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» The Draughtsman's Contract - 0 views

  • Yet in Greenaway’s world, systems or codes of any kind are treated as inadequate, hopelessly subjective fantasies that deserve contempt, not respect. Categorical thinking claims it makes the world easier to understand; Greenaway maintains it distorts the world by forcing it into unnatural categories. Many of his films satirise catalogues and organising principles, firstly by presenting absurd examples of each, and secondly by structuring events around them
    • Stephanie Dixon
       
      This reading of the world that Greenaway creates goes well with the reading of the statue that suggests that it a metaphor for the unpredictability of the real world. The statue captures an ideal form and it is a fixed representation. By having it move around, Greenaway exercises a sense of satire on his world of the Draughtsman's contract. 
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    "Yet in Greenaway's world, systems or codes of any kind are treated as inadequate, hopelessly subjective fantasies that deserve contempt, not respect. Categorical thinking claims it makes the world easier to understand; Greenaway maintains it distorts the world by forcing it into unnatural categories. Many of his films satirise catalogues and organising principles, firstly by presenting absurd examples of each, and secondly by structuring events around them"
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Project MUSE - Dramatizing the Failure to Jump the Culture/Nature Gap: The Films of Pet... - 0 views

shared by Edward Bradley on 13 Nov 14 - No Cached
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    This does have The Draughtsman's Contract in it, but talks more about Peter Greenaway's films in general.
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Peter Greenaway's Postmodern / Poststructuralist Cinema - Google Books - 2 views

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    Go to page 115 of this book.
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Curtis Clark, ASC - Media@ESF - 2 views

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    Useful article on the visual image/lighting used in The Draughtsman's Contract.
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The Draughtsman's Contract - Media@ESF - 1 views

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    Useful quotes and videos based on Greenaway.
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The Change Heard Around the World: The History of Sound in Cinema - 0 views

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    Fantastic resource for sound designers in IB Film...
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Knife in the Water - From the Current - The Criterion Collection - 2 views

  • obsessed not so much with the big issues of the day as with the quirks and backwaters of human nature.
  • It is an exercise in the Absurd and the surreal that suggests the hostility and suspicion with which outsiders can be regarded like the two men in the film who emerge from the sea carrying a large wardrobe. “I wanted to show a society,” said Polanski, “that rejects the non-conformist or anyone who is in its eyes afflicted with a moral or physical burden.” Two Men and a Wardrobe marks several other themes the director would continue to explore in future films––relationships between people, claustrophobia, scorn, deceit, violence, and humiliation.
    • Iain Williamson
       
      Those last points in this paragraph are very rich for exploration. Could they form conceptual lenses with which to structure the Independent Study?
    • Edward Bradley
       
      Focus of film involves psychological and personal issues.
    • Iain Williamson
       
      So are you going to mention Wajda as a pioneer who led to Polanski? Did Polanski deliberately avoid the same subject matter and approach shown by Wajda?
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  • The solitude, or rather isolation, that envelops so much of Polanski’s early cinema is seen again in Knife in the Water. He told The New York Times Magazine in 1971: “What I like is a realistic situation where things don’t quite fit in. I like to begin with a mood, an atmosphere. I begin to people the atmosphere with characters. When I thought of Knife in the Water, I thought, first of the north of Poland where I used to sail and of a theme that wouldn’t involve large numbers of characters.” In Knife in the Water, the Polish lake district appears utterly uninhabited. Not a single other human being even slips into the frame. So, despite the immense skies and vast stretches of water, the three characters remain trapped in a hermetic, Sartrean huis clos.
  • Knife in the Water focused on the concept of non-conformity, on the subtle battles that erupt between the haves and have-nots. Most of the film’s witticisms are at the expense of the privileged, even pampered married couple, the prosperous “Establishment” in a Poland where most people were still struggling to cope with everyday poverty. More intriguingly, Polanski omits all reference to World War II, marking an escape from a past that obsessed Wajda and the somewhat older generation of Polish filmmakers. The youth in Knife in the Water (who Polanski considered playing himself) is a restless spirit, reluctant to accept orthodox habits, and his exit from the film, skipping nimbly away across the floating logs to the unknown promise of the mainland, confirms his survival instincts.
  • surrealist
    • Iain Williamson
       
      Surealism seems a common trait associated with Polanski's work.
  • Knife in the Water, Polanski’s maiden feature would define his maverick status once and for all. Polanski’s personality stamps every frame.
    • Iain Williamson
       
      This suggests that the writer favours the auteur theory...
  • One should not, however, forget the contribution of Jerzy Skolimowski,
    • Iain Williamson
       
      However, this reatains the caveat, which stem frm the form wars of the 70s and in particular, the Kael/Bogdanovich debate.
  • These elements work in alliance with the film’s dialogue time and again.
  • These elements work in alliance with the film’s dialogue time and again.
  • These elements work in alliance with the film’s dialogue time and again
    • Iain Williamson
       
      Is this metaphorical style used in other Polanski fims?
  • ith Michelangelo Antonioni, Claude Chabrol, Louis Malle, and with Central European directors like Miklos Jancso, Jan Nemec, and Ewald Schorm
    • Iain Williamson
       
      This would offer alternative comparative analysis if you choose to do only 1 or 2 Polanski texts.
  • chamber cinema,
    • Iain Williamson
       
      Worth researching this term further...
  • And at every turn, the weather dictates the fickle mood. The desolate horizons in every direction. The waters of the lake, now placid, now whipped into irritation. The glaring sun at noon. The milky light of a summer’s evening. The dark, ominous massing of clouds.
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Knife in the Water - From the Current - The Criterion Collection - 1 views

  • After all the hardship endured in the making of my first film, the press showing was a disaster. The critics were determined to pan it. The members of Poland’s nomenklatura (communist establishment) were starting to get rich quickly at this period, and Knife was, among other things, an attack on privilege. Whether motivated by spite or political zeal, most critics vociferously demanded to know what the film was about. My “cosmopolitan” background was grist to their mill.
    • Iain Williamson
       
      Interesting as an attack on privelge usually gains favour amongst left-wing political commentators.
  • Some eighteen months later, sensing the political climate had changed, I decided to try again with the Ministry of Culture. I tinkered with a few scenes, adding some snippets of dialogue designed to impart a trifle more “social commitment,” and this time the screenplay committee passed it for production.
    • Iain Williamson
       
      The importance of political determinants on film production behind the Iron Curtain at this time.
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    From Mr. Polanski's 1984 autobiography, Roman. Details the development of "Knife in the Water".
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Repulsion: Eye of the Storm - From the Current - The Criterion Collection - 1 views

  • Though her symptoms—excessive attachment to her sister, revulsion toward men and the concomitant rejection of “mature” sexuality, hesitancies about food—can all be found in any given textbook on psychopathological disorders, Polanski refuses to argue her condition in a Freudian key. Averse to embracing psychiatric dictates to explain human behavior, Polanski is more an observer than an analyst, and his face slap to the claims of the therapeutic could not be more blunt.
  • Since there is no past, Repulsion is filmmaking strictly in the present tense, as Polanski’s up-close camera invades the dark, cramped spaces Carol inhabits. She quickly transforms the apartment into a quasi tomb by closing the curtains and battening down the hatches, literally.
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Visual gags in comedies: US vs UK - Boing Boing - 0 views

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    Excellent visual essay with some great deconstruction of the frame. I like the idea of the frame as a playground.
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Learn the 'Rules' of Film Noir & How to Light It « No Film School - 0 views

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    A great resource for filmmakers and theorists alike.
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Exclusive Insights From A Trailer Sound Design Expert | A Sound Effect - 0 views

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    Outstanding resource for IB Film practical task
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ABSURDiTY iN CiNEMA. - MUBI - 2 views

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    Loving this site for Independent Study text ideas! - Cherie/Hannah this one might be useful!
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Postcolonial Cinema - MUBI - 1 views

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    A good resource for anyone who is still looking for a focus for their Independent Study - if they are thinking about doing Post-Colonialism
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Cannes 2014: Quentin Tarantino declares 'cinema is dead' ahead of Pulp Fiction screenin... - 0 views

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    "Death Of Cinema"
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12 Free Music Downloading Sites for Independent Filmmakers | Filmmaker Spot - 0 views

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    Useful website for people like me (who cant actually play any music)
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Film Websites - Media@ESF - 0 views

  • fantastic websites
    • Iain Williamson
       
      Good website
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    Useful IB film studies
  • ...10 more comments...
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    Useful for independent studies. 
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    y'all tis a useful IB Film Studies Website
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    Film website
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    Useful film websites for referencing, etc.
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    useful film websites
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    Useful film related websites
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    Useful film websites for IB film studies. 
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    My first bookmark !!!
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    Great website to help us in our research.
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    Great website to help us out for research
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    Useful IB Film Studies Website 
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    Website of film websites
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The 16 Greatest Female Filmmakers In Cinema History | Taste of Cinema - 1 views

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    An excellent resource for those students approaching the Independent Study.
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