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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.
Join the NYU student chapter of the Association of Moving Image Archivists in celebrating Home Movie Day! AMIA@NYU and Queens Memory (@queensmemory) are collecting questions about how to care for your home movies.
Cinema Studies welcomes friends and family from all Tisch departments to join us for virtual games!
A talk by Cinema Studies alum Jacob Floyd (MA, 2010).
Cinema Studies welcomes friends and family from all Tisch departments to join us for virtual games!
This roundtable is devoted to the transmedia world of Boys’ Love (BL). BL is an umbrella term for male-male romance that originated in Japanese popular culture in the 1970s and has since become a global media phenomenon.
The Moving Image Archiving and Preservation (MIAP) program will host virtual information sessions for prospective students on Wednesday, November 3rd at 9:00AM EST.
Please join us for a project update and celebration of the Regional Media Legacies (RML) Project! A project made possible with support from the Robert David Lion Gardiner Foundation.
Rokhaya Diallo and Ph.D Candidate in Cinema Studies Leonard Cortana will discuss important episodes of her career and the importance of her work in a country that refuses to talk about race, often overlooked as “importation of the US cultural studies”.
“The title of this lecture takes off from Andy Warhol’s Where Is Your Rupture, an early '60s painting which cuts off both a diagrammatic torso and the text beneath it. The result is at once detached and personal, a fragment with both text and body broken, incomplete.
The Moving Image Archiving and Preservation (MIAP) program will host virtual information sessions for prospective students on Wednesday, December 1 at 12:00PM EST.
The Moving Image Archiving and Preservation (MIAP) Master of Arts program will host a virtual information session for prospective students on Wednesday, January 31st at 12:00PM EST.
Join us for virtual games throughout the semester. We'll be playing an assortment of Jackbox games, word games, and more!
Screening of “In the Same Breath” followed by a discussion with filmmaker Nanfu Wang and Zhen Zhang (Cinema Studies). Moderated by Marcia Rock (Director, News & Documentary, Arthur L. Carter Institute of Journalism).
This talk details this recent film and comic book industry history, and explains why great stories and characters will never be as important in Hollywood as great financial structures.
Join us for a screening (online, free at Kanopy through Bobst Library) followed by a Q and A with Anna McCarthy, Professor and Chair of Cinema Studies.
Join us for virtual games throughout the semester. We'll be playing an assortment of Jackbox games, word games, and more!
The Moving Image Archiving and Preservation (MIAP) students will present their M.A. thesis projects.
The Moving Image Archiving and Preservation (MIAP) students will present their M.A. thesis projects.
The Moving Image Archiving and Preservation (MIAP) students will present their M.A. thesis projects.
This international workshop presents some of the most exciting new research on cinema practices including eco-feminist genre film in India, Taiwan queer cinema, Singapore trans/national film infrastructure, strategies and politics of restoration and preservation in Indonesia and Thailand.
In this masterclass, Tobias Weber-Ingold talks about his approach to writing branched narratives, provides insight into the methods and tools he uses from first draft to script delivery to provide aspiring interactive filmmakers with the tools to get started on their own story multiverse.
This program is made possible by the Dean’s Faculty Grant, NYU Tisch School of the Arts and NYU Center for Latin American and Caribbean Studies.
This program is made possible by the Dean’s Faculty Grant, NYU Tisch School of the Arts and NYU Center for Latin American and Caribbean Studies.