Ulu
University of Hawai‘i at Mānoa
Department of English
Kuykendall 402
1733 Donaghho Road
Honolulu, HI 96822
Phone: (808) 956-7619
Fax: (808) 956-3083
 
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Subject to Change Last Update: 04/1/2011

Course Description

Fall Semester 2011

ENG 363(1): Film (60)

instructor:  Glenn Man
time:  TTH 12:00-1:15
description:  This course is an introduction to the diversity of approaches to film, one of the most influential of art forms in the 20th and 21st centuries. Using a variety of films and film clips from Hollywood, independent, and foreign cinemas to illustrate, the course will cover film's aesthetic, cultural, social, and political dimensions, as well as its narrative forms and genres. By the end of the course, students will have developed a visual literacy and an awareness of film's impact on us and our culture in its construction of paradigms by which we live and test our environment; they will have surveyed cinema's narrative elements, the ways a film can "tell" a story; and they will have reviewed one or two of film's popular genres, either the western, the gangster film, the musical, the family melodrama, romantic comedy, or film noir and their variations over periods of American history and culture as they reflect the values and myths of those periods.

Assignments include two papers (4-6 pages); quizzes; and a final examination.

Textbook: Timothy Corrigan & Patricia White, THE FILM EXPERIENCE, Second Edition, Bedford/St. Martin; and a packet of three or four articles.

Films (subject to change):  CITIZEN KANE, THE BICYCLE THIEF, CHILDREN OF MEN, BATTLESHIP POTEMKIN, RUN LOLA RUN, WORKING GIRL, THELMA AND LOUISE, WITNESS, IT HAPPENED ONE NIGHT, THE GRADUATE, ANNIE HALL, THE SEVENTH SEAL, IN A BETTER WORLD, REAR WINDOW, THE KIDS ARE ALL RIGHT