CIN Test 3 Flashcards

1
Q

Stories We Tell

A

d. Sarah Polley - Canada, 2012

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2
Q

Irma Vep

A

d. Oliver Assayas - France, 1996

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3
Q

Meek’s Cutoff

A

d. Kelly Reichart - US, 2010

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4
Q

Fiction

A
  • Literature in the form of prose
  • describes imaginary events and people
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5
Q

Fiction pt. 2

A
  • something that is invented or untrue
  • a belief or statement that is false but is often held to betruebecauseit is expedient to do so
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6
Q

Non-fiction

A

nounprose writing that is based onfacts, real events, and real people, such as biography or history

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7
Q

Fact

A
  • a thing that is known or proved to be true
  • information used as evidence or as part of a report or news article
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8
Q

Mainly Law

A

he truth about events as opposed to interpretation

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9
Q

The Arrival of a Train and La Ciotat

A

Auguste and Louis Lumière - 1895

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10
Q

Objectivity

A

the ideals of journalistic accuracy and objectivity: impartiality, absence of bias/prejudice, fairness, fairmindedness, equitableness, equitability, even-handedness, justness, justice, open-mindedness, disinterest, disinterestedness, detachment, dispassion, dispassionateness, neutrality

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11
Q

Wildcat

A

Kahlil Joseph - U.S., 2013

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12
Q

RER B

A

d. Alice Diop - France 2017

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13
Q

The reflexive mode

A

It makes the viewer aware of the conventions, expectations, and assumptions that usually go unspoke.

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14
Q

“Let me know say only this, that truth is one species of good, and not, as is usually supposed, a category distinct
from good, and co-ordinate with it. The true is the name of whatever proves itself to be good in the way of
belief, and good, too, for assignable reasons.”

A

William James, “What Pragmatism Means”

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15
Q

“I just said now that what is better for us to believe is true unless the belief incidentally clashes with some other
vital benefit.”

A

William James, “What Pragmatism Means”

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16
Q

Diegetic Sound

A

a sound that appears to originate in the story world.
- (traffic noise, dialogue)

17
Q

Extradiegetic Sound

A

Comments on the story world and belongs to the narration.
- (voice-over narration, film score)

18
Q

Subjective Sound

A

sound rendered as a character hears it rather than as an objective auditor would hear it
- (point-of-audition, point-of-view)

19
Q

The Auteur Theory

A

The concept emerges in the pages of Cahiers du cinéma
*Founded in 1951 by André Bazin

20
Q

“The three premises of the auteur theory
may be visualized as three concentric
circles: the outer circle as technique; the
Middle circle, personal style; the inner
circle, interior meaning.”
Sarris, 453.

A

Andrew Sarris, The Auteur Theory

21
Q

first premise of auteur theory

A

“The first premise of the auteur theory is the technical competence of the director
as a criterion of value.”

22
Q

second premise of auteur theory

A

“The second premise of the auteur theory is the indistinguishable personality of the
director as a criterion of value. Over a group of films, the director must exhibit
certain recurrences of style, which serve as his [her] signature.”

23
Q

third premise of auteur theory

A

“The third and ultimate premise of the auteur theory is concerned with interior meaning,
the ultimate glory of cinema as an art. Interior meaning is extrapolated from the tension
between a director’s personality and his [her] material.”

24
Q

“If an individual is not an author, what are we to make of those things that he has written or said, left among his papers or communicated to others? Is this not properly a work?”
p. 118

A

Michel Foucault, What is an Author?

25
Q

How can several texts be attributed to a single author?
(author and discourse)

A

Texts (or films) must be eliminated from the list of works that are inferior to the others.
Those texts whose ideas conflict with the doctrine expressed in the others are eliminated.
Those texts that refer to events after the author’s death are eliminated.

26
Q

In his films, Assayas stages important questions about cosmopolitanism
as an antidote to globalization, insofar as the cosmopolitan is
defined by the interest they take in the encounters with difference that one finds in place, where the globalist and the nationalist seeks only what it is that one already knows.

A

Statement of Central Preoccupation

27
Q

It, too, would be a mistake to understand the wholeness of the world
as already complete, based on the abstract equivalence of human beings
rather than as an always incomplete but richly open building of more and hopefully
better social connections. Connections allow us to ground cosmopolitanism,
instead of in the categorical equivalence of human beings in our relationships
to each other.”

A
  • Cosmopolitanism
  • Craig Calhoun, “Cosmopolitanism in the Modern Social Imaginary,”
    Daedalus (Summer 2008): 112.
28
Q

Central Preoccupation - Clean

A

Cosmopolitan difference as the ground of forgiveness

29
Q

Central Preoccupation - Irma Vep

A

Global media as source of conversation and the recognition of difference

30
Q

Central Preoccupation - Summer Hours

A

Generational change and national belonging