Introduction to Cinema Studies
Toby Lee
Fridays, 12:30-4:30pm
Room 648
CINE-UT 10 / Class # 15370
4 points
This course introduces students to the language of cinema and to critical tools for discussing and writing about film and video, in preparation for more advanced classes in the Department of Cinema Studies or related fields. The primary goal of the course is for students to develop critical and formal analytical skills, so that they may read and interpret a variety of films, both narrative and non-narrative. Through screenings, readings, discussions and assignments, students will gain a foundational understanding of the relationship between film form, style and meaning, as well as exposure to key concepts in film theory and familiarity with major movements in film history. We will examine how movies function aesthetically, how they are meaningful for their audiences, and how they operate in different social and cultural contexts, considering works from a range of periods, places and styles.
By the end of the semester, the aim is for students to be fluent in the basic vocabulary of film form and film style; to write cogently and critically about films, advancing original arguments based on close analysis; and to be more critically aware of how visual media operate in a variety of social and historical contexts.
Cinema Studies majors and pre-approved minors only.
Recitations
Wednesdays
Room 674
Class #
002: 9:15-10:30am 15371
003: 10:45am-12:00pm 15372