Course Syllabus Film Studies
Course Syllabus Film Studies
4 September 2012
Mr. Weintraub
Rm. 2017
[email protected]
Cour se Con te n t:
Introduction and Objectives:
Film Studies is the study of the production, aesthetics and history of the 20th centurys
most important visual mediumthe cinema. As storytelling device, as historical
document, as expression of imagination, as artistic object, there is no form more capable
of capturing our interest and provoking the senses. The cinema can create worlds of
magic, fantasy and romance just as easily as it can expose the dim reality of actuallylived life.
Our primary interest this year will be in readingin this case, reading the language of
cinema in order to improve our critical understanding of the way texts create meaning. In
this way, we will proceed much like an English class, with many of the same goals. Since
the alphabet of cinema is not comprised of A, B, C, etc., though, we will have to start
from scratch.
But we will also have a secondary interest in writing, too. In past years (and in past
assignments this year), you have written in a few modes: analytical, argumentative,
personal and creative. We will be writing in all of these modes this year, with one added
bonus: we will often be writing for and with cinema itself. You will each complete a
screenplay for submission to the Heintzelmann competition, and you will each complete
an ambitious project in which you will translate selected screenplays from class into short
films. Yes, writing and creating will occupy much of our time together this year.
Your primary tool in this class will not be a textbook, or the internet, or even a DVD
player. It will be your eyes. Since film is a photographic medium, it is a visual medium
its primary formal concerns are visual concerns. This may take a while to truly absorb,
but in cinema, images mean more than words. A script with no images cannot be cinema,
but images with no scripts can!
Our objectives in this course are as follows:
1. To understand the nature and process of film production.
2. To learn how to read and analyze film as you would a novel, a poem or a short
story
3. To familiarize ourselves with certain theoretical ideas presented by major film
theorists.
4. To learn how to develop, write and revise workable screenplays.
5. To explore the major aesthetic trends in the history of cinema.
CouRSE SCHEDuLE:
The course will contain eight units (please note that Units Five and Six will be going on
simultaneously):
1. The Art of the Personal Essay: In the first unit of the year, we will be reading a
number of exceptional personal essays in preparation to write short form essays
that you can use on your college applications. Or to navel gaze.
a. Key Texts: Going to the Movies, Susan Allen Toth; Notes Of A
Native Son, James Baldwin; Beauty: When the Other Dancer is the
Self, Alice Walker; On Dumpster Diving, Lars Eighner; Fish
Cheeks, Amy Tan; Running For Sheriff: Aspen 1970, Hunter S.
Thompson; Selections from Songbook, Nick Hornby
b. Key Assessments: Nightly reading notes, two short form essays
2. What is Cinema? In the first section of the actual Film Studies course, we will
examine cinema as a produced creation. Some important questions for us to
consider will be: What is Cinema??? Why do we watch films? What are the
technical processes that go into the production of films? How do films get made?
Who are the people who make films? Who are the people who watch films? Why
do people watch films? Why do people make films?
a. Key Films: Mothlight (1963, dir. Stan Brakhage), Sherlock Jr. (1924, dir.
Buster Keaton), Film Production Independent Viewing
b. Key Assessments: Sherlock, Jr. essay, Production Debate, Production
Quiz
3. Introduction to Film Form: Next, we will move from film production to film
form. In this section of the course, we will learn the elements of film language,
focusing mostly on the four most important elements: mise-en-scene,
cinematography, montage, and sound. Some important questions are: What is the
language in which cinema speaks? How do films create meaning? How does form
reflect content? How can we read films more effectively? How does cinema
create and use metaphors and symbolism?
a. Key Film: Citizen Kane (1941, dir. Orson Welles)
b. Clips from:
i. The Scarlet Empress (1934, dir. Joseph von Sternberg)
ii. Hotel Chevalier (2007, dir. Wes Anderson)
iii. The Maltese Falcon (1941, dir. John Huston)
iv. Bigger Than Life (1956, dir. Nicholas Ray)
v. Battleship Potemkin (1925, dir. Sergei Eisenstein)
He has competition from (in no particular order): Orson Welles, Sergei Eisenstein, D.W. Griffith, F.W.
Murnau, Fritz Lang, Michaelangelo Antonioni, Douglas Sirk, Nicholas Ray, Satyajit Ray, Jean Renoir, and
many others.
analysis of the text and interpretive adaptation based off our (now masterful)
knowledge of cinemaand our final assessment will be a filmed Hamlet scene.
a. Key Texts: Hamlet, William Shakespeare; Hamlet (1948, dir. Laurence
Olivier), Hamlet (1996, dir. Kenneth Branagh), Hamlet (2000, dir.
Michael Almereyda).
b. Key Assessments: Nightly reading notes, explication papers, reading
quizzes, Hamlet on Film (5-6 minute scene).
Our key textbooks will include:
-Bordwell, David and Thompson, Kristin, Film Art: an Introduction, 7th ed. New York:
McGraw-Hill Co., 2004.
-Kawin, Bruce, How Movies Work. Berkeley and Los Angeles: University of California
Press, 1992.
-Cook, David A., A History of Narrative Film, 4th ed. New York: W.W. Norton & Co.,
2004.
Our Activities:
Film Viewing
Watching films is the single most important aspect of Film Studies. We will watch as
many films in class as possible in order to devote enough time for discussion. In addition
to the films we watch at school, you will be politely required to watch at least one film
a week on your own (Honors students will be politely asked to watch at least two).
These films may be assigned or they may be up to you, but either way, you will keep a
log of the films you watch in your film journal. More on that later.
Reading
The reading in Film Studies will be secondary to film viewing in our discussions, but just
as important in terms of content. You should expect to read approximately 10-20 pages of
our primary textbooks each night (H: add additional reading assignments). You will also
be frequently assigned to read critical analyses, theoretical essays, or historical surveys.
You must take notes on all your reading assignments in your film journal. More on
that later.
Going Out to the Movies
Boston is a small city, but for its size, it offers a wide variety of film-related activities and
events. Part of becoming a true enthusiast of the cinema is reveling in the experience of
it, and so part of this course will ask you to go out and sample some of our citys film
culture. Beyond your local multiplex, that is.
A great place to start is the Harvard Film Archive, a theater affiliated with the Harvard
University film studies department (known as VESVisual and Environmental Studies).
The HFA shows rare and significant films, and it often screens retrospectives of
directors complete work. For example, this spring, they will be hosting screenings of the
work of John Ford and Peter Bogdanovich. Other great sources of new, rare, or repertory
cinema are the Museum of Fine Arts, the Boston Public Library, the Brattle Theater,
and the Coolidge Corner Cinema. If anything particularly notable comes around, Ill let
you know.
You will be required to attend at least one repertory screening a term (so, for those mathchallenged among you, you have to go four times). If you want to go more than that,
GREAT! Just dont cut class to be there (not even if Hitchcock himself rose from the
grave to give a talk).
Vocabulary and Grammar
You will not be receiving a red vocab book this year. Yay!
But we will have periodic vocab quizzes on important film terminology. Oh.
Those of you who have had me before know that we dont do grammar in my classes
we do Grammar-Rama. We WILL be participating in Grammar-Rama in this class
studying the grammar of film language. During the third unit (Introduction to Film
Form), we will learn the language of cinema and its grammatical rules.
You will be expected to use the vocabulary of cinema in order to analyze its grammar,
and thus its form.
Writing
You will be writing analytically, argumentatively and creatively in this class. Unlike your
previous English classes, writing, per se, will not be the principal focus of our time
together, as our primary goal will be to learn how to analyze film. Nonetheless, your
writing will form the majority of the work completed in this class. Your writing
assignments will fall into two broad categories:
1. Response Writing: This category includes unpolished writing that attempts to
outline your opinions or observations about a piece of cinema. I will grade
papers in this category primarily on quality and clarity of ideas. Response
writing also includes routine homework assignments and, perhaps more
importantly, your film journal. More on that later.
2. Formal Writing: Formal writing is writing that has been revised and put into
final form; I will be grading you on clarity of ideas as well as form,
organization, grammar, spelling, punctuation and presentation. This category
includes the large format projects that you will complete in Film Studies.
Final Film Project
As stated above (see Unit Seven), each of you will participate in a collaborative project to
plan, shoot and edit an 8-10 minute film that is based off an original screenplay. This
project will be the culmination of our work, and you should be prepared! That means:
GET EXCITEDbut temper that excitement with a realistic sense of what it will take.
My sense is that to produce an excellent student film, you will need to devote at least
fifty hours of your time to the project. Thats a rough estimate, to be sure, but it should
give you a sense of what kind of commitment it will require. Here are just some of the
things you will have to do:
a)
b)
c)
d)
e)
f)
g)
h)
i)
j)
k)
Film Journal
Your film journal is the heart and soul of Film Studies. In it, you will take nightly reading
notes, document your viewing, take notes on films, jot down ideas in the middle of the
night, and perhaps lose once or twice. I will check your notes after every reading
assignment and at-home film viewing. Still, dont let that fact ruin the party. This is
your journal, your space to write, muse, ponder, create, document, dramatize, and spill
orange juice.
Grading Percentages:
I will use the following percentages to compute your quarter grades:
Formal Writing: 40%
Response Writing, Quizzes and Notes: 40%
Citizenship (see Citizenship Rubric): 20%
Grades will signify the following amount of effort and success: an A denotes work of
exceptional quality, a B denotes work of high quality, a C denotes work of standard
quality, a D denotes work of sub-standard quality, and an F is a sign of no quality at all.
Students who try earnestly and honestly will never receive an F, no matter what the
quality of their work.
Ok, youll also be using YouTube more than Id like, so make sure you have a strong
Internet connection at home.
Finally, if anyone has access to a DV, video or film camera, let me know ASAPwe
will be able to use it in informative and fun ways.
One more thing:
appointment if youd like to meet with me. On Tuesdays, I will be in faculty meetings
and will be unavailable after school.
Please bring this Syllabus home tonight, read it!, and have your parent/guardian sign
below, in addition to signing it yourself. This signature proves that you have read the
above expectations and understand them. In addition, if you are under 17, I will need
your parents to sign a waiver that allows you to watch R-Rated films in the class. We will
not be watching anything too explicitly violent, sexual or drug-related, but to cover the
topic completely, we need to feel free to choose from the entire spectrum of the cinema
(and that includes films rated R).
Your name:____________________________________________________
Your signature:_________________________________________________
Parents/Guardians name(s):______________________________________
Parental signature:_______________________________________________
FOR PARENTS OF STUDENTS UNDER THE AGE OF 17:
I do grant permission for my son/daughter to watch R-Rated films in class: _______
I do not grant permission for my son/daughter to watch R-Rated films in class: _______