Chimes at Midnight Francofonia Only Yesterday

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Chimes at Midnight Francofonia Only Yesterday Autumn 2016 October 10, 2016 Chimes at Midnight (1966) 1:59 Dir. Orson Welles in English, Directed by and starring Orson Welles, the film's plot centers on William (color) Shakespeare's recurring character Sir John Falstaff and the father-son relationship he has with Prince Hal, who must choose between loyalty to Falstaff or to his father, King Henry IV. October 24, 2016 Francofonia (2015) 1:30 Dir. Alexander Sokurov in French & Russian Variety described Francofonia as a "dense, enriching meditation on the with English subtitles Louvre and specifically (but not exclusively) the museum’s status during (color) WWII" November 7, 2016 Only Yesterday (1991) 1:58 Dir. Isao Takahata in Japanese Japanese animated drama film written and directed by Isao Takahata, dubbed in English became a surprise box office success, attracting a large adult audience of (color) all genders and becoming the highest-grossing Japanese film of the year in Japan. November 21, 2016 If a Tree Falls: A Story of the Earth Liberation Front (2011) 1:25 Dir. Marshall Curry & Sam Cullman in English A documentary, exploring the origins, motives, and organization of the (color) Earth Liberation Front and Eco-terrorism. It explains how the Department of Justice was able to find and arrest the co-conspirators in 2005 and questions whether or not they deserved to be sentenced as "terrorists." All Movies 7:30 pm at the Dignity/Washington Center Autumn 2016 December 5, 2016 Exit Through the Gift Shop (2010) 1:37 Dir. Banksy in English The story of a French immigrant in Los Angeles, and his obsession with (color) street art. Documenting of his every waking moment on film, from a chance encounter with his cousin, to his eventual fame as a street artist. All Movies 7:30 pm at the Dignity/Washington Center.
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    “How this World is Given to Lying!”: Orson Welles’s Deconstruction of Traditional Historiographies in Chimes at Midnight Jeffrey Yeager, West Virginia University ew Shakespearean films were so underappreciated at their release as Orson Welles’s Chimes at Midnight.1 Compared F to Laurence Olivier’s morale boosting 1944 version of Henry V, Orson Welles’s adaptation has never reached a wide audience, partly because of its long history of being in copyright limbo.2 Since the film’s debut, a critical tendency has been to read it as a lament for “Merrie England.” In an interview, Welles claimed: “It is more than Falstaff who is dying. It’s the old England, dying and betrayed” (qtd. in Hoffman 88). Keith Baxter, the actor who plays Prince Hal, expressed the sentiment that Hal was the principal character: Welles “always saw it as a triangle basically, a love story of a Prince lost between two father figures. Who is the boy going to choose?” (qtd. in Lyons 268). Samuel Crowl later modified these differing assessments by adding his own interpretation of Falstaff as the central character: “it is Falstaff’s winter which dominates the texture of the film, not Hal’s summer of self-realization” (“The Long Good-bye” 373). Michael Anderegg concurs with the assessment of Falstaff as the central figure when he historicizes the film by noting the film’s “conflict between rhetoric and history” on the one hand and “the immediacy of a prelinguistic, prelapsarian, timeless physical world, on the other” (126). By placing the focus on Falstaff and cutting a great deal of text, Welles, Anderegg argues, deconstructs Shakespeare’s world by moving “away from history and toward satire” (127).
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