A Canadian Perspective on the International Film Festival

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

A Canadian Perspective on the International Film Festival NEGOTIATING VALUE: A CANADIAN PERSPECTIVE ON THE INTERNATIONAL FILM FESTIVAL by Diane Louise Burgess M.A., University ofBritish Columbia, 2000 THESIS SUBMITTED IN PARTIAL FULFILLMENT OF THE REQUIREMENTS FOR THE DEGREE OF DOCTOR OF PHILOSOPHY In the School ofCommunication © Diane Louise Burgess 2008 SIMON FRASER UNIVERSITY Fall 2008 All rights reserved. This work may not be reproduced in whole or in part, by photocopy or by other means, without permission ofthe author. Library and Archives Bibliothèque et Canada Archives Canada Published Heritage Direction du Branch Patrimoine de l’édition 395 Wellington Street 395, rue Wellington Ottawa ON K1A 0N4 Ottawa ON K1A 0N4 Canada Canada Your file Votre référence ISBN: 978-0-494-58719-5 Our file Notre référence ISBN: 978-0-494-58719-5 NOTICE: AVIS: The author has granted a non- L’auteur a accordé une licence non exclusive exclusive license allowing Library and permettant à la Bibliothèque et Archives Archives Canada to reproduce, Canada de reproduire, publier, archiver, publish, archive, preserve, conserve, sauvegarder, conserver, transmettre au public communicate to the public by par télécommunication ou par l’Internet, prêter, telecommunication or on the Internet, distribuer et vendre des thèses partout dans le loan, distribute and sell theses monde, à des fins commerciales ou autres, sur worldwide, for commercial or non- support microforme, papier, électronique et/ou commercial purposes, in microform, autres formats. paper, electronic and/or any other formats. The author retains copyright L’auteur conserve la propriété du droit d’auteur ownership and moral rights in this et des droits moraux qui protège cette thèse. Ni thesis. Neither the thesis nor la thèse ni des extraits substantiels de celle-ci substantial extracts from it may be ne doivent être imprimés ou autrement printed or otherwise reproduced reproduits sans son autorisation. without the author’s permission. In compliance with the Canadian Conformément à la loi canadienne sur la Privacy Act some supporting forms protection de la vie privée, quelques may have been removed from this formulaires secondaires ont été enlevés de thesis. cette thèse. While these forms may be included Bien que ces formulaires aient inclus dans in the document page count, their la pagination, il n’y aura aucun contenu removal does not represent any loss manquant. of content from the thesis. APPROVAL NAME Diane Louise Burgess DEGREE PhD TITLE OF DISSERTATION: Negotiating Value: A Canadian Perspective on the International Film Festival EXAMINING COMMITTEE: CHAIR: Barry Truax, Professor Catherine Murray Senior Supervisor Professor, School of Communication Zoe Druick Supervisor Associate Professor, School of Communication Alison Beale Supervisor Professor, School of Communication Stuart Poyntz, Internal Examiner Assistant Professor, School of Communication Charles R Acland, Professor, Communication Studies Concordia University DATE: September 18, 2008 11 SIMON FRASER UNIVERSITY LIBRARY Declaration of Partial Copyright Licence The author, whose copyright is declared on the title page of this work, has granted to Simon Fraser University the right to lend this thesis, project or extended essay to users of the Simon Fraser University Library, and to make partial or single copies only for such users or in response to a request from the library of any other university, or other educational institution, on its own behalf or for one of its users. The author has further granted permission to Simon Fraser University to keep or make a digital copy for use in its circulating collection (currently available to the public at the "Institutional Repository" link of the SFU Library website <www.lib.sfu.ca> at: <http://ir.lib.sfu.ca/handle/1892/112>) and, without changing the content, to translate the thesis/project or extended essays, if technically possible, to any medium or format for the purpose of preservation of the digital work. The author has further agreed that permission for multiple copying of this work for scholarly purposes may be granted by either the author or the Dean of Graduate Studies. It is understood that copying or publication of this work for financial gain shall not be allowed without the author's written permission. Permission for public performance, or limited permission for private scholarly use, of any multimedia materials forming part of this work, may have been granted by the author. This information may be found on the separately catalogued multimedia material and in the signed Partial Copyright Licence. While licensing SFU to permit the above uses, the author retains copyright in the thesis, project or extended essays, including the right to change the work for subsequent purposes, including editing and publishing the work in whole or in part, and licensing other parties, as the author may desire. The original Partial Copyright Licence attesting to these terms, and signed by this author, may be found in the original bound copy of this work, retained in the Simon Fraser University Archive. Simon Fraser University Library Burnaby, BC,Canada Revised: Summer 2007 111 ABSTRACT This dissertation argues that the Toronto and Vancouver International Film Festivals have been undervalued as showcases and in fact these hybrid public-private institutions are catalysts in the global, local and regional articulation ofEnglish-Canadian cinema culture. As a threshold to mainstream release and a non-theatrical venue, the festival operates in the gap between the production and consumption offilm commodities. Drawing on Pierre Bourdieu's model ofthe field ofcultural production, this gap is re-conceptualized as a productive space structured by the relative positioning ofstakeholders engaged in the negotiation ofhierarchies ofcinematic value. Festival space mediates the interests ofinternational trade, cultural diplomacy and cinephilia, balancing a need for programming autonomy against the intervention ofglobal Hollywood in the political economy ofindependent cinema. In the Canadian context, the value of national cinema is both a vexatious economic issue in that indigenous films consistently earn less than a 5% domestic box office share and a symbolic one to the extent that lacklustre theatrical performance is seen as an indication ofthe chronic absence ofa popular national cinema. While TIFF endorses public accessibility and an industrial rationale, VIFF situates itself as a community event with a focus on providing an exhibition alternative-both of which are consecrated by urban cultural policy with the development ofBell Lightbox and the Vancouver International Film Centre. Press coverage, festival publications and policy reports provide insight into the field of forces shaping festival buzz and evolving organizational identity in the divergent historical trajectories ofthese events to embedding as permanent space. Despite a realignment ofCanadian Feature Film Policy toward industrial objectives and performance indicators, the value chain from film festival to box office persists as a policy blind spot, reinforcing a split, rather than creative intermixture, ofcultural and industrial measures ofaudience access. This dissertation contends that, through the creation ofvibrant local film scenes that connect regional production to the international marketplace and cosmopolitan consumption, Canada's major film festivals playa critical role as intermediaries in cinephilic, governmental and industrial struggles to define cinema's symbolic and economic value. Keywords: film festival; English-Canadian cinema; film policy; cultural value; field theory Subject Terms: film festivals; motion picture industry -- Government policy -- Canada; motion picture industry -- Canada -- history; motion picture - distribution; cultural industries IV ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS I would like to thank my supervisory committee, Alison Beale, Zoe Druick and Catherine Murray for their insightful comments and generous advice over the course ofthis project. I'm indebted to Zoe for referring to Canadian cinema as "vexing" at a critical moment in the writing process and to my senior supervisor Catherine for her rigour, leadership and support as I found my voice. Both at the very beginning and during the final stages, portions ofthis research were presented at Film Studies Association ofCanada conferences; and an early draft ofthe field theory chapter was presented at CRESC's Media Change and Social Theory conference at St. Hugh's College, Oxford. I'm grateful for the feedback and collegiality that I encountered at these events; in addition, I would like to thank the School ofCommunication and Faculty ofApplied Sciences for funding assistance. A CD Nelson Memorial entrance scholarship was instrumental in the early stages of my degree in enabling me to forge a balance between my festival work and my studies. Lastly, I would like to thank Graduate Secretary Denise Vanderwolf, her predecessor Neena Shahani and Monique Cloutier for their invaluable assistance. My heartfelt thanks goes out to the faculty, staffand students in the Department of Theatre and Film at the University ofBritish Columbia, where I taught several Film Studies courses over the course ofmy degree. In particular, I would like to acknowledge Brian McIlroy's ongoing mentorship throughout my graduate career. I would also like to thank the Film librarian, Brenda Peterson, for her kernels ofresearch wisdom, Andrew deWaard for the book recommendations, and Sharon McGowan and Zanna Downes for their unwavering encouragement. On a personal
Recommended publications
  • In the Same Breath
    IN THE SAME BREATH A film by Nanfu Wang #InTheSameBreathHBO DEBUTS 2021 ON HBO SUNDANCE FILM FESTIVAL SCREENING SCHEDULE Thursday, January 28 at 5:00 PM PT / 6:00 PM MT – Online (WORLD PREMIERE) For press materials, please visit: ftp://ftp.homeboxoffice.com username: documr password: qq3DjpQ4 Running Time: 95 min Press Contact Press Contact HBO Documentary Films Cinetic Marketing Asheba Edghill / Hayley Hanson Rachel Allen / Ryan Werner Asheba cell: 347-721-1539 Rachel cell: 937-241-9737 Hayley cell: 201-207-7853 Ryan cell: 917-254-7653 [email protected] [email protected] [email protected] [email protected] LOGLINE Nanfu Wang's deeply personal IN THE SAME BREATH recounts the origin and spread of the novel coronavirus from the earliest days of the outbreak in Wuhan to its rampage across the United States. SHORT SYNOPSIS IN THE SAME BREATH, directed by Nanfu Wang (“One Child Nation”), recounts the origin and spread of the novel coronavirus from the earliest days of the outbreak in Wuhan to its rampage across the United States. In a deeply personal approach, Wang, who was born in China and now lives in the United States, explores the parallel campaigns of misinformation waged by leadership and the devastating impact on citizens of both countries. Emotional first-hand accounts and startling, on-the-ground footage weave a revelatory picture of cover-ups and misinformation while also highlighting the strength and resilience of the healthcare workers, activists and family members who risked everything to communicate the truth. DIRECTOR’S STATEMENT I spent a lot of my childhood in hospitals taking care of my father, who had rheumatic heart disease.
    [Show full text]
  • March 2018 New Releases
    March 2018 New Releases what’s inside featured exclusives PAGE 3 RUSH Releases Vinyl Available Immediately! 59 Vinyl Audio 3 CD Audio 8 RICHIE KOTZEN - TONY MACALPINE - RANDY BRECKER QUINTET - FEATURED RELEASES TELECASTERS & DEATH OF ROSES LIVEAT SWEET BASIL 1988 STRATOCASTERS: Music Video KLASSIC KOTZEN DVD & Blu-ray 35 Non-Music Video DVD & Blu-ray 39 Order Form 65 Deletions and Price Changes 63 800.888.0486 THE SOULTANGLER KILLER KLOWNS FROM BRUCE’S DEADLY OUTER SPACE FINGERS 203 Windsor Rd., Pottstown, PA 19464 [BLU-RAY + DVD] DWARVES & THE SLOTHS - DUNCAN REID & THE BIG HEADS - FREEDOM HAWK - www.MVDb2b.com DWARVES MEET THE SLOTHS C’MON JOSEPHINE BEAST REMAINS SPLIT 7 INCH March Into Madness! MVD offers up a crazy batch of March releases, beginning with KILLER KLOWNS FROM OUTER SPACE! An alien invasion with a circus tent for a spaceship and Killer Klowns for inhabitants! These homicidal clowns are no laughing matter! Arrow Video’s exclusive deluxe treatment comes with loads of extras and a 4K restoration that will provide enough eye and ear candy to drive you insane! The derangement continues with HELL’S KITTY, starring a possessed cat who cramps the style of its owner, who is beginning a romantic relationship. Call a cat exorcist, because this fiery feline will do anything from letting its master get some pu---! THE BUTCHERING finds a serial killer returning to a small town for unfinished business. What a cut-up! The King of Creepy, CHRISTOPHER LEE, stars in the 1960 film CITY OF THE DEAD, given new life with the remastered treatment.
    [Show full text]
  • A Canadian Perspective on the International Film Festival
    NEGOTIATING VALUE: A CANADIAN PERSPECTIVE ON THE INTERNATIONAL FILM FESTIVAL by Diane Louise Burgess M.A., University ofBritish Columbia, 2000 THESIS SUBMITTED IN PARTIAL FULFILLMENT OF THE REQUIREMENTS FOR THE DEGREE OF DOCTOR OF PHILOSOPHY In the School ofCommunication © Diane Louise Burgess 2008 SIMON FRASER UNIVERSITY Fall 2008 All rights reserved. This work may not be reproduced in whole or in part, by photocopy or by other means, without permission ofthe author. APPROVAL NAME Diane Louise Burgess DEGREE PhD TITLE OF DISSERTATION: Negotiating Value: A Canadian Perspective on the International Film Festival EXAMINING COMMITTEE: CHAIR: Barry Truax, Professor Catherine Murray Senior Supervisor Professor, School of Communication Zoe Druick Supervisor Associate Professor, School of Communication Alison Beale Supervisor Professor, School of Communication Stuart Poyntz, Internal Examiner Assistant Professor, School of Communication Charles R Acland, Professor, Communication Studies Concordia University DATE: September 18, 2008 11 SIMON FRASER UNIVERSITY LIBRARY Declaration of Partial Copyright Licence The author, whose copyright is declared on the title page of this work, has granted to Simon Fraser University the right to lend this thesis, project or extended essay to users of the Simon Fraser University Library, and to make partial or single copies only for such users or in response to a request from the library of any other university, or other educational institution, on its own behalf or for one of its users. The author has further granted permission to Simon Fraser University to keep or make a digital copy for use in its circulating collection (currently available to the public at the "Institutional Repository" link of the SFU Library website <www.lib.sfu.ca> at: <http://ir.lib.sfu.ca/handle/1892/112>) and, without changing the content, to translate the thesis/project or extended essays, if technically possible, to any medium or format for the purpose of preservation of the digital work.
    [Show full text]
  • Minding the Gap : a Rhetorical History of the Achievement
    Louisiana State University LSU Digital Commons LSU Doctoral Dissertations Graduate School 2013 Minding the gap : a rhetorical history of the achievement gap Laura Elizabeth Jones Louisiana State University and Agricultural and Mechanical College, [email protected] Follow this and additional works at: https://digitalcommons.lsu.edu/gradschool_dissertations Part of the English Language and Literature Commons Recommended Citation Jones, Laura Elizabeth, "Minding the gap : a rhetorical history of the achievement gap" (2013). LSU Doctoral Dissertations. 3633. https://digitalcommons.lsu.edu/gradschool_dissertations/3633 This Dissertation is brought to you for free and open access by the Graduate School at LSU Digital Commons. It has been accepted for inclusion in LSU Doctoral Dissertations by an authorized graduate school editor of LSU Digital Commons. For more information, please [email protected]. MINDING THE GAP: A RHETORICAL HISTORY OF THE ACHIEVEMENT GAP A Dissertation Submitted to the Graduate Faculty of the Louisiana State University and Agricultural and Mechanical College in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy in The Department of English by Laura Jones B.S., University of Colorado, 1995 M.S., Louisiana State University, 2010 August 2013 To the students of Glen Oaks, Broadmoor, SciAcademy, McDonough 35, and Bard Early College High Schools in Baton Rouge and New Orleans, Louisiana ii Acknowledgements I am happily indebted to more people than I can name, particularly members of the Baton Rouge and New Orleans communities, where countless students, parents, faculty members and school leaders have taught and inspired me since I arrived here in 2000. I am happy to call this complicated and deeply beautiful community my home.
    [Show full text]
  • Maailman Elokuvan Historia III
    Maailman elokuvan historia III Kanada, Australia, Uusi Seelanti Kanada: puitteet • Canadian Pacific Railroad:n tuottamia dokumentteja • Tarinaelokuva pääasiassa USA:sta, osa UK:sta • Ensimmäinen oma tarinaelokuva, Evangeline (1913) oli sekä kriittinen että yleisömenestys, mutta seuraavat elokuvat eivät olleet → tuottajayhtiö lopetti 1915 • Hieman tuotantoa 1920-luvulla, mutta äänielokuvan läpimurto tyrehdytti taas tuotannon • Docudraamoja ja muita tarinaa ja dokumentaaria sekoittavia lajityyppejä • Tarinaelokuva rajoittui pitkään "quota quickies” - tuotantoon National Film Board of Canada perustettiin 1939 Canadian Co-operation Project (1948-58) Luovat lahjakkuudet emigroituivat Hollywoodin tai UK:an Canadian Film Development Corporation perustetaan 1967 koordinoimaan investointeja, lainoja ja tukia Taloudelliset kannustimet ja verohelpotukset 1974 alkaen lisäävät massiivisesti sijoittamista Kanadalaiseen tuotantoon ”Tax-shelter era” johtaa pian kulttuurielokuvista suuren budjetin tuotantoihin National Film & Video Policy heijastaa taiteellisesti kunnianhimoisempaa suuntausta, mutta myös television roolia julkaisukanavana – CFDC:stä tulee Telefilm Canada Pienen budjetin itsenäistä tuotantoa syntyy kaikissa provinsseissa ja territorioissa Canadian Film Centre (CFC) perustetaan 1988 – osa rahoitusta hankitaan ei-valtiollisista lähteistä 1980-90 luvuilla ohjaajat kuten Denys Arcand, Patricia Rozema ja Gail Singer sekä maahanmuuttajat kuten Atom Egoyan (Egypt) ja Deepa Mehta (Intia) tekevät kv. läpimurtonsa ”Toronto New Wave” Kanadan
    [Show full text]
  • Inmedia, 3 | 2013, « Cinema and Marketing » [Online], Online Since 22 April 2013, Connection on 22 September 2020
    InMedia The French Journal of Media Studies 3 | 2013 Cinema and Marketing Electronic version URL: http://journals.openedition.org/inmedia/524 DOI: 10.4000/inmedia.524 ISSN: 2259-4728 Publisher Center for Research on the English-Speaking World (CREW) Electronic reference InMedia, 3 | 2013, « Cinema and Marketing » [Online], Online since 22 April 2013, connection on 22 September 2020. URL : http://journals.openedition.org/inmedia/524 ; DOI : https://doi.org/10.4000/ inmedia.524 This text was automatically generated on 22 September 2020. © InMedia 1 TABLE OF CONTENTS Cinema and Marketing When Cultural Demands Meet Industrial Practices Cinema and Marketing: When Cultural Demands Meet Industrial Practices Nathalie Dupont and Joël Augros Jerry Pickman: “The Picture Worked.” Reminiscences of a Hollywood publicist Sheldon Hall “To prevent the present heat from dissipating”: Stanley Kubrick and the Marketing of Dr. Strangelove (1964) Peter Krämer Targeting American Women: Movie Marketing, Genre History, and the Hollywood Women- in-Danger Film Richard Nowell Marketing Films to the American Conservative Christians: The Case of The Chronicles of Narnia Nathalie Dupont “Paris . As You’ve Never Seen It Before!!!”: The Promotion of Hollywood Foreign Productions in the Postwar Era Daniel Steinhart The Multiple Facets of Enter the Dragon (Robert Clouse, 1973) Pierre-François Peirano Woody Allen’s French Marketing: Everyone Says Je l’aime, Or Do They? Frédérique Brisset Varia Images of the Protestants in Northern Ireland: A Cinematic Deficit or an Exclusive
    [Show full text]
  • Starz’S €˜America to Me’ Docuseries Explores Race in Schools
    Starz’s ‘America to Me’ Docuseries Explores Race in Schools 06.29.2018 Filmmaker Steve James (Hoop Dreams, The Interrupters, Life Itself, Abacus: Small Enough to Jail) spent a year inside suburban Chicago's Oak Park and River Forest High School, exploring the grapple with decades-long racial and educational inequities. America to Me follows students, teachers and administrators at one of the country's highest performing and diverse public schools, digging into many of the stereotypes and challenges that today's teenagers face, and looking at what has succeeded and failed in the quest to achieve racial equality in our educational system. The 10-part series also serves as the launch of a social impact campaign focusing on the issues highlighted in each episode. Starz partnered with series producer Participant Media to encourage candid conversations about racism through a downloadable Community Conversation Toolkit and elevate student voices through a national spoken-word poetry contest. Alongside the release of each new episode, the campaign will also host a high-profile screening event in one city across the country. Over the course of 10 weeks, these 10 events will seed a national dialogue anchored by the series, and kick off activities across the country to inspire students, teachers, parents and community leaders to develop local initiatives that address inequities in their own communities, says Starz. James directed and executive produced the series, along with executive producers Gordon Quinn (The Trials of Muhammad Ali), Betsy Steinberg (Edith+Eddie) and Justine Nagan (Minding the Gap) at his longtime production home, Kartemquin Films.
    [Show full text]
  • Bureaucrats and Movie Czars: Canada's Feature Film Policy Since
    Media Industries 4.2 (2017) DOI: 10.3998/mij.15031809.0004.204 Bureaucrats and Movie Czars: Canada’s Feature Film Policy since 20001 Charles Tepperman2 UNIVERSITY OF CALGARY c.tepperman [AT] ucalgary.ca Abstract: This essay provides a case study of one nation’s efforts to defend its culture from the influx of Hollywood films through largely bureaucratic means and focused on the increasingly outdated metric of domestic box-office performance. Throughout the early 2000s, Canadian films accounted for only around 1 percent of Canada’s English-language market, and were seen by policy makers as a perpetual “problem” that needed to be fixed. Similar to challenges found in most film-producing countries, these issues were navigated very differently in Canada. This period saw the introduction of a new market-based but cultural “defense” oriented approach to Canadian film policy. Keywords: Film Policy, Production, Canada Introduction For over a century, nearly every film-producing nation has faced the challenge of competing with Hollywood for a share of its domestic box office. How to respond to the overwhelming flood of expensively produced and slickly marketed films that capture most of a nation’s eye- balls? One need not be a cultural elitist or anti-American to point out that the significant presence of Hollywood films (in most countries more than 80 percent) can severely restrict the range of films available and create barriers to the creation and dissemination of home- grown content.3 Diana Crane notes that even as individual nations employ cultural policies to develop their film industries, these efforts “do not provide the means for resisting American domination of the global film market.”4 In countries like Canada, where the government plays a significant role in supporting the domestic film industry, these challenges have political and Media Industries 4.2 (2017) policy implications.
    [Show full text]
  • This Book Is a Compendium of New Wave Posters. It Is Organized Around the Designers (At Last!)
    “This book is a compendium of new wave posters. It is organized around the designers (at last!). It emphasizes the key contribution of Eastern Europe as well as Western Europe, and beyond. And it is a very timely volume, assembled with R|A|P’s usual flair, style and understanding.” –CHRISTOPHER FRAYLING, FROM THE INTRODUCTION 2 artbook.com French New Wave A Revolution in Design Edited by Tony Nourmand. Introduction by Christopher Frayling. The French New Wave of the 1950s and 1960s is one of the most important movements in the history of film. Its fresh energy and vision changed the cinematic landscape, and its style has had a seminal impact on pop culture. The poster artists tasked with selling these Nouvelle Vague films to the masses—in France and internationally—helped to create this style, and in so doing found themselves at the forefront of a revolution in art, graphic design and photography. French New Wave: A Revolution in Design celebrates explosive and groundbreaking poster art that accompanied French New Wave films like The 400 Blows (1959), Jules and Jim (1962) and The Umbrellas of Cherbourg (1964). Featuring posters from over 20 countries, the imagery is accompanied by biographies on more than 100 artists, photographers and designers involved—the first time many of those responsible for promoting and portraying this movement have been properly recognized. This publication spotlights the poster designers who worked alongside directors, cinematographers and actors to define the look of the French New Wave. Artists presented in this volume include Jean-Michel Folon, Boris Grinsson, Waldemar Świerzy, Christian Broutin, Tomasz Rumiński, Hans Hillman, Georges Allard, René Ferracci, Bruno Rehak, Zdeněk Ziegler, Miroslav Vystrcil, Peter Strausfeld, Maciej Hibner, Andrzej Krajewski, Maciej Zbikowski, Josef Vylet’al, Sandro Simeoni, Averardo Ciriello, Marcello Colizzi and many more.
    [Show full text]
  • Doc Nyc Unveils Influential Short Lists
    DOC NYC UNVEILS INFLUENTIAL SHORT LISTS FOR FEATURES & SHORTS PLUS INAUGURAL “WINNER’S CIRCLE” SECTION, LIFETIME ACHIEVEMENT SCREENINGS, “40 UNDER 40” LIST AND NEW AWARDS NEW YORK, September 26, 2019 - DOC NYC, America’s largest documentary festival, celebrating its 10th anniversary, announced the lineup for three of its most prestigious sections. Short List: Features and Short List: Shorts each curate a selection of nonfiction films that the festival’s programming team considers to be among the year’s strongest contenders for Oscars and other awards. For the first time, the Short List: Features will vie for juried awards in four categories: Directing, Producing, Cinematography and Editing, and a Best Director prize will also be awarded in the Short List: Shorts section. The festival also announced the launch of a new section, Winner’s Circle, highlighting films that have won top prizes at international festivals, but might fly below the radar of American audiences. Michael Apted and Martin Scorsese, the two recipients of DOC NYC’s previously announced Visionaries Lifetime Achievement Awards, will also have their latest documentary films screened: 63 Up and Rolling Thunder Revue: A Bob Dylan Story by Martin Scorsese, respectively. The festival also announced the second year of its 40 Under 40 list of young rising stars in the documentary community, co-presented by Topic Studios. “Today’s announcements of the DOC NYC Short Lists, Winner’s Circle and 40 Under 40 showcase a tremendous breadth and depth of talent,” said festival Artistic Director Thom Powers. “We’re excited to bring New York audiences to some of the year’s best films and showcase the future of the documentary field.” AMPAS members can email [email protected] to register for a Short List Pass to gain free admission to Short List, Winner’s Circle and Lifetime Achievement screenings; as well as to the panel discussions for Short List: Features (Fri, Nov.
    [Show full text]
  • Everyday Narratives
    Everyday Narratives Reconsidering Filmic Temporality and Spectatorial Affect through the Quotidian Effie Rassos A Thesis Submitted in Fulfilment of the Requirements for the Degree of Doctor of Philosophy School of Media, Film and Theatre University of New South Wales August 2005 ABSTRACT This thesis takes as its focus the relation between particular constructions of filmic time and the resulting affective and emotional experiences these temporalities produce on a spectatorial level. This connection between time and affect is thought through more specifically here in relation to an idea of the everyday not only as a thematic concern with the minutia of routine daily existence but also as distinct, and yet shifting, conceptions of filmic and viewing time. While film studies has often approached the temporal construction of the quotidian through the rubric of ‘real time,’ I explore different articulations of the everyday in a number of film practices through the writings of Henri Lefebvre. As a sociologist and philosopher preoccupied with the revolutionary quality of everyday time in both material reality and art practices including film, Lefebvre’s work enables this thesis to approach film as an especially potent and significant site for affective experiences of time and of the everyday. Beginning with John Cassavetes’ Faces (1968) and an analysis of an affective everyday temporality that film is able to produce as a temporal medium, this thesis goes on to consider the quotidian through photography and stillness in Jeanne Dielman, 23 Quai du Commerce, 1080 Bruxelles (Chantal Akerman, 1975), dying and witnessing via Silverlake Life: The View from Here (Tom Joslin and Peter Friedman, 1993), and finally melodrama and unrequited love in Wong Kar-wai’s In the Mood for i Love (Huayang Nianhua, 2000).
    [Show full text]
  • NEW FILMS from CANADA MARCH 21 – 24, 2019 AMERICAN CINEMATHEQUE at the AERO THEATRE 1328 Montana Avenue at 14Th Street, Santa Monica
    NEW FILMS FROM CANADA MARCH 21 – 24, 2019 AMERICAN CINEMATHEQUE AT THE AERO THEATRE 1328 Montana Avenue at 14th Street, Santa Monica Movies on the Big Screen! AMERICAN CINEMATHEQUE.COM CANADA NOW 2019 Look up. Way up. Up above that 49th parallel. Soon you will begin to see the swirling illuminations of those northern cinematic lights: Canada Now 2019 is here. Yes, your Canadian neighbours are again coming south, bringing tales of restless youth, indigenous stories of tragedy and healing, compelling personal dramas about reinventing our world with the power of our imaginations, as well as a riveting documentary about the search for social justice in right here in the United States of America. This latest Canada Now selection includes daring and impressive works by both veteran flmmakers and new Canadian visions by emerging directorial talents. As always, the 2019 Canada Now showcase celebrates the independent spirit that has always been a hallmark of Canadian cinema. Follow us on Facebook at @CanadaNowFilm www.CanadaNowFestival.com Directors of the CANADA NOW flms will be present at screenings for Q & A. The Firefies Are Gone/ La disparition des lucioles THURSDAY, MARCH 21, 7:30 PM DOUBLE FEATURE NIGHT! ► FRIDAY, MARCH 22, 7:30 PM THE FIREFLIES ARE GONE/ THROUGH BLACK SPRUCE LA DISPARITION DES LUCIOLES Director: Don McKellar 2018 | 111 MINUTES | ENGLISH Director: Sébastien Pilote 2018 | 96 MINUTES | FRENCH WITH ENGLISH SUBTITLES A thoughtful and timely dramatic exploration of the crisis in Canada regarding missing and murdered Indigenous women, Through Black Spruce revolves around Annie Bird, On the verge of her high school graduation, a brilliant, high-spirited young 18 year-old a young Cree woman from the remote James Bay region of Northern Ontario who travels woman named Léo can’t wait to get out of her drab small town in Quebec’s hinterland.
    [Show full text]