Tuesday, July 26, 2011

Chicago Children's Film Festival

What's New With Facets Children's Programs?

Mad Hot Ballroom / El Tux

Festival Shorts in the Parks

This summer, you can catch selected shorts from past Festivals playing before some of the Chicago Park District's Movies in the Parks. All shorts are official selections from the Chicago International Children's Film Festival's previous seasons. Come catch your Festival favorites and get excited for this year's Festival, coming up October 21-30, 2011!
CLICK HERE for movie titles, dates, times, and locations.

Summer Film Institute

Facets Summer Film Institute

A unique, week-long, intensive film camp for teachers
July 25-29, 2011
Earn 30 CPDUs
  • Gain the foundation and tools you need to inspire your students through film.
  • Build a collection of resources and strategies to take back to your classroom.
  • Learn to engage with the media-based world that your students already inhabit.
  • Watch, discuss, and be provoked by films from some of the greatest minds in cinema.
It's a summer experience that will transform you (and your students) for a lifetime!
CLICK HERE for more information.

2011 Children's Film Festival - Call for Entries

The Chicago International Children's Film Festival is now accepting entries for the 2011 Festival. Enter before May 1 & save 20%. Final deadline is May 31, 2011 for adult filmmakers. EXTENDED DEADLINE for filmmakers ages 6-14: July 15, 2011. CLICK HERE for entry details.

Bruno BugNature at the Movies

Facets Children's Programs at the Peggy Notebaert Nature Museum
Presenting nature-themed film programs select Fridays & weekends! Weekday screenings for groups & special low price weekend ticket options for families. Facets & Nature Museum members attend Museum screenings FREE!
CLICK HERE for Nature Museum screening info & to purchase tickets.

Group Screening Programs (summer 2011)

CLICK HERE for information on screenings at Facets.
CLICK HERE for information on screenings at your location.
All films are official selections of the Chicago International Children's Film Festival - North America's largest and most celebrated film festival devoted to films for and by kids, and one of the onlyAcademy Award-qualifying children's film festivals in the world. We invite you and your students to see relevant, curriculum supported films in an exciting environment guaranteed to create memories that last a lifetime.

Wednesday, May 4, 2011

Brian De Palma and You


Your Favorite Brian De Palma Film
 and What It Says About You

By Alec Novakow
Sisters: You have unresolved family issues with your siblings.
Phantom of the Paradise: You work in the music industry and/or you like Daft Punk.
Carrie: You like Stephen King, Sissy Spacek, and/or seeing a lot of teenagers die. You’re probably a teacher.
The Fury: You like watching John Cassavetes explode.
Dressed to Kill: You like watching Angie Dickinson (and her body double) in the shower
Blow Out: You know good cinema and like the concept of Blow Up and The Conversation.
Scarface: You consider yourself a (wanna-be) gangsta.
Body Double: You like to do handy work involving power tools. Also, you might be Patrick Bateman.
The Untouchables: You like law and order and spend a majority of your time sober.
The Bonfire of the Vanities: You do not exist.
Carlito’s Way: You’re not as gangsta as the people who like Scarface and you might be French.
Mission: Impossible: You are a Tom Cruise groupie.
Femme Fatale: You like supermodels.
The Black Dahlia: You are a masochist who enjoys pain or you’ve never seen any other De Palma film or perhaps and most likely you do not exist.


Friday, April 22, 2011

Embarras Valley Film Festival, November 10-12, 2011



The 2011  Embarras Valley Film Festival
Films For Children and Young Adults 

The Embarras Valley Film Festival is a yearly event sponsored by the Eastern Illinois University College of Arts and Humanities and honors a person or theme relevant to the Embarras Valley, which encompasses much of East Central Illinois. Eastern Illinois University is located in Charleston,Illinois, in the Embarras Valley. The symposium will be held in the Tarble Arts Center Atrium on EIU’s campus.


Call for Papers

Embarras Valley Film Festival Symposium

Symposium Date: November 11, 2011
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Deadline for Proposals: October 1, 2011

This Year’s Theme: Films For and About Children and Young Adults


Proposals for conference-length papers related to our theme, “Films For and About Children and Young Adults” are invited for our 2011 Embarras Valley Film Festival. Although we will be screening films connected with film makers and personnel from the Central Illinois area, we encourage a variety of perspectives on children’s and young adult films. The following outlines the possible films we will screen during our festival:

Hachi: A Dog’s Tale (2009)
Song of the South (1946)
Rudolph the Red-Nosed Reindeer (1964)
Cinderella (1950)
Percy Jackson and the Lightning Thief (2010)
Martian Child (2007)

Paper topics may include readings of films for children and young adults, film adaptations, children’s or young adult literature and film, or children’s or young adult literature of or about Central Illinois.

Please send an abstract of approximately 150 words by October 1, 2011 to the following address or email:

Dr. Robin L. Murray
English Department
Eastern Illinois University
Charleston, IL 61920

We will contact participants by October 15, 2011 regarding their status.


Monday, April 11, 2011

Central Illinois Feminist Film Festival, April 13, 2011



Central Illinois

Feminist Film Festival Screening

April 13, 2011

2:00-6:00

Coleman Hall 3150


2:00 The Chicago Maternity Center Story: Kartemquin Films

The Chicago Maternity Center Story provides an historical overview of an important maternity center and its midwives in Chicago.

3:00 Stan vs. Squirrel: By: Lilly Boruszkowski

Stan vs. Squirrel explores the relationship between a father and daughter as they document the intelligence of squirrels in a back yard garden

3:30 Tom’s Wife: By: Alana Cash

Tom’s Wife tells a fictionalized story of women striving for independence on the American frontier.

5:00 LGBT Youth in Chicago: By: Free Spirit Media Students

LGBT Youth in Chicago highlights the lives of high school students exploring their gender and sexuality.

5:15 Perfect: By: Alexandra Hidalgo

Perfect examines the motivations behind women’s choice to have breast implant surgery, sometimes at an early age.

Film Studies Minor Newsletter, April/May 2011

scene clacker

Eastern Illinois University Film Studies Minor Newsletter

April/May 2011

News and Views

Open House

April 16, 2011 from 9:30-11:30

The Film Studies Minor will be staffing a table at the EIU Open House in the University Ballroom on Monday, October 11 from 9:45-11:30. We will have a new flyer with information about possible job opportunities with a film studies minor, a fact sheet, and an interactive film game available for prospective students and their friends to enjoy.

Please Note:

Eastern Film Society Films during Spring 2011 will be screened on Mondays and Wednesdays from 7-9 Coleman Auditorium

Film Conferences, Journals, and Screenings

Call for Papers: Embarras Valley Film Festival Symposium

Symposium Date: November 11, 2011

Deadline for Proposals: October 1, 2011

This Year’s Theme: Films For and About Children and Young Adults

Proposals for conference-length papers related to our theme, “Films For and About Children and Young Adults” are invited for our 2011 Embarras Valley Film Festival. Although we will be screening films connected with film makers and personnel from the Central Illinois area, we encourage a variety of perspectives on children’s and young adult films. The following outlines the possible films we will screen during our festival:

Hachi: A Dog’s Tale (2009)

Song of the South (1946)

Rudolph the Red-Nosed Reindeer (1964)

Cinderella (1950)

Percy Jackson and the Lightning Thief (2010)

Martian Child (2007)

Please send an abstract of approximately 150 words by October 1, 2011 to the following address or email:

Dr. Robin L. Murray

English Department

Eastern Illinois University

Charleston, IL 61920

rlmurray@eiu.edu

We will contact participants by October 15, 2011 regarding their status.

The EVFF is a yearly event sponsored by the Eastern Illinois University College of Arts and Humanities and honors a person or theme relevant to the Embarras Valley, which encompasses much of East Central Illinois.

Eastern Illinois University is located in Charleston, Illinois, in the Embarras Valley. The symposium will be held in the Tarble Arts Center Atrium on EIU’s campus.

Power Outage Delays Screenings for Central Illinois Feminist Film Festival to April 13 from 2:00-6:00 in CH 3150

The Central Illinois Feminist Film Festival entries will be screened on Wednesday, April 13, from 2-6 in room 3150 Coleman Hall. This year’s winner is Tom’s Wife, a feature-length film set during the rural Depression era. Our honorable mentions were Stan Vs. Squirrel and LGBT Youth in Chicago. The following outlines the program for our April 13 screenings:

2:00 The Chicago Maternity Center Story

Kartemquin Films

The Chicago Maternity Center Story provides an historical overview of an important maternity center and its midwives in Chicago.

3:00 Stan vs. Squirrel

By: Lilly Boruszkowski

Stan vs. Squirrel explores the relationship between a father and daughter as they document the intelligence of squirrels in a back yard garden.

3:30 Tom’s Wife

By: Alana Cash

Tom’s Wife tells a fictionalized story of women striving for independence on the American frontier.

5:00 LGBT Youth in Chicago

By: Free Spirit Media Students

LGBT Youth in Chicago highlights the lives of high school students exploring their gender and sexuality.

5:15 Perfect

By: Alexandra Hidalgo

Perfect examines the motivations behind women’s choice to have breast implant surgery, sometimes at an early age.

5th Annual Notre Dame Undergraduate Film & Television Conference

April 1-2, 2011

The Notre Dame Undergraduate Film & Television Conference offers undergraduate students the opportunity to present papers representing their best work in film and television studies. Students will deliver papers on any aspect of film and television history, criticism, or theory. Papers will be given in twenty-minute slots (up to a 10-page doubled spaced paper presented at normal talking speed with a few visual aids).

Film Festival of Hendricks County, Indiana.April 22-23, 2011

The festival seeks to present the art of cinematographic storytelling through emerging film talent and independent films while highlighting the arts in Hendricks County.

The Phantoscope High School Film Festival

Festival Date: April 30, 2011

Panel Discussion: 5:30 PM

Film Screening: 7:00 PM

Are you making films in class? In your basement? On the street? By yourself? With your friends? Have you ever had to beg your mom or dad to be in one of your films? Bribed your little brother or sister? We're talking to you!

Phantoscope is especially for budding filmmakers who are high school students. Phantoscope shows a juried program of short films created by Mid-Western teens annually and features a panel discussion with area industry professionals, along with cash and other prizes. There is a $1000 cash prize awarded to the contest's best film.

FOR MORE INFORMATION CONTACT: Lance M. Crow, Ed. Director, (765) 966-0256

Indianapolis International Film Festival

July 14-24, 2011 in Indianapolis

This is a feature and shorts film festival for independent filmmakers that presents films that inform, enlighten, and educate the community by providing a vivid reflection of the rich cultural diversity of Indianapolis and the world beyond our doors.

Summer 2011 Courses

CMN 4030-Genre Science Fiction Film

Joseph Heumann

May 20-21, June 3-4 and 17-18 in Physical Science Building 3060.

EIU 4115G-Pop Culture Economics

First Four Weeks, two sections.

M-F, 10-12 and M-R, 1-3:35

EIU 4170G-History on Film

David Smith

Off Campus: Parkland

May 20-21, June 3-4 and 17-18

Fall 2011 Courses

AF 3300—African Cinema

Klevor Abo

MWF, 3-3:50 in Blair Hall 2130

This is a course which encounters and interprets traditions of Africa through its cinema. Credits: 3 Prerequisites & Notes ENG 1002G.

3.000 Credit hours

CMN 3530 - Film Communication (3-2-4)

Wilson-Brown TR 9:30-10:45 and T 7-9:30

Film as the expression of the performers, producers, directors, writers, and technicians. Critical discussion of film theory, history, and criticism. WI Credits: 4

4.000 Credit hours

CMN 3540 - Video Production. (1-4-3) On Demand. 8-10:05 TR

This course deals with the principles of preproduction planning, scripting, lighting, and audio and video mixing for studio and remote television productions as unified by the television director. Credits: 3

CMN 4030-The War Film

Joseph Heumann

October 7-8, 21-22, and November 4-5

Location to be announced.

EIU 4115G-Pop Culture Economics

Please check catalogue for multiple listings

EIU 4192G Section 099 CRN 90860Boswell
Film and Contemporary Society, Honors Senior Seminar 1530-1850 R

Film represents the most popular—and probably the most powerful—art form of our own time. We will watch, study, and discuss a variety of movies throughout the semester as we explore the history, aesthetics, and critical theory which inform the movies. Prerequisites: Admission to the University Honors Program and permission of the Director of Honors Program.

Requirements: class participation, several short papers, one substantial research paper.

Note: This University Senior Seminar does not fulfill the English Honors Senior Seminar requirement, English 4300/4390. (General Education)

English 3504 Section 001 CRN 90795MartinezFilm and Literature 1500-1700 MW

“Fella, you don’t know what this story means”: Conspiracy and Trauma in Literature and Film

In this course, we will focus on the explosion of radical developments in film and literature that respond to key political, social, and philosophical challenges of the late twentieth century. Specifically, we will examine how film and literature represent and explore themes of conspiracy and trauma. Some of our films and texts will have their roots in major cultural events (such as the political assassinations and scandals of the 1960s/early 1970s and the Vietnam War), while others will focus on more subtle social and technological developments and their impact on the individual. Crucial to this class will be the question of identity and the nature of truth—in other words, how do we process shocking events and attempt to make sense of them, fashion meaning out of them?



Note: We will most likely discuss all works on Monday and screen all films on Wednesdays during “lab time.” The class will be assessed through film responses, a final paper, a group presentation, and a midterm and final exam. (Group 5)

Eastern Film Society Films/Fall 2010 Wednesdays from 7-9

Coleman Auditorium

Come join us for Eastern Film Society meetings every Wednesday at 7:00 in the Coleman Auditorium!