Instructor: László Arató
Required Texts
· David Bordwell – Kristin Thompson: Film Art – An Introduction,
McGraw-Hill (as a reference book)
· Reading Packet, available in the office, containing hand-outs:
a) a Glossary of analytical terms, concepts
b) André Bazin: The Evolution of Film Language
c) short studies concerning the periods/schools of European film history
covered
d) analyses of the films discussed in class – written by different
specialists, critics
Course Overview
This course offers an introduction into the key terms and fundamental
approaches (the examination of narrative techniques, cinematographic-stylistic
features) of film analysis. It provides an opportunity to get acquainted
with some of the most important movements (schools) and some of the greatest
masters of European film. It starts with the definition of film as a temporal-visual,
later temporal audio-visual form of art. It goes on to examine some of
the basic differences between theater and film, then shows how silent film
developed its own autonomous language, how “moving pictures” are able to
tell stories without words. Students will get acquainted with three important
national schools/movements of European silent film: German expressionism,
Soviet montage and French surrealism. Each movement will be represented
by one outstanding film example. Then we’ll move on to sound films and
to some great European masters of the thirties, forties, fifties, sixties
and seventies. Besides “solitary masters” like Bunuel, Fellini and Antonioni,
Italian neorealism and French new wave (and perhaps the new German
cinema) will also be covered.
Each double class will start with viewing a film and will continue
with the discussion and analysis of the film. Each discussion will focus
on some particular approach and concept of film analysis (like mise-en-scene,
the relationship between story and plot, editing, metaphors and metonymies,
diegetic and non-diegetic sound, the function of long takes etc.).
Thus the course has four primary objectives: 1) Familiarize students with
the basic theoretical vocabulary necessary for studying narrative films.
2) Familiarize students with a dozen of great European films and help them
to discover and/or identify their narrative and stylistic peculiarities.
3) Help students to realize the function these peculiarities play in the
creation of meaning i.e. to show ways of interpretation and to encourage
to discuss and revise these interpretations, eventually create their own
interpretations. 4) To get students acquainted with some important historical
schools and their peculiarities.
PLEASE NOTE: The actual course work begins two weeks earlier than the regular BSM Semester. Therefore, BSM students wishing to take this course will be required to catch up with it. In particular, they will have to borrow and watch the first movie: F.W. Murnau: The Last Laugh (Man) individually.
Schedule
GREAT MASTERS OF EUROPEAN FILM – A POSSIBLE LIST OF FILMS TO BE VIEWED AND DISCUSSED
1. Expectations, requirements – some key concepts. Film as art, theatre
and film.
2. F.W. Murnau: The Last Laugh (Man) – German expressionism, mise en
scene, cinematographic image, story and plot 1.
3. M. S. Eisenstein: Battleship Potemkin – The relationship of shot to shot: editing, the Soviet montage, rhetorical narration, types of editing
4. Fritz Lang: M - story and plot 2.; the function of (diegeteic) sound, metaphor and metonymy 1.; some expressionistic features
5. L. Bunuel: An Andalusian Dog – French surrealism; metaphor and metonymy 2.
6. L. Bunuel: Viridana – the perfect Christian and the realities of life – Bunuel’s classicism
7. L. Bunuel: The Phantom of Liberty – conventions and transgressions – an afterthought of/to surrealism
8. Vittorio De Sica: Bicycle Thieves – Italian neorealism
9. F. Fellini: La Strada – beyond neorealism, the journey - levels of meaning
10. F. Truffaut: Jules and Jim – the French new wave, the long take, the style of detachment
11. Ingmar Bergman: Through A Glass Darkly (1961) or Persona
12. .M. Antonioni: Blow-Up – a detective story or an essay in epistemology
13. Nikita Mihalkov: Unfinished Pieces for Mechanical Piano
14. R. M. Fassbinder: Ali, Fear Eats the Soul – or a film by W. Herzog, Wim Wenders or A. Tarkowsky or a contemporary Hungarian director
15. Final exam.
Assignments and Grading
1. Attendance and contribution to class discussions
20%
Class will be conducted in a discussion format, supplemented by mini-lectures
explicating theoretical concepts and difficult readings. In-class (public
and often “conducted”) viewing and discussion of films is the essential
part of the course, thus everybody is expected to be present. More than
two double classes mustn’t be missed, as it is practically impossible to
catch up. (In fact two absences are four absences in this case: two films
and two analyses.)
2. Midterm test
30%
The test is made up of three parts. 1) Five definitions (some with
examples) will be asked from the glossary. 2) There will be 3-4 brief essay
questions – one paragraph each. 3) The
analysis of one of the films discussed (1-1½ page). The list
of sample questions (possible questions, concepts to be defined) will be
provided two weeks before the in-class test.
3. Final test
20%
Similar to 1) and 2) of the midterm test, but 5 brief essays this time
and no 3). Sample questions provided as above.
4. A paper of 5-7 pages (double spaced)
30%
The comparative analysis of two or more films from a certain point
of view (e.g. the function of sound, the function of long takes, crime
stories with surplus meaning). A list of recommended topics will be provided
at least a month before the due date. The topics will cover films we shall
have examined in class. Other topics/titles may be chosen as well and the
comparison might cover films that have not been discussed together. In
the latter case the instructor (me, L. A.) should be informed in advance.
The paper must be typed; style, spelling, grammar, structure do matter!
Sources must be indicated – both printed and internet.
Course Policy
The most important is that you watch those films and participate in
the discussions: that is the “pre-requisite” of all the rest.
Late work: You’ll have to hand in your paper on the day of the final
test. No excuses will be accepted after this date. Late assignments will
result in a full letter grade deduction per day, after three days delay
there’s no use handing in the paper.
Plagiarism: please be sure that you are familiar with the definition
of ‘plagiarism’ and Western Maryland College’s policies towards it. Plagiarism
results in course failure.