Introduction to the World Film History and Theory I
Study Course Implementer
Dzirciema street 16, Rīga, szf@rsu.lv
About Study Course
Objective
Preliminary Knowledge
Learning Outcomes
Knowledge
1.As a result of mastering the course students: • Recognise and understand main stages of development and stylistic directions of cinematic art (until 1940s–1950s). • Analyse the interaction between cinematic art and development of society. • Name and characterise the most important directions of cinematic art, as well as theoretical analysis approaches. • Understand the principles of formation of film language and its use in different periods of time and in traditions of different national schools.
Skills
1.As a result of mastering the course students: • Recognise different cinematic art schools. • Evaluate the impact of cinematic art on modern mass media. • Analyse film authors and examples of cinematic art. • Interpret the impact of cinematic art on public communication. • Use cinematic art message approaches in multimedia communication.
Competences
1.As a result of mastering the course students: • Evaluate audio-visual works in films, which developed in different periods of time. • Able to recognise different uses of film language. • Able to orient in classical principles of film language, as well as in alternative use of modernism principles. • Understand the main development stages of cinematic art and domineering stylistic principles. • Able to see the link between modern audio-visual culture and important stages of development of cinematic art and theoretical and practical achievements in different periods of time.
Assessment
Individual work
|
Title
|
% from total grade
|
Grade
|
|---|---|---|
|
1.
Individual work |
-
|
-
|
|
To approbate the knowledge learned during lectures and seminars in the independent analysis and presentation of a film.
In order to evaluate the quality of the study course as a whole, the student must fill out the study course evaluation questionnaire on the Student Portal.
|
||
Examination
|
Title
|
% from total grade
|
Grade
|
|---|---|---|
|
1.
Examination |
-
|
-
|
|
2.
Examination |
-
|
-
|
|
• Participation in lectures.
• Participation and activity in seminars.
• Seminar diploma paper – film presentation and analysis (four A4 pages).
To analyse a film made in the historical period reviewed during the course (see the list of recommended films in informative sources), as well as to present own work. Conduct the thematical, stylistic and genre analysis of the film, characterise the importance of the film in the world film context. Scope – at least four A4 pages (without the title page).
|
||
Study Course Theme Plan
-
Lecture
|
Modality
|
Location
|
Contact hours
|
|---|---|---|
|
On site
|
Auditorium
|
2
|
Topics
|
Introduction. Basic film concepts, basic elements of film language.
|
-
Lecture
|
Modality
|
Location
|
Contact hours
|
|---|---|---|
|
On site
|
Auditorium
|
2
|
Topics
|
Emergence of film, development of film language: Lumière brothers, Georges Méliès, Edwin S. Porter. Creation and development directions of national film schools (1889–1915).
|
-
Lecture
|
Modality
|
Location
|
Contact hours
|
|---|---|---|
|
On site
|
Auditorium
|
2
|
Topics
|
Importance of D.W. Griffith in the development of film language and US film. "The Birth of a Nation" (1915), "Intolerance" (1916). Birth of film as mass media. System of studios in the United States. Introduction of sound. Upsurge of new genres – musical film, gangster film at the turn of 1920s–1930s. Film as a mirror of public mood and history – the Great Depression. Censorship.
|
-
Class/Seminar
|
Modality
|
Location
|
Contact hours
|
|---|---|---|
|
On site
|
Auditorium
|
2
|
Topics
|
Cinematography in the United States in 1930s–1940s. United States – full member of the classical Hollywood style, diversity of genres (westerns, melodramas, comedies). The brightest authors, actors. “Casablanca" (1942) as an embodiment of principles of the classical Hollywood style.
|
-
Lecture
|
Modality
|
Location
|
Contact hours
|
|---|---|---|
|
On site
|
Auditorium
|
2
|
Topics
|
Modernism ideas in films. Cinema of Europe of 1920s. German expressionism: Friedrich Murnau, Robert Wiene, Fritz Lang. The dawn of surrealism (Luis Buñuel and Salvador Dalí).
|
-
Class/Seminar
|
Modality
|
Location
|
Contact hours
|
|---|---|---|
|
On site
|
Auditorium
|
2
|
Topics
|
Modernism ideas in films. Editing theories of Russian modernists. (Sergei Eisenstein, Lev Kuleshov, Dziga Vertov, etc.)
|
-
Class/Seminar
|
Modality
|
Location
|
Contact hours
|
|---|---|---|
|
On site
|
Auditorium
|
2
|
Topics
|
Echo of modernism ideas in Hollywood practice. Viewing and analysis of fragments from "Citizen Kane" (1941) by Orson Welles. Film pioneering and importance in the world film history.
|
-
Class/Seminar
|
Modality
|
Location
|
Contact hours
|
|---|---|---|
|
On site
|
Auditorium
|
2
|
Topics
|
Echo of modernism ideas in Hollywood practice. Viewing and analysis of fragments from "Citizen Kane" (1941) by Orson Welles. Film pioneering and importance in the world film history.
|
-
Lecture
|
Modality
|
Location
|
Contact hours
|
|---|---|---|
|
On site
|
Auditorium
|
2
|
Topics
|
Form searches within the classical Hollywood style. Film noire as a call-out to the classical Hollywood style (1940s–1950s).
|
-
Lecture
|
Modality
|
Location
|
Contact hours
|
|---|---|---|
|
On site
|
Auditorium
|
2
|
Topics
|
Form searches within the classical Hollywood style. Visual stylistics of film noire, diversity of message strategies (e.g., in works of Billy Wilder). Echo of film noire in film experiences of the 20th century.
|
-
Lecture
|
Modality
|
Location
|
Contact hours
|
|---|---|---|
|
On site
|
Auditorium
|
2
|
Topics
|
Introduction. Basic film concepts, basic elements of film language.
|
-
Lecture
|
Modality
|
Location
|
Contact hours
|
|---|---|---|
|
On site
|
Auditorium
|
2
|
Topics
|
Emergence of film, development of film language: Lumière brothers, Georges Méliès, Edwin S. Porter. Creation and development directions of national film schools (1889–1915).
|
-
Lecture
|
Modality
|
Location
|
Contact hours
|
|---|---|---|
|
On site
|
Auditorium
|
2
|
Topics
|
Importance of D.W. Griffith in the development of film language and US film. "The Birth of a Nation" (1915), "Intolerance" (1916). Birth of film as mass media. System of studios in the United States. Introduction of sound. Upsurge of new genres – musical film, gangster film at the turn of 1920s–1930s. Film as a mirror of public mood and history – the Great Depression. Censorship.
|
-
Class/Seminar
|
Modality
|
Location
|
Contact hours
|
|---|---|---|
|
On site
|
Auditorium
|
2
|
Topics
|
Cinematography in the United States in 1930s–1940s. United States – full member of the classical Hollywood style, diversity of genres (westerns, melodramas, comedies). The brightest authors, actors. “Casablanca" (1942) as an embodiment of principles of the classical Hollywood style.
|
-
Lecture
|
Modality
|
Location
|
Contact hours
|
|---|---|---|
|
On site
|
Auditorium
|
2
|
Topics
|
Modernism ideas in films. Cinema of Europe of 1920s. German expressionism: Friedrich Murnau, Robert Wiene, Fritz Lang. The dawn of surrealism (Luis Buñuel and Salvador Dalí).
|
-
Class/Seminar
|
Modality
|
Location
|
Contact hours
|
|---|---|---|
|
On site
|
Auditorium
|
2
|
Topics
|
Echo of modernism ideas in Hollywood practice. Viewing and analysis of fragments from "Citizen Kane" (1941) by Orson Welles. Film pioneering and importance in the world film history.
|
-
Class/Seminar
|
Modality
|
Location
|
Contact hours
|
|---|---|---|
|
On site
|
Auditorium
|
2
|
Topics
|
Echo of modernism ideas in Hollywood practice. Viewing and analysis of fragments from "Citizen Kane" (1941) by Orson Welles. Film pioneering and importance in the world film history.
|
-
Lecture
|
Modality
|
Location
|
Contact hours
|
|---|---|---|
|
On site
|
Auditorium
|
2
|
Topics
|
Form searches within the classical Hollywood style. Film noire as a call-out to the classical Hollywood style (1940s–1950s).
|
Bibliography
Required Reading
The Oxford History of World Cinema. The Definitive History of Cinema Worldwide, Oxford University Press, 1996
Bordwell, David, Thompson, Kristin. Film Art. An Introduction. International Edition, McGraw-Hill, Inc, 1993
Sklar, Robert. Film. An International History of the Medium, Thames and Hudson, 1993
An Introduction to Film Studies. Edited by Jill Nelmes, Routledge, 1996
Теплиц, Ежи. История киноискусства, Москва: Прогресс, 1968.
Садуль, Жорж. Всемирная история кино, Москва: Искусство, 1958 — 1982.
Bordvels, Deivids, Tompsone, Kristīne. Kinomāksla. Ievads. Nacionālais kino centrs, Rīga, 2018
Other Information Sources
Filmas:
Voyage dans la lune, Georges Melies, 1902
The Birth of a Nation, 1915
Intolerance, D.W. Griffit, 1916
Das Kabinet der doktor Kaligari, Robert Wiene, 1922
The Kid, Charles Chaplin, 1921
Nosferatu, Robert F. Murnaw, 1922
Metropolis, Fritz Lang, 1926
Bronenosec Potjemkin, Sergejs Eizenšteins, 1926
The Jazz Singer, Alan Crosland,1927
The Grand Hotel, Edmund Goulding, 1932
Un Chien Andalou, Luis Bunuel, Salvador Dali, 1929
The Blue Angel, Joseph von Sternberg, 1930
The Public Enemy, William A.Wellman, 1931
Frankenstein, James Wales, 1931
Zero for Conducti, Jean Vigo, 1933
It Happened One Night, Frank Capra, 1934
L’Atalante, Jean Vigo, 1939
Top Hat, Mark Sandrich, 1935
The 39 Steps, Alfred Hitchcock, 1935
Modern Times, Charlie Chaplin, 1936
21 Bringing up Baby, George Cukor, 1938
Roaring twenties, Raoul Walsh,1939
Gone With the Wind, Victor Fleming, 1939
Wizard of Oz, Victor Fleming, 1939
Ninotchka, Ernst Lubitsch, 1939
The Great Dictator, Charlie Chaplin, 1940
Citizen Kane, Orson Welles, 1941
Casablanca, Michael Curtiz, 1941
The Maltese Falcon, Juhn Huston, 1941
The Double Indemnity, Billy Willder, 1944