|
Editors Great Directors & Book Reviews Editor Cteq Annotations Editor Web Designer Manager, Public Relations |
FeaturesDziga Vertov: The Idiot by Carloss James ChamberlinThe Austrian Film Museum’s excellent DVD of Vertov’s Entuziazm affords the occasion for an insightful essay on the work of this legendary Soviet filmmaker.Mapping Catalonia in 1967: The Barcelona School in Global Context by Rosalind GaltA comprehensive overview of the regional and global imperatives that shaped the historically fascinating 1960s avant-garde movement known as the Barcelona School.Letters to the World: Erice-Kiarostami: Correspondences Curated by Alain Bergala and Jordi Balló by Linda C. EhrlichReview of the recent exhibition inspired by the correspondences between these two great filmmakers that featured in Barcelona, subsequently in Madrid and destined for Paris in 2007.Clearly, Clearly, Dark-Eyed Donna: Time and A Scanner Darkly by Nathan KosubA discussion of Richard Linklater’s adaptation of Philip K. Dick’s novel in relation to the broader context of the filmmaker’s œuvre and his obsession with time.Perfect Storm, Imperfect Death by Tim Cawkwell“Nothing tests the resources of cinema like a storm at sea.” So argues Tim Cawkwell who discusses a number of films, including an in-depth analysis of the mastery of director John Ford’s and cinematographer Greg Toland’s burial-at-sea episode in The Long Voyage Home.Hitchcock’s Aventure Malgache (or the True Story of DZ 91) by Alain KerzoncufThe fate of Alfred Hitchcock’s little-seen film about the French Resistance reads like one of his own espionage thrillers. Hitchcock scholar Alain Kerzoncuf tracks through the archives in search of evidence.Working Together: Two Cultures, One Film, Many Canoes by Therese DavisAn examination of director Rolf de Heer’s unique collaboration with the Yolngu people of Ramingining of Northern Australia on Ten Canoes and the behind-the-scenes documentary Balanda and the Bark Canoes.
The Films of Bill MorrisonTrajectories of Decay: An Interview with Bill Morrison by Maximilian Le Cain and Barry RonanBill Morrison is one of the most distinctive voices in the independent film scene. On the occasion of a retrospective of his films at the Cork Film Festival in Ireland, he speaks about the practice of his found-footage æsthetic.Memories are Made of This: Bill Morrison’s The Film of Her by Ursula BöserAn essay on one of Morrison’s classic found-footage documentaries. A story of ‘forgotten films’ and ‘forgotten careers’, and the dynamics of remembering.
Film & History Conference PapersTelling Stories: Cinema, History and Experience Editors: Adrian Danks, Constantine Verevis, Deb Verhoeven, Deane Williams Editorial Board: Ina Bertrand, Russell Campbell, Ross Gibson, Ben Goldsmith, Tim Groves, David Hanan, Jeanette Hoorn, Michelle Langford, Pat Laughren, Gabrielle Murray, Belinda Smaill, Mike Walsh, Audrey Yue The following nine articles make up a sample of papers that will be presented at The XIIIth Biennial Conference of the Film & History Association of Australia and New Zealand (FHAANZ) in Melbourne, November 16-19, 2006. The Film and History Conference – jointly presented this year by the Department of Visual Culture, Monash University and The School of Applied Communication, RMIT University – is held every two years and is an opportunity for international film scholars, archivists, and filmmakers to present their thoughts on recent debates and events in the fields of: film history, national and trans-national cinemas, film theory, film practice and the importance of cinema to specific communities. More specifically, the papers published here address the four main themes of the 2006 conference: Historical Film Theory and Criticism; Film, Memory and Allusion; The Social Experience of Cinema-going; and The Junction of Television and Film. Eisenstein and his Method: Recent Publications in Russia by Julia VassilievaFrom Colonial Film Commissioner to Political Pariah: Joris Ivens and the Making of Indonesia Calling by Drew Cottle and Angela KeysRethinking Transnational Cinema: The Case of Tamil Cinema by Vijay Devadas“Caught Between Poetry and Censorship”: The Influence of State Regulation and Sufi Poeticism on Contemporary Iranian Cinema by Rosa HolmanQuasi-Documentary, Cellflix and Web Spoofs: Chinese Movies’ Other Visual Pleasures by Paola VociRe-designing the Past Imperfect: The Making of Hunt Angels by Alec MorganModernity and the Film Exhibition Industry in Gippsland: The Glover Family Business 1926-1973 by Anne Helen Wilson“The Illusion of Magnitude”: Adapting the Epic from Film to Television by Djoymi BakerPretending to be Himself: Graham Kennedy, Television, Film and Authenticity by Susan Bye
DVD ReviewsToni (Masters of Cinema) review by Michael CampiThe Films of Su Friedrich (Outcast Films) review by William C. WeesMt. Head: Koji Yamamura Animation Works (Geneon Entertainment) review by Paul Jackson
Festival ReportsWomanising: The 20th Cinema Ritrovato by Virginia Wright WexmanDesire, Passion and Power: Women in the Festival of German Films by Leonie NaughtonA View from the 41st Karlovy Vary International Film Festival 2006 by Renata MurawskaA Taxidermia Indeed: Stuffed to the Gills at MIFF although Still a Little Miffed at Some Stuff: The 55th Melbourne International Film Festival by Cerise HowardOn the Occasion of Remembering the Golden Gate: The 49th San Francisco International Film Festival by Jay KuehnerRelative, But Also Absolute: The 53rd Sydney Film Festival by Bill Mousoulis“Dhow Aesthetics”: Negotiating the Global and the Local: The 9th Zanzibar International Film Festival by Sharae DeckardA Report on Cinema at the Periphery: An International Film Studies Conference by Jenny Chamarette
Book ReviewsSheep and the Australian Cinema by Deb Verhoeven review by Ross GibsonFilm Remakes by Constantine Verevis review by Brian McFarlaneIcons of Grief: Val Lewton’s Home Front Pictures by Alexander Nemerov review by Saige WaltonJean Vigo by Michael Temple review by Patrick EllisTheorising National Cinema edited by Valentina Vitali and Paul Willemen review by Elizabeth AvramGhouls, Gimmicks and Gold: Horror Films and the American Movie Business, 1953-1968 by Kevin Heffernan review by Louise Sheedy
Also new this issue5 profiles have been added to the Great
Directors critical database: 14 new and 2 republished annotations
have been added to the Cinémathèque
Annotations on Film section: 11 new lists and 5 revised lists have been added to the Top Tens section.
|









