye, with the pupil opening or contracting to control light). An "open" lens (for example, f 1.4) creates a shallow depth of field while a "stopped down" (contracted) lens (for example f 16) creates a large depth of field.

Director - The person responsible for overseeing all aspects of the making of a film.

Dissolve - A method of making a transition from one shot to another by briefly superimposing one image upon another and then allowing the first image to disappear. A dissolve is a stronger form of transition than a cut and indicates a distinct separation in action.

Dolly - A platform on wheels serving as a camera mount capable-of movement in any direction.

Dolly Shot - A moving shot taken from a dolly. A Dolly-In moves the camera toward the subject, while a Dolly-Out moves the camera away from the subject. A dolly shot creates a sense of movement through space by capturing changes in perspective.

Double Exposure (Superimposition) - Two distinct images appearing simultaneously with one superimposed upon the other.

Dubbing (Lip Sync) - The process of matching voice with the lip movements of an actor on the screen; dubbing also refers to any aspect of adding or combining sounds to create a film's final soundtrack.

Editing - The process of splicing individual shots together into a complete film. Editing (as opposed to Montage) puts shots together to create a smoothly flowing narrative in an order making obvious sense in terms of time and place.

Editor (Cutter) - The person responsible for assembling the various visual and audial components of a film into a coherent and effective whole.

Fade - A transitional device in which either an image gradually dims until the viewer sees only a black screen (Fade-Out) or an image slowly emerges from a black screen to a clear and bright picture (Fade-In). A fade provides a strong break in continuity, usually setting off sequences.

Fast Motion - Movements on the screen appearing more rapid than they would in actual life. For example, a man riding a bicycle will display legs pumping furiously while he flashes through city streets at the speed of a racing car. A filmmaker achieves fast motion by running film through his camera at a speed slower than the standard 24 frames per second; subsequent projection of 24 frames per second speeds up the action.

Film Stock - Unexposed strips of celluloid holding light-sensitive emulsions.

Filters - Transparent glass of gelatin placed in front of or behind a lens to control coloration; some filters cut out certain types of light (such as ultra- violet); others create a soft, hazy appearance, and still others provide a dominant color when used with color films.

Fine Cut - The final assembling of all the various audial and visual components of a film.

Fish-Eye - An extreme wide-angle lens taking in (and distorting) an immense area.

Flashback - A segment of film that breaks into normal chronological order by shifting directly to time past (a flashback does not, however, disturb the overall chronology of the narrative). Flashback may be subjective (showing the thoughts and memory of a character) or objective (returning to earlier events to show their relationship to the present).

Flash Forward - A segment of film that breaks normal chronological order by shifting directly to a future time (a flash forward does not, however, disturb the overall chronology of the narrative). Flash forward, like flashback, may be subjective (showing precognition or fears of what might happen) or objective (suggesting what will eventually happen and thus setting up relationships for an audience to perceive).

Flashframe - A shot lasting only a few frames; the shortness of a flashframe makes its content difficult to assimilate. When many flashframes follow each other, they create a feeling of intense action and often visually resemble the effects of stroboscopic light; when used alone, flashframes usually act as flashbacks or Hash forwards.

Focus-Through (Racking) - A change of the field in focus taking the viewer from one object to another that was previously out of focus.

Frame - A single photographic image imprinted on a length of film; also the perimeter of an image as seen when projected on a screen (a filmmaker sees the frame as the boundaries of his camera's view-finder).

Freeze Frame - A single frame repeated for an extended time, consequently looking like a still photograph.

High-Angle Shot - A shot taken from above a subject, creating a sense of "looking down" upon whatever is photographed.

Intercutting - The alternation between actions taking place at two distinct locations to make one composite scene. For example, cutting between two people involved in the same telephone conversation. The distinction between this and cross cutting is one of compression of time. The intercut can be used to speed up a scene and eliminate large pieces of time that would slow a story down.

Iris - A technique used to show an image in only one small round area of the screen. An Iris-Out begins as a pinpoint and then moves outward to reveal the full scene, while an Iris-In moves inward from all sides to leave only a small image on the screen. An iris can be either a transitional device (using the image held as a point of transition) or a way of focusing attention on a specific part of a scene without reducing the scene in size.

Jump Cut - An instantaneous cut from one action to another, at first seemingly unrelated, action. Jump cuts will usually call attention to themselves because of the abrupt change in time and/or place.

Library Shot (Stock Shot) - Any shot not taken for a particular film but used in it.

Local Music - Music originating within a scene and audible to both the characters in the film and the audience.

Location - A place outside-the studio where shooting occurs.

Long Lens - Any lens with a focal length greater than normal; a normal focal length approximates the size relationships seen by the human eye, while a long focal length creates a narrower angle of vision, causing a larger image. A long lens alters perspective by flattening a subject into its background. (See Telephoto Lens.)

Low-Angle Shot - A shot taken from below a subject, creating a sense of "looking up to" whatever is photographed.

Mask - A device placed in front of a lens to reduce the horizontal or vertical size of the frame or to create a particular shape (for example, periscope eyepiece, binoculars, or gun-sight).

Match Cut - A cut intended to blend two shots together unobtrusively (opposed to a Jump Cut).

Matte Shot - A process for combining two separate shots on one print, resulting in a picture that looks as if it had been photographed all at once. For example, a shot of a man walking might be combined with a shot of a card table in such a way that the man appears to be six inches high and walking on a normal size card table.

Mise-En-Scene - The aura emanating from details of setting, scenery, and staging.

Mix - The process of combining all sounds at their proper levels from several tracks and placing them onto a master track.

Montage - (dynamic editing, expressive montage, montage sequence) A technique in film editing in which a series of short shots is edited into a sequence. It is often used to condense narrative time, show the passage of time, or offer an "essay-like" look at different parts or elements of an important event.

Negative Image - An image with color value reversed from positive to negative, making white seem black and black appear white.

Neorealism - A film style using documentary techniques for fictional purposes. Most neorealist films rely on high-contrast black-and-white film, nonprofessional actors, and natural settings. Neorealism began as a movement among a group of filmmakers in Italy after World War II.

New Wave (Nouvelle vague) - A recent movement in French filmmaking based mainly on the notion of the Auteur. The movement was begun in the late 1950s by a group of young filmmakers (including Francois Truffaut, Jean-Luc Godard, Louis Malle, and Alain Resnais) interested in exploring new potentials for film art.

Nonsynchronous Sound - Sound whose source is neither visible on the screen nor has been implied to be present in the action: a voice over narrator's commentary, sound effects added for dramatic effect, or the mood music of the film's score are examples. Two other terms for this are commentary sound and non-diegetic sound. (See Synchronous Sound.)

Objective Camera - The attempt to suggest that the camera acts only as a passive recorder of what happens in front of it. The use of objective camera relies on de-emphasis of technique, involving minimal camera movement and editing.

Out-Take - A take that is not included in the final version of a film.

Pan - A shot in which a stationary camera turns horizontally, revealing new areas.

Parallel Editing (See Cross-Cutting.)

Perspective - The way objects appear to the eye in terms of their relative positions and distances.

Process Shot - A shot coordinated with another image created by Rear Projection, making the resulting picture look like a single simultaneous shot. A typical process shot shows the faces of two people riding in a car; behind them (as seen through the rear window) moves the usual traffic of a city street. The traffic has been added by rear projection, creating a process shot.

Producer - The person who is responsible for all of the business aspects of making and releasing a film.

Reaction Shot - A shot showing one or more characters reacting to an action or statement.

Rear Projection (Back Projection) - The process of projecting an image onto a translucent screen from the back side rather than over the heads of the viewers as is usually done. Filmmakers use rear projection to film an action against a projected background, thus recording on film both the stage action and the rear-projected image. (See Process Shot.)

Reverse Angle Shot - A shot of an object or person taken in the direction opposite that of the preceding shot (for example, a shot of the gates of a prison from within followed by a reverse angle shot showing the gates from outside).

Rough Cut - The initial assembling of the shots of a film, done without added sound.

Rushes (Dailies) - The lengths of footage taken during the course of filming and processed as the shooting of a film proceeds.

Scenario - A series of Shots taken at one basic time and place. A scene is one of the basic structural units of film, with each scene contributing to the next largest unit of film, the sequence. (See Script).

Script (Shooting Script) - A written description of the action, dialogue, and camera placements for a film.

Sequence - A structural unit of a film using time, location, or some pattern to link together a number of scenes.

Shooting Ratio - The ratio in a finished film of the amount of film shot to the length of the final footage.

Shot - A single uninterrupted action of a camera as seen by a viewer (see Take). Shots are labeled according to the apparent distance of the subject from the camera: Extreme long-shot (ELS) also called an establishing shot; Long-shot (LS); Medium long-shot (MLS); Medium or mid-shot (MS); Medium close-up (MCU); Close-up (CU); and Extreme close-up (ECU).

Slow Motion - Movements on the screen appearing slower than they would in actual life. For example, a diver will seem to float to the water gently rather than fall at the speed dictated by gravity. A filmmaker achieves slow motion by running film through his camera at a speed faster than the standard 24 frames per second; subsequent projection at 24 frames per second slows down the action.

Soft Focus - A slightly blurred effect achieved by using a special filter or lens, or by shooting with a normal lens slightly out of focus.

Still - A photograph taken with a still (versus motion) camera.

Stock Shot (See Library Shot.)

Storyboard - A series of sketches (resembling a cartoon strip) showing potential ways various shots might be filmed.

Subjective Camera - Shots simulating what a character actually sees; audience, character, and camera all "see" the same thing. Much subjective camera involves distortion, indicating abnormal mental states. Shots suggesting how a viewer should respond are also called "subjective" (for example, a high-angle shot used to make a boy look small and helpless).

Superimposition (See Double Exposure.)

Synchronous Sound - Sound coordinated with and derived from a film's visuals. Sound whose source is visible on the screen or whose source is implied to be present by the action of the film:
voices of characters, sounds made by objects in the story andmusic represented as coming from instruments in the story. Two other terms for synchronous sound are actual sound and diegetic sound. (See Nonsynchronous Sound.)

Take - A single uninterrupted action of a camera as seen by a filmmaker. A take is unedited footage as taken from the camera, while a shot is the uninterrupted action left after editing.

Telephoto Lens - A lens with an extremely long focal length capable of making distant objects appear nearer and thus larger (See Long Lens).

Tilt Shot - A shot taken by angling a stationary camera up (tilt-up) or down (tilt-down).

Tracking Shot - Any shot using a mobile camera that follows (or moves toward or away from) the subject by moving on tracks or by being mounted on a vehicle.

Trailer - A short segment of film that theaters use to advertise a feature film.

Trucking Shot - Any moving shot with the camera on a mobile mounting, but chiefly a moving shot taken with a camera mounted on a truck.

Two Shot - A shot of two people, usually from the waist up.

Voice-Over - Any spoken language not seeming to come from images on the screen.

Wide-Angle Lens - Any lens with a focal length shorter than normal, thus allowing a greater area to be photographed. A wide-angle lens alters perspective by making nearby objects seem relatively larger than those far away and by increasing the apparent distance between objects both laterally and in depth.

Wipe - A transitional device in which one image slowly replaces another by pushing the other out of the way.

Zoom Shot - A shot accomplished with a lens capable of smoothly and continuously changing focal lengths from wide-angle to telephoto (zoom in) or telephoto to wide-angle (zoom out).

Syllabus

This course is an examination of visual and written texts, a class on film and literature. One way to proceed is to study the filmed adaptations of works of fiction, but we will be taking another way---examining issues of narrativity which are shared by both. In this sense, this is class about narrative, and we will be investigating some of the fundamental issues common to all modern and contemporary practices of story telling.

Narrative is the name given to the ordering or structuring of events in a story. We will begin our study with issues of narrative structure: how a story is told. How events are ordered, how the spectator or reader is situated within this order, and what the overall effects of such ordering are will be our first topic of investigation. Do not confuse “narrative” with “plot”---the first conceptual move in this course will be to direct student’s attention to issues of structure, rather than content. Of course, we will also be examining how the two elements work together, in particular the determining effect that structure has on content.

The invention of mechanical modes of visual representation (photography first and later film) made the question of the representation of reality a central issue for all serious cultural theorists and artists of the 20th century---especially filmmakers. However, most conventional or “Hollywood” films are unconcerned with exploring issues of filmic representation; they downplay their status as films. That is, the viewer is asked to “forget” that they are watching a film, and instead identify with and “experience” the “reality” presented by the film during its duration. Some of the films we will look at in this course run counter to this practice: they actively seek to disrupt conventional expectation and draw the viewer’s attention to film’s status as representation and not “reality.” The films I have chosen for this class can be loosely grouped under three areas of inquiry: studies of narrative structure, film and the "reality effect," and the relation between memory and narrative. These three sets of concepts are important not only to the history and study of film, but also literature.

Throughout the course I want students to begin thinking about the places where and ways in which they encounter narratives in their daily lives. Although our apprehension of the world may seem immediate, it is in fact mediated: we understand "reality” only through the various narratives (interpretations) of it to which we have access. One of the goals of this course is to make those prior interpretations visible to students, to enable them see the taken-for-granted assumptions that shape not only their understanding of film and literature, but also the world. This is what Antonio Gramsci called "the cultural commonsense”---those uncritical and unconscious ways of looking at the world which have come to seem natural, and thus beyond question.

Challenging the “naturalness” of everyday life has been, quite broadly, the agenda of every radical political theory of the twentieth century. Summing up the work of the French Situationists and their British counterparts in the late 1970’s punk movement, American cultural critic Greil Marcus writes, “What was on their mind was the notion that everyday life---wage labor, official propaganda, the commodity system, but also the way you bought a shirt, how you made love, the feeling you had as you watched the nightly news, or turned away from it---was not “natural,” but the product of an invisible hand. It was an interested construction, someone else's project, a ruler's project.” As Jon King of the post-punk group Gang of Four put it, “The attitudes and beliefs that people take as being natural have been inherited through the social structure they're brought up in. An example is the man who believes that women are by definition more suited to working in the home than making decisions. The belief in the natural puts all this outside the realm of debate---and unless you have an awareness of your ideas as political manifestations, you won't believe you can change them.”

Papers and assignments

The format of the course consists of film screenings and discussion. Students will complete three graded papers, and an ungraded viewing/reading log. The graded papers will be formal, typed, critical analysis papers where students present the results of their reading and thinking. The log, however, provides a different, less formal space for students to work through the implications of their reading and viewing practices.

The log is not a diary or a journal, that is, a place to record random impressions. Rather, the log functions as a space where students can begin to critically reflect on their practices as “film fan,” “movie goer” “spectator,” and “reader.” The log provides a place for students to react to and reflect on the films screened that week, that week’s class discussion and reading, as well the discussion and films shown in previous classes---in other words, the log should reflect the incremental development of the student’s ideas throughout the course. Besides being a place to begin to work on the ideas generated in specific class sessions, the log can also provide a space for students to make connections between ideas and issues beyond what can be included in individual class sessions and a place to begin thinking about the importance of narrative in other cultural and social spaces besides literature and film. Students will be required to make one entry a week (after that Tuesday’s session); while the length of individual entries will vary, 300 words should be considered a base minimum.

Logs will be posted online in a “team blog” that I’ve already set up (there is a link to the student logs on the main class blog page). By posting the logs in a public place, the discussion and knowledge created there can be collectively shared: unlike traditional papers, logs will not be just a private conversation between individual students and the teacher. Both the teacher and other students will read everyone’s log and make comments on them. I will collect email addresses on the first day and send all students an “invite” to the team blog---the invite is generated by Blogger and will take students through the process of setting up an account. Once you have set up your account you may start posting. Use some variation of your real name as your log handle and make part of your post’s subject title the class date that log represents, or mark it as an “extra” entry. Logs for each class session must be posted by 10 a.m. that Friday, so entries can be read and responded to over the weekend. You must turn in a complete log in order to pass the class.

Grades

The ability to simply review or reproduce "main ideas" is not the end goal of this class. Instead, the focus is on learning how to make use of ideas and concepts. That's why there are no conventional tests or quizzes in this class. That's also why regular participation in class discussion is a course requirement (remember that in this course discussion takes place in two spaces: the classroom and the online student logs). Regular attendance then, is necessary to produce the classroom as a genuine public space marked by the active participation of all its members—not just the teacher.

The final grade is based on class participation,(15% of grade), in-class assignments and viewing/reading log (35% of grade), and the three papers (50% of grade). More than 3 unexcused absences will result in FAILING the course. All assignments must be turned in to pass the course.

________________________________________________________________________________

Academic and Classroom Policies


It is the official policy of Nassau Community College that more than 3 unexcused absences results in an F for the course.

Remember that plagiarism is a serious academic infraction. Turning in plagiarized work results not only in failing the course, but also in possible academic suspension.

Turn off all cell phones and pagers upon entering the classroom. The first time one rings, the student will be given a warning. The second time, the student will be dropped from the class.
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Films:

la Jetee (1962), Chris Marker 28 min
Distant Voices/Still Lives (1988), Terence Davies 85 min
Memento (2000), Christopher Nolan 113 min
Tarnation (2003), Jonathan Caouette 88 min
Storytelling (2001) Todd Solondz 87 min
Hamlet 2000 (2000) Michael Almereyda 112 min
Cat People (1942) Jacques Tourneur 73 min
Freeway (1996) Matthew Bright 102 min

Texts:

la Jetee (script) Chris Marker
Distant Voice/Still Lives (script), Terence Davies
"We Kill What We Love," Maxine Chernoff
“Memento Mori,” Jonathan Nolan
"My Body: A Wunderkammer," Shelley Jackson
“The Company of Wolves,” Angela Carter
Hamlet---William Shakespeare (available in bookstore)
The Trials and Tribulations of Little Red Riding Hood, Jack Zipes (on reserve in the library)

Course calendar

(all dates are approximate---the calendar will likely be revised over the semester---check here for updates)


January

T 30: Introduction to course: discussion of film history, general concepts of narrative

February

T 6: FILM: la Jetee (1962), Chris Marker

T 13: FILM: Distant Voices/Still Lives (1988), Terence Davies

T 20: No Class

T 27: discussion, "We Kill What We Love" (first paper assigned)

March
T 6: FILM: Memento (2000), Christopher Nolan first paper due

T 13: FILM: Tarnation (2003), Jonathan Caouette

T 20: discussion “Memento Mori,” Jonathan Nolan, "My Body: A Wunderkammer," Shelley Jackson, (second paper assigned)

T 27: FILM: Storytelling (2001) Todd Solondz

April

T 3: No Class

T 10: FILM: Hamlet 2000 (2000) Michael Almereyda second paper due

T 17: discussion, Hamlet, William Shakespeare (final paper assigned)

T 24: FILM: Cat People (1942) Jacques Tourneur

May
T 1: discussion “The Company of Wolves,” Angela Carter

T 8: FILM: Freeway (1996) Matthew Bright

T 15: FILM: TBA final paper due

End of semester

Getting started....

This blog is a place for students to find the syllabus, assignments and other information about the course. If you need to contact me, email me directly rather than posting here.

IMPORTANT:

Do not email papers or other assignments unless you have made prior arrangements with me.

My email is:

estevem@ncc.edu