1 COM 320, History of the Moving Image Fall 2013 Extra Credit

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COM 320, History of the Moving Image
Fall 2013
Extra Credit Viewing Opportunities VERSION 2!
All due at the Final Exam (may hand in earlier)
11/11/13
You may receive up to 2% extra credit for each film viewed and fully analyzed (up to 4% for selected
films showing at the Cleveland Institute of Art Cinematheque or the Cleveland Museum of Art, if ticket
stub is attached), to a maximum total of 10%. Films must be from the attached list of approved films.
There may be additions made in class or on a new handout.
Many of the films on the list are available for free viewing at the CSU Michael Schwartz Library. Most
are also available via Netflix.
For each film viewed, you need to do a little research. Use the Katz Film Encyclopedia or similar source
to learn about the main "players" involved in the film--the director, producer(s), writer(s),
DP/cinematographer, and main stars (IMDb is not sufficient for such biographical info as is it entirely
user-generated, and very incomplete). The Katz book is available in the classroom projection booth for
quick use before or after class. Use your textbook, too! Some online sources are good, others are bogus.
Do not rely solely on online sources.
After viewing the film, complete a 2-page typed, double-spaced report, addressing the following issues:
1.
Historiography in 2 parts:
A:
What about this film makes it important to the history of film? What is its contribution (in
terms of techniques, genre, movement, national cinemas, etc.)?
B:
What does this film inform us about the history of the U.S. or the world? i.e., How does it
inform us about the human condition at a particular point in time?
2.
Analyze the film in terms of the main "players" (director, DP, writer, etc., as noted above)--what
unique talents did they bring to the endeavor? And, how does their contribution to this film fit
into their long-term careers?
Approved Extra Credit Film List as of 11/11/13:
* - Showing at the Cleveland Institute of Art Cinematheque (www.cia.edu/cinematheque); double extra
credit points possible for each (with ticket stub; 4% each); listed by date:
NEW!!!:
* - Ninotchka, 1939, U.S., Ernst Lubitsch—11/9 5:15 & 11/10 4:00
* - La Strada, 1954, Italy, Federico Fellini—11/14 7:00
* - Trouble in Paradise, 1932, U.S., Ernst Lubitsch—11/16 5:15 & 11/17 4:00
* - Experimental Films from 1963, U.S., various directors (e.g., Jack Smith, Kenneth Anger, Marie
Menken)—11/17 6:15 (with free pizza!)
* - Design for Living, 1933, U.S., Ernst Lubitsch—11/23 5:15 & 11/24 8:15
* - Angel, 1937, U.S., Ernst Lubitsch—11/30 5:15 & 12/1 8:25
* - Bluebeard’s Eighth Wife, 1938, U.S., Ernst Lubitsch—12/7 5:15 & 12/8 8:35
OLD:
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* - Castle in the Sky, 1986, Japan, Hayao Miyazaki—9/6 7:00 & 9/7 5:00
* - Nausicaa of the Valley of the Wind, 1984, Japan, Hayao Miyazaki—9/12 8:35 & 9/14 8:15
* - My Neighbor Totoro, 1988, Japan, Hayao Miyazaki—9/20 7:30, 9/21 5:15, & 9/22 6:30
* - L’Avventura, 1960, Italy/France, Michelangelo Antonioni—9/20 9:15 & 9/21 7:00
* - The Films of Richard Myers: An Intro, 1960-1975, U.S., Richard Myers—9/22 3:00
* - Kiki’s Delivery Service, 1989, Japan, Hayao Miyazaki—9/26 8:35 & 9/27 7:30
* - Miss Oyu, 1951, Japan, Kenji Mizoguchi—9/28 5:00
* - Metropolis, 1927, Germany, Fritz Lang—9/28 8:00 WITH THE ALLOY ORCHESTRA
* - The Phantom of the Opera, 1925, U.S., Rupert Julian—9/29 4:00 WITH THE ALLOY ORCHESTRA
* - He Who Gets Slapped, 1924, U.S., Victor Sjostrom—9.29 7:00 WITH THE ALLOY ORCHESTRA
* - Record of a Tenement Gentleman, 1947, Japan, Yasujiro Ozu—10/3 6:30
* - Porco Rosso, 1992, Japan, Hayao Miyazaki—10/3 8:45 & 10/4 7:30
* - Un Flic (A Cop), 1972, France, Jean-Pierre Melville—10/4 9:25, 10/5 7:30, & 10/6 4:00
* - Flaming Creatures, 1963, U.S., Jack Smith—10/5 9:30
* - Le Petit Soldat (The Little Soldier), 1960/63, France, Jean-Luc Godard—10/17 6:45 & 10/18 9:35
* - A Clockwork Orange, 1971, U.S., Stanley Kubrick—10/22 7:00
* - The Birds, 1963, U.S., Alfred Hitchcock—10/26 9:40 & 10/27 6:30
On-your-own viewing (regular extra credit, 2% each); listed alphabetically:
Aguirre, Wrath of God, 1973, W. Germany, Werner Herzog
Akira, 1988, Japan, Katsuhiro Otomo
Alexander Nevsky, 1938, Soviet Union, Sergei Eisenstein
Ali: Fear Eats the Soul,1974, W. Germany, Rainer Werner Fassbinder
Alphaville, 1965, France, Jean-Luc Godard
Anatomy of a Murder, 1959, U.S., Otto Preminger
Annie Hall, 1977, U.S., Woody Allen
The Awful Truth, 1937, U.S., Leo McCarey
Beauty and the Beast, 1946, France, Jean Cocteau
Berlin, the Symphony of a Great City (Berlin, die Symphonie einer Grosstadt), 1927, Germany, Walter
Ruttmann
The Best Years of Our Lives, 1946, U.S., William Wyler
The Big Heat, 1953, U.S., Fritz Lang
Birth of a Nation, 1915, U.S., D. W. Griffith
Black Girl, 1966, Senegal, Ousmane Sembene
Black Narcissus, 1947, Britain, Michael Powell & Emeric Pressburger
The Blood of a Poet, 1930, France, Jean Cocteau
The Blue Angel, 1930, Germany, Josef von Sternberg
Body and Soul, 1925, U.S., Oscar Michaeux
Bride of Frankenstein, 1935, U.S., James Whale
Bridge on the River Kwai, 1957, Britain, [Sir] David Lean
Cabin in the Sky, 1943, U.S., Vincente Minnelli
Cabiria, 1914, Italy, Giovanni Pastrone
Casablanca, 1942, U.S., Michael Curtiz
City of Lost Children, 1995, France/Spain/Germany, Jean-Pierre Jeunet
Closely Watched Trains, 1966, Czechoslovakia, Jiri Menzel
Cowboy Bebop: Tengoku no tobira, 2001, Japan, Shinichirô Watanabe
Cries and Whispers, 1972, Sweden, Ingmar Bergman
The Crowd, 1928, U.S., King Vidor
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Das Boot, 1981, W. Germany, Wolfgang Petersen
Dial M for Murder, 1954, U.S., Alfred Hitchcock
Dinner at Eight, 1933, U.S., George Cukor
Dr. Strangelove, or: How I Learned to Stop Worrying and Love the Bomb, 1964, Britain, Stanley
Kubrick
Doctor Zhivago, 1965, U.S., David Lean
The Emperor Jones, 1933, U.S., Dudley Murphy
Fahrenheit 451, 1967, U.S.(?), Francois Truffaut
Fallen Angels, 1997, Hong Kong, Kar-wai Wong
The Fallen Idol, 1948, Great Britain, Sir Carol Reed
Fanny and Alexander, 1983, Sweden, Ingmar Bergman
The Firemen’s Ball, 1967, Czechoslovakia, Milos Forman
A Fistful of Dollars, 1964, Italy, Sergio Leone
The Fortune Cookie, 1966, U.S., Billy Wilder
42nd Street, 1933, U.S., Lloyd Bacon (chor. by Busby Berkeley)
The 400 Blows, 1959, France, Francois Truffaut
Fox and His Friends, 1975, W. Germany, Rainer Werner Fassbinder
Freaks, 1932, U.S., Tod Browning
The General, 1927, U.S., Buster Keaton
Giant, 1956, U.S., George Stevens
The Golden Coach, 1952, Italy, Jean Renoir
The Good Earth, 1937, U.S., Sidney Franklin
Grand Hotel, 1932, U.S., Edmund Goulding
Grand Illusion, 1937, France, Jean Renoir
The Great Dictator, 1940, U.S., Charles Chaplin
Great Expectations, 1946, Britain, David Lean
Greed, 1925, U.S., Erich von Stroheim
Hiroshima, Mon Amour, 1959, France/Japan, Alain Resnais
His Girl Friday, 1940, U.S., Howard Hawks
How Green Was My Valley, 1941, U.S., John Ford
In the Mood for Love, 2000, France/Hong Kong, Kar-wai Wong
Intolerance, 1916, U.S., D. W. Griffith
It Happened One Night, 1934, U.S., Frank Capra
J’accuse (I Accuse), 1919, France, Abel Gance
Juliet of the Spirits, 1965, Italy/France, Federico Fellini
Killer of Sheep, 1977, U.S., Charles Burnett
The Killers, 1946, U.S., Robert Siodmak
Kriemhild's Revenge, 1924, Germany, Fritz Lang
La Roue, 1923, France, Abel Gance
The Last Laugh, 1924, Germany, F. W. Murnau
Last Year at Marienbad, 1961, France/Italy, Alain Resnais
Laura, 1944, U.S., Otto Preminger
Little Caesar, 1930, U.S., Mervyn Leroy
The Little Foxes, 1941, U.S., William Wyler
The Lodger, 1926, Britain, Alfred Hitchcock
Los Olvidados, 1950, Mexico, Luis Bunuel
M, 1931, Germany, Fritz Lang
The Magnificent Ambersons, 1942, U.S., Orson Welles
The Maltese Falcon, 1941, U.S., John Huston
Marty, 1955, U.S., Delbert Mann
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Mean Streets, 1973, U.S., Martin Scorsese
Mildred Pierce, 1945, U.S., Michael Curtiz
My Favorite Wife, 1940, U.S., Garson Kanin
My Little Chickadee, 1940, U.S., Edward Cline
Napoleon, 1927, France, Abel Gance
A Night at the Opera, 1935, U.S., Sam Wood
Night of the Hunter, 1955, U.S., Charles Laughton
Nights of Cabiria, 1957, Italy, Federico Fellini
No Way Out, 1950, U.S., Joseph L. Mankiewicz
North by Northwest, 1959, U.S., Alfred Hitchcock
Nosferatu, 1922, Germany, F. W. Murnau
Nosferatu, 1979, W. Germany, Werner Herzog
Now, Voyager, 1942, U.S., Irving Rapper
Olympia, 1936, Germany, Leni Riefenstahl
Once Upon a Time in the West, 1968, U.S./Italy, Sergio Leone
Open City, 1945, Italy, Roberto Rossellini
Orphans of the Storm, 1922, U.S., D.W. Griffith
Orpheus, 1949, France, Jean Cocteau
Othello, 1952, Italy, Orson Welles
Pather Panchali, 1955, India, Satyajit Ray
Peeping Tom, 1960, U.K., Michael Powell
Penny Serenade, 1941, U.S., George Stevens
The Philadelphia Story, 1940, U.S., George Cukor
The Producers, 1967, U.S., Mel Brooks
Querelle, 1982, W. Germany, Rainer Werner Fassbinder
Ran, 1985, Japan, Akira Kurosawa
Rashomon, 1950, Japan, Akira Kurosawa
The Red Shoes, 1948, Britain, Michael Powell
Rope, 1948, U.S., Alfred Hitchcock
Rosemary’s Baby, 1968, U.S., Roman Polanski
The Roundup, 1965, Hungary, Miklos Jancso
Rules of the Game, 1939, France, Jean Renoir
The Scarlet Empress, 1934, U.S., Josef von Sternberg
The Searchers, 1956, U.S., John Ford
Seconds, 1966, U.S., John Frankenheimer
The Seven Samurai, 1954, Japan, Akira Kurosawa
Shadow of a Doubt, 1943, U.S., Alfred Hitchcock
She Done Him Wrong, 1933, U.S., Lowell Sherman
She’s Gotta Have It, 1986, U.S., Spike Lee
Sherlock Jr., 1924, U.S., Buster Keaton
Shock Corridor, 1963, U.S., Sam Fuller
Shoot the Piano Player, 1960, France, Francois Truffaut
Show Boat, 1936, U.S., James Whale
Some Like It Hot, 1959, U.S., Billy Wilder
Stagecoach, 1939, U.S., John Ford
A Star is Born, 1937, U.S., William Wellman
Stormy Weather, 1943, U.S., Andrew L. Stone
Stranger Than Paradise, 1984, U.S., Jim Jarmusch
A Streetcar Named Desire, 1951, U.S., Elia Kazan
Stroszek, 1977, W. Germany, Werner Herzog
Sunrise, 1927, U.S., F.W. Murnau
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Sweet Sweetback’s Baaad Asssss Song, 1971, U.S., Melvin Van Peebles
Swing Time, 1936, U.S., George Stevens (Astaire/Rogers film)
Tabu: A Story of the South Seas, 1931, U.S., F.W. Murnau (with Robert Flaherty)
The Third Man, 1949, Britain, Carol Reed
The 39 Steps, 1935, Britain, Alfred Hitchcock
Touch of Evil, 1958, U.S., Orson Welles
Top Hat, 1935, U.S., Mark Sandrich (Astaire/Rogers film)
Touki-Bouki, 1973, Senegal, Djibril Diop Mambety
Triumph of the Will, 1935, Germany, Leni Riefenstahl
Twentieth Century, 1934, U.S., Howard Hawks
The Umbrellas of Cherbourg, 1964, France, Jacques Demy
Un Chant D’amour, 1950, France, Jean Genet
Vertigo, 1958, U.S., Alfred Hitchcock
Wild Strawberries, 1957, Sweden, Ingmar Bergman
Wings, 1927, U.S., William Wellman
Wings of Desire, 1988, W. Germany, Wim Wenders
Witness for the Prosecution, 1957, U.S., Billy Wilder
The Women, 1939, U.S., George Cukor
The World of Apu, 1959, India, Satyajit Ray
Yeelen, 1987, Mauritania, Souleymane Cisse
You Can’t Take it With You, 1938, U.S., Frank Capra
Zan Boko, 1988, Burkina Faso, Gaston Kabore
Zero for Conduct, 1933, France, Jean Vigo
Students in the past have enjoyed this special category–“Movies about movies. . . and other media”
All About Eve, 1959, U.S., Joseph Mankiewicz
Baadasssss!, 2004, U.S., Mario Van Peebles
The Celluloid Closet, 1995, U.S., Rob Epstein
Cinema Paradiso, 1988, Italy/France, Giuseppe Tornatore
Cinema’s Exiles: From Hitler to Hollywood, 2009, U.S. Karen Thomas
Contempt, 1963, France, Jean-Luc Godard
Day for Night, 1973, France, Francois Truffaut
8 1/2, 1963, Italy, Federico Fellini
A Face in the Crowd, 1957, U.S., Elia Kazan
The Front, 1976, U.S., Martin Ritt
Gods and Monsters, 1998, U.S., Bill Condon
Good Night and Good Luck, 2005, U.S., George Clooney
His Girl Friday, 1940, U.S., Howard Hawks
Hollywoodism: Jews, Movies, and the American Dream, 1998, U.S., Simcha Jacobovici
La Dolce Vita, 1960, Italy, Federico Fellini
The Last Picture Show, 1971, U.S., Peter Bognanovich
The Last Tycoon, 1976, U.S., Elia Kazan
Lumiere and Company, 1995, France, 40 different directors
The Man with a Movie Camera, 1929, Soviet Union, Dziga Vertov
Network, 1976, U.S., Sidney Lumet
Shadow of the Vampire, 2000, U.S., E. Elias Merhige
Sullivan’s Travels, 1941, U.S., Preston Sturges
Sunset Boulevard, 1950, U.S., Billy Wilder
These Amazing Shadows, 2011, U.S., Paul Mariano & Kurt Norton
The Wonderful, Horrible Life of Leni Riefenstahl, 1993, Germany/Belgium/Britain, Ray Muller
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