Oscars 2015 P1 Choose the Winners

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

Oscars 2015 P1 Choose the Winners Oscars 2015 P1 Choose the winners Best Picture (5) Adapted Screenplay (4) “Selma” “American Sniper” “Birdman” “The Imitation Game” “The Theory of Everything” “Inherent Vice” “Whiplash” “The Theory of Everything” “Boyhood” “Whiplash” “The Grand Budapest Hotel” “American Sniper” Cinematography (3) “The Imitation Game” “Birdman” “The Grand Budapest Hotel” Best Actor in a Leading Role (5) “Ida” Steve Carrell, “Foxcatcher” “Mr. Turner” Bradley Cooper, “American Sniper” “Unbroken” Benedict Cumberbatch, “The Imitation Game” Michael Keaton, “Birdman” Costume Design (3) Eddie Redmayne, “The Theory of Everything” Milena Canonero, “The Grand Budapest Hotel” Mark Bridges, “Inherent Vice” Best Actress in a Leading Role (5) Colleen Atwood, “Into the Woods” Marion Cotillard, “Two Days, One Night” Anna B. Sheppard and Jane Clive, “Maleficent” Felicity Jones, “The Theory of Everything” Jacqueline Durran, “Mr. Turner” Julianne Moore, “Still Alice” Rosamund Pike, “Gone Girl” Animated Feature Film (4) Reese Witherspoon, “Wild” “Big Hero 6” “The Boxtrolls” Best Actor in a Supporting Role (4) “How to Train Your Dragon 2” Robert Duvall, “The Judge” “Song of the Sea” Ethan Hawke, “Boyhood” “The Tale of the Princess Kaguya” Mark Ruffalo, “Foxcatcher” J.K. Simmons, “Whiplash” Documentary Feature (3) Edward Norton, “Birdman” “CitizenFour” “Finding Vivian Maier” Best Actress in a Supporting Role (4) “Last Days in Vietnam” Patricia Arquette, “Boyhood” “The Salt of the Earth” Laura Dern, “Wild” “Virunga” Keira Knightley, “The Imitation Game” Meryl Streep, “Into the Woods” Documentary Short Subject (2) Emma Stone, “Birdman” “Crisis Hotline: Veterans Press 1” “Joanna” Directing (5) “Our Curse” Alejandro G. Inarritu, “Birdman” “The Reaper” Richard Linklater, “Boyhood” “White Earth” Bennett Miller, “Foxcatcher” Wes Anderson, “The Grand Budapest Hotel” Film Editing (3) Morten Tyldum, “The Imitation Game” Joel Cox and Gary D. Roach, “American Sniper” Sandra Adair, “Boyhood” Original Screenplay (4) Barney Pilling, “The Grand Budapest Hotel” “Birdman” William Goldenberg, “The Imitation Game” “Boyhood” Tom Cross, “Whiplash” “Foxcatcher” “The Grand Budapest Hotel” “Nightcrawler” Oscars 2015 P2 Choose the winners Original Score (3) Live Action Short Film (2) Alexandre Desplat, “The Grand Budapest Hotel” “Aya” Alexandre Desplat, “The Imitation Game” “Boogalo and Graham” Hans Zimmer, “Interstellar” “Butter Lamp” Gary Yershon, “Mr. Turner” “Parvaneh” Johann Johannsson, “The Theory of Everything” “The Phone Call” Production Design (3) Visual Effects (3) “The Grand Budapest Hotel” “Captain America: The Winter Soldier” “The Imitation Game” “Dawn of the Planet of the Apes” “Interstellar” “Guardians of the Galaxy” “Into the Woods” “Interstellar” “Mr. Turner” “X-Men: Days of Future Past” Animated Short Film (2) Foreign Language Film (2) “The Bigger Picture” “Ida” “The Dam Keeper” “Leviathan” “Feast” “Tangerines” “Me and My Moulton” “Timbuktu” “A Single Life” “Wild Tales” Original Song (4) “Everything is Awesome” from “The Lego Movie”, Music and Lyric by Shawn Patterson “Glory” from “Selma”, Music and Lyric by John Stephens and Lonnie Lynn “Grateful” from “Beyond the Lights”, Music and Lyric by Diane Warren “I’m Not Gonna Miss You” from “Glen Campbell ... I’ll Be Me”, Music and Lyric by Glen Campbell and Julian Raymond “Lost Stars” from “Begin Again”, Music and Lyric by Gregg Alexander and Danielle Brisebois Sound Editing (3) Alan Robert Murray and Bub Asman, “American Sniper” Martin Hernandez and Aaron Glascock, “Birdman” Brent Burge and Jason Canovas, “The Hobbit: The Battle of the Five Armies” Richard King, “Interstellar” Becky Sullivan and Andrew DeCristofaro, “Unbroken” Sound Mixing (3) John Reitz, Gregg Rudloof and Walt Martin, “American Sniper” Jon Taylor, Frank Montano, and Thomas Varga, “Birdman” Gary A. Rizzo, Gregg Landaker, and Mark Weingarten, “Interstellar” Jon Taylor, Frank Montano, and David Lee, “Unbroken” Craig Mann, Ben Wilkins, and Thomas Curley, “Whiplash” Makeup and Hairstyling (3) Bill Corso and Dennis Liddiard, “Foxcatcher” Frances Hannon and Mark Coulier, “The Grand Budapest Hotel” Elizabeth Yianni-Georgiou and David White, “Guardians of the Galaxy” NAME Yes, I'll put in $5.
Recommended publications
  • Oscars® Awarded to Avid Customers in Triumphant Sweep at the 88Th Annual Academy Awards
    March 1, 2016 Oscars® Awarded to Avid Customers in Triumphant Sweep at the 88th Annual Academy Awards Every Winner and Nominee for Best Picture, Film Editing, Sound Editing, Sound Mixing and Original Score Relied on Avid Creative Solutions BURLINGTON, Mass., March 01, 2016 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) -- Avid® (Nasdaq:AVID) today congratulates its customers recognized as nominees and winners at the 88th Academy Awards®, the world's most prestigious ceremony honoring film industry professionals. Every nominee in the Best Picture, Best Film Editing, Best Sound Editing, Best Sound Mixing and Best Original Score categories, including Best Picture winner Spotlight, was crafted by Avid customers using Avid Artist Suite audio and video creative tools, powered by the Avid MediaCentral™ Platform. All five nominees in the Film Editing category—winner Margaret Sixel for Mad Max: Fury Road, Hank Corwin for The Big Short, Stephen Mirrione for The Revenant, Tom McArdle for Spotlight, and Maryann Brandon and Mary Jo Markey for Star Wars: The Force Awakens—relied on the industry's preeminent editing solution, Avid Media Composer® to cut their films. In the Sound Editing category, all five nominees—winners Mark Mangini and David White for Mad Max: Fury Road, Oliver Tarney for The Martian, Martin Hernandez and Lon Bender for The Revenant, Alan Robert Murray for Sicario, and Matthew Wood and David Acord for Star Wars: The Force Awakens—all relied on the industry-standard digital audio software Avid Pro Tools® for sound editing. "I had an opportunity to develop many soundscapes on The Revenant," said Formosa Group's Lon Bender. "Each day I would take material from our team and hone it using my Avid control surface for reviews with Alejandro.
    [Show full text]
  • 92Nd ACADEMY AWARDS® BALLOT
    92nd ACADEMY AWARDS® BALLOT IMDb LIVE is covering the Academy Awards all evening long -- join us at IMDb.com on Feb. 9 at 7:30 p.m. ET/4:30 p.m. PT Name ¨ A B BEST ACHIEVEMENT ¨ A Marriage Story 8.1 14 Once Upon a Time... in Hollywood 7.7 Noah Baumbach IN COSTUME DESIGN Wylie Stateman A ¨ Once Upon a Time... in Hollywood 7.7 ¨ Jojo Rabbit A8.0 ¨ Star Wars: The Rise Of Skywalker A6.9 Total Correct Quentin Tarantino Mayes C. Rubeo Matthew Wood and David Acord A ¨ Parasite 8.6 ¨ Joker A8.6 /24 Bong Joon Ho and Jin Won Han Mark Bridges BEST ACHIEVEMENT 20 ¨ Little Women A8.1 IN VISUAL EFFECTS Jacqueline Durran BEST MOTION PICTURE BEST ADAPTED ¨ 1917 A8.5 01 08 A OF THE YEAR SCREENPLAY ¨ Once Upon a Time... in Hollywood 7.7 Guillaume Rocheron, Greg Butler, and A Arianne Phillips Dominic Tuohy ¨ 1917 A8.5 ¨ Jojo Rabbit 8.0 ¨ The Irishman A8.0 A Sam Mendes, Pippa Harris, Jayne-Ann Taika Waititi ¨ Avengers: Endgame 8.5 Christopher Peterson and Sandy Powell Tenggren, and Callum McDougall ¨ Joker A8.6 Dan DeLeeuw, Russell Earl, Matt Aitken, Todd Phillips and Scott Silver and Daniel Sudick ¨ Ford v Ferrari A8.2 A BEST ACHIEVEMENT IN ¨ A Peter Chernin, Jenno Topping, James Mangold ¨ Little Women 8.1 15 Star Wars: The Rise Of Skywalker 6.9 Greta Gerwig MAKEUP AND HAIRSTYLING Neal Scanlan, Patrick Tubach, Dominic Tuohy, ¨ Jojo Rabbit A8.0 and Roger Guyett Carthew Neal, Taika Waititi ¨ The Irishman A8.0 ¨ 1917 A8.5 Steven Zaillian ¨ The Irishman A8.0 ¨ Joker A8.6 Naomi Donne, Tristan Versluis, and Rebecca Cole Pablo Helman, Leandro Estebecorena, Todd Phillips, Bradley Cooper, Emma Tillinger ¨ The Two Popes A7.6 ¨ Bombshell A6.8 Nelson Sepulveda, and Stephane Grabli Koskoff Anthony McCarten Kazu Hiro, Anne Morgan, and Vivian Baker ¨ The Lion King A6.9 ¨ Little Women A8.1 ¨ Joker A8.6 Robert Legato, Adam Valdez, Andrew R.
    [Show full text]
  • THTR 433A/ '16 CD II/ Syllabus-9.Pages
    USCSchool of Costume Design II: THTR 433A Thurs. 2:00-4:50 Dramatic Arts Fall 2016 Location: Light Lab/PDE Instructor: Terry Ann Gordon Office: [email protected]/ floating office Office Hours: Thurs. 1:00-2:00: by appt/24 hr notice Contact Info: [email protected], 818-636-2729 Course Description and Overview This course is designed to acquaint students with the requirements, process and expectations for Film/TV Costume Designers, supervisors and crew. Emphasis will be placed on all aspects of the Costume process; Design, Prep: script analysis,“scene breakdown”, continuity, research, and budgeting; Shooting schedules, and wrap. The supporting/ancillary Costume Arts and Crafts will also be discussed. Students will gain an historical overview, researching a variety of designers processes, aesthetics and philosophies. Viewing films and film clips will support critique and class discussion. Projects focused on specific design styles and varied media will further support an overview of techniques and concepts. Current production procedures, vocabulary and technology will be covered. We will highlight those Production departments interacting closely with the Costume Department. Time permitting, extra-curricular programs will include rendering/drawing instruction, select field trips, and visiting TV/Film professionals. Students will be required to design a variety of projects structured to enhance their understanding of Film/TV production, concept, style and technique . Learning Objectives The course goal is for students to become familiar with the fundamentals of costume design for TV/Film. They will gain insight into the protocol and expectations required to succeed in this fast paced industry. We will touch on the multiple variations of production formats: Music Video, Tv: 4 camera vs episodic, Film, Commercials, Styling vs Costume Design.
    [Show full text]
  • The Revenant Nominations List Achievement in Cinematography 1
    The Revenant nominations list Achievement in cinematography 1 Achievement in costume design 2 Achievement in directing 3 Achievement in film editing 4 Achievement in makeup and hairstyling 5 Achievement in production design 6 Achievement in sound editing 7 Achievement in sound mixing 8 Achievement in visual effects 9 Best motion picture of the year 10 Performance by an actor in a leading role 11 Performance by an actor in a supporting role 12 Oscars® 2016 Movie Checklist 13 Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences Page 1 1. NOMINATIONS BY CATEGORY - 88TH AWARDS Performance by an actor in a leading role Bryan Cranston in “Trumbo” (Bleecker Street) Matt Damon in “The Martian” (20th Century Fox) Leonardo DiCaprio in “The Revenant” (20th Century Fox) Michael Fassbender in “Steve Jobs” (Universal) Eddie Redmayne in “The Danish Girl” (Focus Features) Performance by an actor in a supporting role Christian Bale in “The Big Short” (Paramount) Tom Hardy in “The Revenant” (20th Century Fox) Mark Ruffalo in “Spotlight” (Open Road Films) Mark Rylance in “Bridge of Spies” (Walt Disney and 20th Century Fox) Sylvester Stallone in “Creed” (Warner Bros.) Performance by an actress in a leading role Cate Blanchett in “Carol” (The Weinstein Company) Brie Larson in “Room” (A24) Jennifer Lawrence in “Joy” (20th Century Fox) Charlotte Rampling in “45 Years” (Sundance Selects) Saoirse Ronan in “Brooklyn” (Fox Searchlight) Performance by an actress in a supporting role Jennifer Jason Leigh in “The Hateful Eight” (The Weinstein Company) Rooney Mara in “Carol” (The Weinstein Company) Rachel McAdams in “Spotlight” (Open Road Films) Alicia Vikander in “The Danish Girl” (Focus Features) Kate Winslet in “Steve Jobs” (Universal) Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences PagePage 2 2.
    [Show full text]
  • Oscars 2020 Ballot
    OSCARS BALLOT OSCAR NOMINATIONS 2020 BY CATEGORY - 92ND AWARDS О JOKER - LAWRENCE SHER О PARASITE - YANG JINMO ROBERT DE NIRO, JANE ROSENTHAL AND О JOKER - ALAN ROBERT MURRAY EMMA TILLINGER KOSKOFF, PRODUCERS О THE LIGHTHOUSE - JARIN BLASCHKE BEST INTERNATIONAL FEATURE FILM OF THE О 1917 - OLIVER TARNEY AND RACHAEL TATE YEAR: О JOJO RABBIT - CARTHEW NEAL AND О 1917 - ROGER DEAKINS TAIKA WAITITI, PRODUCERS О ONCE UPON A TIME...IN HOLLYWOOD - О CORPUS CHRISTI - POLAND, DIRECTED WYLIE STATEMAN PERFORMANCE BY AN ACTOR IN A LEADING О ONCE UPON A TIME...IN HOLLYWOOD - BY JAN KOMASA О JOKER - TODD PHILLIPS, BRADLEY ROLE: ROBERT RICHARDSON COOPER AND EMMA TILLINGER KOSKOFF, О STAR WARS: THE RISE OF SKYWALKER - О HONEYLAND - NORTH MACEDONIA, PRODUCERS MATTHEW WOOD AND DAVID ACORD О ANTONIO BANDERA IN PAIN AND GLORY ACHIEVEMENT IN COSTUME DESIGN: DIRECTED BY LJUBO STEFANOV AND TAMARA KOTEVKSA О LITTLE WOMEN - AMY PASCAL, ACHIEVEMENT IN SOUND MIXING: О LEONARDO DICAPRIO IN ONCE UPON A О THE IRISHMAN - SANDY POWELL AND PRODUCER TIME...IN HOLLYWOOD CHRISTOPHER PETERSON О LES MISÉRABLES - FRANCE, DIRECTED BY О AD ASTRA - GARY RYDSTROM, TOM LADJ LY О MARRIAGE STORY - NOAH BAUMBACH JOHNSON AND MARK ULANO О ADAM DRIVER IN MARRIAGE STORY О JOJO RABBIT - MAYES C. RUBEO AND DAVID HEYMAN, PRODUCERS О PAIN AND GLORY - SPAIN, DIRECTED BY О FORD V FERRARI - PAUL MASSEY, DAVID О JOAQUIN PHOENIX IN JOKER О JOKER - MARK BRIDGES PEDRO ALMODÓVAR О 1917 - SAM MENDES, PIPPA HARRIS, GIAMMARCO AND STEVEN A. MORROW JAYNE-ANN TENGGREN AND CALLUM О JONATHAN PRYCE IN THE
    [Show full text]
  • Wmc Investigation: 10-Year Analysis of Gender & Oscar
    WMC INVESTIGATION: 10-YEAR ANALYSIS OF GENDER & OSCAR NOMINATIONS womensmediacenter.com @womensmediacntr WOMEN’S MEDIA CENTER ABOUT THE WOMEN’S MEDIA CENTER In 2005, Jane Fonda, Robin Morgan, and Gloria Steinem founded the Women’s Media Center (WMC), a progressive, nonpartisan, nonproft organization endeav- oring to raise the visibility, viability, and decision-making power of women and girls in media and thereby ensuring that their stories get told and their voices are heard. To reach those necessary goals, we strategically use an array of interconnected channels and platforms to transform not only the media landscape but also a cul- ture in which women’s and girls’ voices, stories, experiences, and images are nei- ther suffciently amplifed nor placed on par with the voices, stories, experiences, and images of men and boys. Our strategic tools include monitoring the media; commissioning and conducting research; and undertaking other special initiatives to spotlight gender and racial bias in news coverage, entertainment flm and television, social media, and other key sectors. Our publications include the book “Unspinning the Spin: The Women’s Media Center Guide to Fair and Accurate Language”; “The Women’s Media Center’s Media Guide to Gender Neutral Coverage of Women Candidates + Politicians”; “The Women’s Media Center Media Guide to Covering Reproductive Issues”; “WMC Media Watch: The Gender Gap in Coverage of Reproductive Issues”; “Writing Rape: How U.S. Media Cover Campus Rape and Sexual Assault”; “WMC Investigation: 10-Year Review of Gender & Emmy Nominations”; and the Women’s Media Center’s annual WMC Status of Women in the U.S.
    [Show full text]
  • William B. Kaplan CAS
    Career Achievement Award Recipient William B. Kaplan CAS CAS Filmmaker Award Recipient George SPRING Clooney 2021 Overcoming Atmos Anxiety • Playing Well with Other Departments • RF in the 21st Century Remote Mixing in the Time of COVID • Return to the Golden Age of Booming Sound Ergonomics for a Long Career • The Evolution of Noise Reduction FOR YOUR CONSIDERATION CINEMA AUDIO SOCIETY AWARDS NOMINEE MOTION PICTURE LIVE ACTION PRODUCTION MIXER DREW KUNIN RERECORDING MIXERS REN KLYCE, DAVID PARKER, NATHAN NANCE SCORING MIXER ALAN MEYERSON, CAS ADR MIXER CHARLEEN RICHARDSSTEEVES FOLEY MIXER SCOTT CURTIS “★★★★★. THE FILM LOOKS AND SOUNDS GORGEOUS.” THE GUARDIAN “A WORK OF DAZZLING CRAFTSMANSHIP.” THE HOLLYWOOD REPORTER “A stunning and technically marvelous portrait of Golden Era Hollywood that boasts MASTERFUL SOUND DESIGN.” MIRROR CAS QUARTERLY, COVER 2 REVISION 1 NETFLIX: MANK PUB DATE: 03/15/21 BLEED: 8.625” X 11.125” TRIM: 8.375” X 10.875” INSIDE THIS ISSUE SPRING 2021 CAREER ACHIEVEMENT AWARD RECIPIENT WILLIAM B. KAPLAN CAS | 20 DEPARTMENTS The President’s Letter | 4 From the Editor | 6 Collaborators | 8 Learn about the authors of your stories 26 34 Announcements | 10 In Remembrance | 58 Been There Done That |59 CAS members check in The Lighter Side | 61 See what your colleagues are up to 38 52 FEATURES A Brief History of Noise Reduction | 15 Remote Mixing in the Time of COVID: User Experiences | 38 RF in the Twenty-First Century |18 When mix teams and clients are apart Filmmaker Award: George Clooney | 26 Overcoming Atmos Anxiety | 42 Insight to get you on your way The 57th Annual CAS Awards Nominees for Outstanding Achievement Playing Well with Other Production in Sound Mixing for 2020 | 28 Departments | 48 The collaborative art of entertainment Outstanding Product Award Nominees| 32 Sound Ergonomics for a Long Career| 52 Return to the Golden Age Staying physically sound on the job Cover: Career Achievement Award of Booming | 34 recipient William B.
    [Show full text]
  • Introduction
    THE NEW YORK PUBLIC LIBRARY FOR THE PERFORMING ARTS THE OLIVE WONG PROJECT PERFORMANCE COSTUME DESIGN RESEARCH GUIDE INTRODUCTION COSTUME DESIGN AND PERFORMANCE WRITTEN AND EDITED BY AILEEN ABERCROMBIE The New York Public Library for the Perform- newspapers, sketches, lithographs, poster art ing Arts, located in Lincoln Center Plaza, is and photo- graphs. In this introduction, I will nestled between four of the most infuential share with you some of Olive’s selections from performing arts buildings in New York City: the NYPL collection. Avery Fisher Hall, Te Metropolitan Opera, the Vivian Beaumont Teater (home to the Lincoln There are typically two ways to discuss cos- Center Teater), and David H. Koch Teater. tume design: “manner of dress” and “the history Te library matches its illustrious location with of costume design”. “Manner of dress” contextu- one of the largest collections of material per- alizes the way people dress in their time period taining to the performing arts in the world. due to environment, gender, position, economic constraints and attitude. Tis is essentially the The library catalogs the history of the perform- anthropological approach to costume design. ing arts through collections acquired by notable Others study “the history of costume design”, photographers, directors, designers, perform- examining the way costume designers interpret ers, composers, and patrons. Here in NYC the the manner of dress in their time period: where so many artists live and work we have the history of the profession and the profession- an opportunity, through the library, to hear als. Tis discussion also talks about costume sound recording of early flms, to see shows designers’ backstory, their process, their that closed on Broadway years ago, and get to relationships and their work.
    [Show full text]
  • BEST PICTURE Director Actor in a Leading Role ACTRESS in A
    Up–to–the–minute Oscar news and wrap-up on vulture.com 2011 OSCAR POOL BALLOT BEST PICTURE FOreiGN LANGuaGE FilM DOcuMENtarY Feature Black Swan Biutiful Exit Through the Gift Shop Banksy and Jaimie D’Cruz The Fighter Mexico | Directed by Alejandro González Iñárritu Gasland Josh Fox and Trish Adlesic Inception Dogtooth (Kynodontas) Inside Job Charles Ferguson and Audrey Marrs Greece | Directed by Giorgos Lanthimos The Kids Are All Right Restrepo Tim Hetherington and Sebastian Junger In a Better World (Hævnen) The King’s Speech Waste Land Lucy Walker and Angus Aynsley Denmark | Directed by Susanne Bier 127 Hours Incendies DOcuMENtarY SHOrt SUBJect The Social Network Canada | Directed by Denis Villeneuve Killing in the Name Nominees to be determined Toy Story 3 Outside the Law (Hors-la-loi) Poster Girl Nominees to be determined True Grit Algeria | Directed by Rachid Bouchareb Strangers No More Karen Goodman and Kirk Simon Winter’s Bone OriGINal SCOre Sun Come Up Jennifer Redfearn and Tim Metzger DirectOR How to Train Your Dragon John Powell The Warriors of Qiugang Ruby Yang and Darren Aronofsky Black Swan Inception Hans Zimmer Thomas Lennon David O. Russell The Fighter The King’s Speech Alexandre Desplat ANIMated SHOrt FilM Tom Hooper The King’s Speech 127 Hours A.R. Rahman Day & Night Teddy Newton David Fincher The Social Network The Social Network Trent Reznor and Atticus Ross The Gruffalo Jakob Schuh and Max Lang Joel Coen and Ethan Coen True Grit OriGINal SONG Let’s Pollute Geefwee Boedoe ActOR IN A LeadiNG ROle Country Strong “Coming Home” The Lost Thing Shaun Tan and Andrew Ruhemann Javier Bardem Biutiful Music and Lyric by Tom Douglas, Troy Verges, Madagascar, carnet de voyage (Madagascar, a and Hillary Lindsey Journey Diary) Bastien Dubois Jeff Bridges True Grit Tangled “I See the Light” Jesse Eisenberg The Social Network Music by Alan Menken, Lyric by Glenn Slater LIVE ActiON SHOrt FilM Colin Firth The King’s Speech 127 Hours “If I Rise” The Confession Tanel Toom James Franco 127 Hours Music by A.R.
    [Show full text]
  • Cinematic Fashionability and Images Politics
    Journalism and Mass Communication, Mar.-Apr. 2021, Vol. 11, No. 2, 73-80 doi: 10.17265/2160-6579/2021.02.002 D DAVID PUBLISHING Cinematic Fashionability and Images Politics Chan Ka Lok Sobel Hong Kong Baptist University, Hong Kong SAR, China The marriage of cinema and fashion? When, where and how their interaction and origin is begun? There should be no glamor and red carpet when The Lumière brothers short films like Workers leaving the Lumière factory, The Gardener, Baby’s Breakfast on the birth of cinema in 1895. However, we notice that artificially costumes are tailor-made for A Trip to the Moon in Georges Méliès and D. W. Griffith’s Intolerance. Suddenly, it adds the aesthetical and modernist elements into the blood of cinema beside the raw-realism of how the daily life of the common people is represented on the silver screen. Some kinds of bourgeois ideology and middle class value is enhanced. It is so unbelievable that some ordinary actress like Mary Pickford transforming into a movie star after beautifully dressing up. Not only the audience feel the power of movie magic but also the fashion magic. This paper explores the different perspective of movie and fashion in terms of fashion and film costumes, movie stars icon, fashion trends influenced by movies, and how fashion designers changes the look of cinema as well, etc. Keywords: ideology, movie images, stardom, fashionability Introduction Cinema is somehow like a showcase of fashion. General audiences are fans of movie stars not just because of their personal charisma, but because of the fashion they wear.
    [Show full text]
  • CED Digest, Vol. 7
    ************************************************************************ ************************************************************************ CED Digest Vol. 7 No. 1 1/5/2002 ------------------------------------------------------------------------ 20 Years Ago In CED History: January 6, 1982: * Archbishop Jozef Glemp, the Roman Catholic primate of Poland, tells a congregation in Warsaw's St. John's Cathedral that those who signed oaths renouncing Solidarity were coerced by the government and the oaths have no validity. January 7, 1982: * Presidential counselor Edwin Meese III reads a statement that reverses President Reagan's pre-election stand against the registration of 18-year-old males for a possible future military draft. * The Winter 1982 Consumer Electronics Show begins in Las Vegas, Nevada. While a year earlier the RCA VideoDisc system had been one of the most prominent introductions, at the 1982 show the VHD VideoDisc holds the spotlight with a large display space sporting the slogan "There's More to See on VHD." Other notable video-related introductions include the Technicolor CVC mini-cassette VCR system, the first tubeless consumer video camera, and the first Pioneer LaserDisc player with CX noise reduction. A picture of the VHD booth at the Winter 1982 CES can be seen at this URL: http://www.cedmagic.com/history/vhd-1982-ces.jpg January 8, 1982: * Spokesmen for the American Telephone & Telegraph Company (AT&T) and the U.S. Department of Justice announce the settlement of a seven-year-old antitrust case which will result in AT&T divesting itself of 22 telephone companies, effectively breaking up the monopoly. * Future CED title in widespread theatrical release: Four Friends. January 9, 1982: * A frigid blast of artic air arrives in the United States bringing with it a week of record low temperatures.
    [Show full text]
  • THTR 363 Syl-Fall
    THTR 363: Introduction to Sound Design INSTRUCTOR: Richard K. Thomas, 494-8050 [email protected] OFFICE HOURS: Tuesday: 2:30 – 3:30 p.m., Thursday, 1:30 – 2:30 p.m. PAO 2184 CLASS SCHEDULE: Fall 2011 August 23 Intro to Course (Music As a Foundation, pp. 1 - 6) 25 Lecture: Music Language and Theatre (Music As a Foundation, pp. 6 - 25) 30 Music as a Foundation of Theatre: Origins September 1 Lecture: Primal Elements of Music (Music As a Foundation, pp. 25 – 45) 6 Lecture: Primal Elements of Music (Cont.) 8 Lecture: Primal Elements of Music (Cont.) 13 Lecture: Dramatic Time and Space 17 Lecture: The Function of the Soundscape 20 Group Presentations: General Overview of Design Elements 22 Group Presentations: General Overview of Design Elements (cont.) 27 Watch “More to Live For” in studio (No Rick) 29 No Class: Rick at IRT October 4 Color DVDʼs DUE 6 Color Projects DUE 11 Color (Cont) 13 Octoberbreak 18 Color Composition DUE 20. Time DVDʼs Due 25 Time Projects DUE 27 Time (Cont.) November 1 Time Composition DUE 3 Mass DVDʼs DUE 8 Mass Projects DUE 10 Mass (Cont.) 15 Mass Composition DUE THTR 363 Syllabus: Fall, 2011 Page 2 17 Space DVDʼs DUE 22 Space Projects DUE 24 THANKSGIVING BREAK 29 Space Compositions DUE December 1 Line DVDʼs DUE 6 Line Projects DUE 8 Line (Cont) Final Exam Period: Sonnet Projects Due NOTE: THIS SYLLABUS SUBJECT TO CHANGE!! Course Objectives: The purpose of this course is to introduce students to an aesthetic vocabulary of design elements that is useful in both visual and auditory design.
    [Show full text]