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The Cinema Studies Department regularly hosts events that include lectures, screenings, and discussions, including our Wednesday Night Series, which is open to the public.
Join our Cinema Studies announcements listserv to receive emails about upcoming film-related events within and outside the department!
To view past events, check out our Event History page.
The Cinema Studies Department regularly hosts events that include lectures, screenings, and discussions, including our Wednesday Night Series, which is open to the public.
Join our Cinema Studies announcements listserv to receive emails about upcoming film-related events within and outside the department!
To view past events, check out our Event History page.
Screening introduced by professor Robert Stam (Cinema Studies, NYU) and Débora Butruce (Ph.D candidate, University of São Paulo, Brazil/Visiting Scholar, MIAP, NYU), followed by a discussion between her, who worked in this restoration project, and Fabio Andrade (Ph.D student, Cinema Studies, NYU).
Join us as Cinema Studies Associate Professor Ed Guerrero discusses Jordan Peele's directorial debut, Get Out.
A workshop led by Cinema Studies Assistant Professor Marina Hassapopoulou focusing on demonstrations and applications of easy-to-use tools for film/audiovisual media analysis. Co-sponsored by NYC Digital Humanities, as part of NYCDH Week.
Artist-scholar in residence in Cinema Studies Laurie O'Brien is a multi-disciplinary artist working with video, installation, performance and animation, and creator of the Peephole Cinema.
A lecture on the impact of digital media on the arts by Paddy Johnson (founding editor, Art F City).
Join us for a weekend of conversation for the Annual Cinema Studies Student Conference. Featuring keynote speaker Wayne Hodge.
Join us for a weekend of conversation for the Annual Cinema Studies Student Conference. Featuring keynote speaker Wayne Hodge.
Join us for a screening of films by indigenous Kayapó-Mebêngôkre filmmakers from the Béture Collective. Co-sponsored by the Center for Media, Culture, and History and the Department of Cinema Studies.
This round-table explores contemporary archival practices in and from the Middle East, focusing on organizations and institutions that utilize digital platforms to collect and preserve documentary media from historically marginalized worlds. Sponsored by: Dept. of Cinema Studies, Kevorkian Center, Center for Media Culture & History, Tisch Initiative for Creative Research.
Join us for a screening of Buffy the Vampire Slayer’s “Becoming Part II," and an evening of discussion surrounding Buffy the Vampire Slayer, Charmed, Xena: Warrior Princess, and much more as we take critical looks at the coming out metaphors couched in 1990s American fantasy television. Post-screening panel with Heather Hogan (Autostraddle) and Kristin Russo (Buffering the Vampire Slayer, Everyone is Gay), moderated by Cinema Studies MA Student Shayna Maci Warner.
Join the Moving Image and Archive Preservation (MIAP) program as we share an afternoon of demonstrations, informal presentations on student work, and general information about our program.
An illustrated talk by Kristen Gallerneaux. Presented by the Colloquium for Unpopular Culture.
A talk by Scholar-in-Residence, Jennifer Holt (Associate Professor of Film and Media Studies at the University of California, Santa Barbara).
Screening followed by discussion with filmmakers, Fabio Andrade (PhD student, Cinema Studies), moderated by Juana Suárez (Director, Moving Image Archiving and Preservation).
Presented by CineCina Film Festival and the Asian Film and Media Initiative.
Students in the Moving Image Archiving and Preservation (MIAP) program will present their M.A. thesis projects.
Students in the Moving Image Archiving and Preservation (MIAP) program will present their M.A. thesis projects.
Join us for a screening of three short films by André Novais Oliveira: Ghosts (Fantasmas, 2010, 11 min.), About a Month (Pouco Mais de um Mês, 2013, 24 min.), and Backyard (Quintal, 2015, 20 min.). Filmmaker in attendance.
Students in the Moving Image Archiving and Preservation (MIAP) program will present their M.A. thesis projects.
A public lecture by Visiting Researcher in Cinema Studies, Lisa Parks.
This three-day film festival explores changing representations of blackness in French cinema through a cross-disciplinary approach.
This three-day film festival explores changing representations of blackness in French cinema through a cross-disciplinary approach.
This roundtable discussion will bring together Maria Bustillos (Editor, Popula.com), Amy Whitaker (Assistant Professor, Art and Art Professions, NYU), and Finn Brunton (Assistant Professor, Department of Media, Culture and Communication, NYU) to discuss their blockchain-based work and research.
This three-day film festival explores changing representations of blackness in French cinema through a cross-disciplinary approach.
A talk by Pooja Rangan, Associate Professor of English and Film and Media Studies at Amherst College and Board President of the Flaherty.
This one-day symposium asks how feminist and queer Asian migrant and diasporic visual cultures – from cinema to social media practices to independent games – betray and reimagine the intersecting axes of gender, race, sex, and the nation. The lineup brings together critics and makers of film history, game design, and media theory. Talks will be held purposefully short – 15min – and feature works in progress to allow for collective discussion.
Presentation on the early works produced by Women Make Movies featuring screening and discussion. Discussion moderated by Tanya Goldman (PhD candidate, Cinema Studies) with Women Make Movies co-founders Ariel Dougherty and Sheila Paige, and Dr. Alexandra Juhasz, Chair of the Film Department, Brooklyn College, CUNY.
A talk by David Hesmondhalgh (University of Leeds)
This event features screenings of two recent documentaries from within migrant detention centers, seeking to open a discussion about new fugitive pathways and emerging filmmaking practices in the face of militarized borders. Screenings include: Unkilled, Chapter 1 (David Aronowitsch, Hanna Heilborn, 2018, 8’) and Chauka, Please Tell Us the Time (Arash Kamali Sarvestani, Behrouz Boochani, 2017, 90’)
Tracing the development of his research across these disparate contexts, this presentation considers how Worth’s thinking about film was entangled in various forms of cinematic practice, political activism, pedagogy and social therapy. A talk by Henning Engelke, Visting Scholar in the Department of Cinema Studies at New York University.
The Cinema Studies Department is enthused to present a screening of Taiwanese filmmaker Ko I-Chen's experimental landmark, Blue Moon.
Screening of 'The Case of the Borrowed Baby (1962).' 50 min. With commentary by Drake Stutesman, Adjunct Professor of Cinema Studies (TSOA) and Costume Studies (Steinhardt), NYU. Offered in conjunction with Art After Stonewall, 1969-1989, on view at the Grey Art Gallery, New York University, 100 Washington Square East, NYC, April 24–July 20, 2019; and the Leslie-Lohman Museum of Gay and Lesbian Art, 26 Wooster Street, NYC, April 24-July 21, 2019.
Li Juchuan presents his work, in conversation with Professor Thomas Looser, Associate Professor of East Asian Studies at NYU. Juchuan Li (Shashi, 1964) is an associate professor at Hubei Institute of Fine Arts.