Free cinema screening: That Guy Dick Miller – Sat 14 January 2017 1pm

That Guy Dick Miller, directed by Elijah Drenner, 2014 (1hr  31min)

Sat 14 January 2017, 13:00-15:00

Birkbeck Cinema, 43 Gordon Square, London WC1H 0PD

Marking the end of the exhibition A Museum of the Everyday: Cinephilia and Collecting at Peltz Gallery, That Guy Dick Miller celebrates a journeyman of the Hollywood bit part. Anyone who has kept up with Hollywood films over the past forty years would recognise Dick Miller but probably wouldn’t be able to put a name to the face.  Having worked with directors such as Roger Corman, Steven Spielberg, and James Cameron, regularly appearing in the films of Joe Dante (The Howling, Gremlins), and sharing the screen with the likes of Robert De Niro, Jack Nicholson and Jada Pinkett Smith, he is the epitome of the ‘It’s that guy!’ supporting actor.

Looking at Hollywood through the prism of Dick’s career echos the collections displayed in the exhibition, particularly Vic Kinson’s Stars Archive, which records every single actor Kinson ever saw in a film. Both take the time to mark the careers of actors who may be forgotten or, in Dick’s case, recognised but not necessarily known. That Guy Dick Miller demonstrates that every film exists in the context of another film, connected through the actors in them and audiences who watch them.

A Museum of the Everyday: Cinephilia and Collecting is on at Peltz Gallery until 25 January 2017.

To book your FREE ticket go to

https://www.eventbrite.co.uk/e/a-museum-of-the-everyday-cinephilia-and-collecting-tickets-30487605248

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Essayistic Filmmaking: The Derek Jarman Lab 3/4 and 10/11 December 2016

For all those who are interested in using film in their research we offer a course in essayistic filmmaking for the second time this term. The dates are: 3rd and 4th December for filming and production sessions, and 10th and 11th December for an editing workshop. You can find more information about the course on our website: jarmanlab.org

The sessions take place in our offices:

The Derek Jarman Lab
36 Gordon Square Essay Essay Film
London WC1H 0PD

The training begins at 10am on each day of the 4-day course and we aim to finish around 6pm.

The cost of the course for Birkbeck students and staff is £300.

If you are interested in signing up for it, please send an email to bartek@jarmanlab.org by 29th November. Please also share this information with anyone who might be interested.

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CFP: Visual Pleasure: Acts of Looking in Narrative Culture – Deadline 15 November

Following the screening of Laura Mulvey and Peter Wollen’s groundbreaking avant-garde classic film ‘Riddles of the Sphinx’ [1977], introduced by Mulvey, and held in the new Curzon Goldsmiths in September, I am writing to announce the call for papers for this year’s annual GLITS symposium, ‘Visual Pleasure: Acts of Looking in Narrative Culture.’ Marking a continued interest in the cinematic and critical works of Laura Mulvey and their application, this symposium seeks interdisciplinary responses to her work and its legacy. Please see below for the CFP.

We invite abstracts of 350 words or less for 20 minute presentations; submissions will be open from now until November 15th. The symposium will take place on December 9th (venue to be confirmed and will be formally announced shortly).

Cambridge Scholars have expressed an interest in publishing the proceedings of this event and abstractsalong with a series of invited essayswill be considered as an element of a book proposal following the symposium.

Please address all abstracts, alongside a brief biographical note, to glits@gold.ac.uk, or contact d.jaeckle@gold.ac.uk for further information.

‘Visual Pleasure: Acts of Looking in Narrative Culture’

This conference seeks to explore the ways in which the political “act of looking” in Laura Mulvey’s writing and its legacies can be extended to a broader discussion of narrative and critical cultures in contemporary society.  Whether we are exploring the nature of academic discourse and authorial identity, the function of autobiography and confession in contemporary literary culture, or the determinacy of canon and the anxiety of influence, the conflict between active and passive renditions of criticism relative to the force of narrative can be everywhere encountered. Mulvey’s work amplifies such collisions and, given her interest in the power of entertainment technologies, she offers an insight that is as relevant today as it was to the development of film criticism in the 1970s.

When we consider the role of culture in contemporary society, similar concerns plague the author and the academic—apprehensions about gazing backwards rather than broaching new territory, or the anxiety of influence as inveighing on original perspective proves to problematize conceptions of originality, authenticity and creativity in contemporary critical and creative practices. Often, the attempt to wring originality from existing traditions results in the inescapable realisation that critical work is contingent on second hand material. Conversely, criticism resumes to be perceived as a creative action that is unique to the personality engaging with the object of their attention. In this conference, we aim to encourage reflections upon the significance (and definition) of ‘originality’ and authorship in film, literature, and criticism. This approach ought to cast the role of the critic in renewed light, resulting in a reassessment of the standing that film and literary criticism dons in present-day narrative cultures.

This conflict is crucial to our self-definition in the academy—we let our interests define us, to then be defined by our interests, readily identify personality with product, and professionalize an engagement with culture. Scholarly response is either a product of its source or a procreant and provocative exercise that reclaims, reframes, and unsettles tradition. These polarised views of the critic are central to the work of Laura Mulvey in her exploration of active and passive manifestations of critical observation in cinema. In her canonical essay ‘Visual Pleasure and Narrative Cinema’ (1975), Mulvey explores the segregation of the director and their audience – the cinema and its spectator – to underscore the manner in which representation on and off the screen is determined by an intermingling of social and personal pressures that, in turn, mould our reading of the text.

We invite 20 minute presentations on subjects including, but by no means limited to:

  • Academic culture, authorship and authorial or critical identity
  • Film, and the evolution of film criticism in the twenty-first century
  • Creative responses to film and literature (for example, adaptation, commentary, or novelisation)
  • Realism, authenticity and originality in literature, cinema and popular culture
  • Documentary as intervention versus creativity as intervention
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Introducing the BFI: Student Open Day 26 October 2016

Introducing the BFI + Video Essay Masterclass with Kogonada + Nothing But a Man screening

bfi

We welcome all students to BFI Southbank for a special Open Day that showcases all the riches we have to offer anyone who loves film.

Students will have a chance to acquaint themselves with the essential BFI Reuben Library, browse the BFI Shop’s unrivalled selection, test-drive the Mediatheque, and enjoy several exciting sessions in glorious NFT1.

The Details

Wednesday 26 October 12:00-17:00
BFI Southbank, Belvedere Road, London SE1 8XT

12:00-12:30: Registration (main foyer)
12:30-13:00: Introducing the BFI + preview of what’s coming soon at BFI Southbank
13:00-14:30: Video Essay Masterclass with Kogonada
15:30-17:05: Screening of Nothing But a Man

Places are limited! To reserve a space for individuals or groups for the Introducing the BFI talk or Nothing But a Man screening, RSVP to narena.modeste@bfi.org.uk to reserve a place for individuals or groups.

For the Kogonada masterclass, (free) tickets must be booked via the box office here.

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BIMI Programme: Autumn Term 2016

BIRKBECK INSTITUTE FOR THE MOVING IMAGE

Our programme of events for the autumn term is now available for booking: http://www.bbk.ac.uk/arts/research/birkbeck-institute-for-the-moving-image/events

Highlights include:

ESSAY FILMS: Adrian Martin and Cristina Alvarez López in conversation; John Berger event; Lovers in Time screening; Korean essay film double-bill

CINEPHILIA screenings and exhibition at Peltz Gallery

PITTSBURGH lecture with Adam Lowenstein on Horror

FESTIVAL events with London Film Festival, Korean Film Festival, Irish Film Festival London, and Nordic Film Festival

Collaborations with LUX Artists’ Moving Image, DOGWOOF Documentary Distribution, and Faith Matters

Regular ANIMATION, SCI/FILM, and GUILT GROUP strands, plus the CHILDREN’S FILM CLUB

Our events are open to all and most of them are free. They all take place at Birkbeck Cinema, 43 Gordon Square, WC1H 0PD.

Looking forward to seeing you there!

On behalf of BIRKBECK INSTITUTE FOR THE MOVING IMAGE

Michael Temple, Director, and Matthew Barrington, Manager.

Follow BIMI on Twitter: https://twitter.com/Birkbeck_BIMI

Or on Facebook: http://tinyurl.com/jf9jhcg

Sign up to our Newsletter: bimi@bbk.ac.uk

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Vacancy – Three BIMI Internships: deadline 2nd Sept 16

ANNOUNCEMENT: PAID INTERNSHIP OPPORTUNITY WITH THE BIRKBECK INSTITUTE FOR THE MOVING IMAGE

Birkbeck Institute for the Moving Image (BIMI) is a response to the growing interest in film and the moving image across the College. Through public events and academic research initiatives, BIMI addresses a wide variety of contemporary issues, particularly those relevant to its interdisciplinary structure.  Working closely with the Birkbeck Cinema, BIMI programmes public screenings and special seasons, making use of 35 mm film in addition to the Cinema’s high quality DVD projection. We run a busy calendar of events from research seminars to film screenings.

We wish to appoint three interns for next the academic year to work closely with BIMI academic staff and the BIMI administrator. In particular, the intern would be involved in:

  • The organisation, promotion and hosting of academic and cultural events, symposia, workshops, screenings and master classes, including the annual BIMI/University of Pittsburgh Lecture and all other collaborative events.
  • To assist with the organisation and promotion of the Birkbeck Essay Film Festival
  • To coordinate documentation and recording of events, audience surveys and follow up, social media practices and development, to participate in and contribute to BIMI Steering Group meetings and liaise across the Schools and College on behalf of BIMI.
  • To assist with the organisation and promotion of the third annual Birkbeck Essay Film Festival

We welcome applications from current Birkbeck students with a variety of interests and expertise but ask that applicants are able to demonstrate a passion for the moving image and screen culture.

There are three positions available split across the three terms. For the winter 2016 and summer 2017 terms the successful candidate will work 40 hours per term, or one day a week. In the spring the role requires 80 hours per term, or two days a week. The exact working days can be discussed but we require our intern to work on the night of each event which tends to fall on a Friday or Saturday. Please note that a typical shift will last 4 hours. Please note that the successful candidate will be paid £16.51 per hour.

Application deadline: 10.00am Friday September 2nd

To apply please send a CV and statement of interest to bimi@bbk.ac.uk.

Applicant Requirements: Applicant must be a current Birkbeck student (MA/MPhil/PhD) in either the Schools of Law, SSHP, BEI, Arts or Science.

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BIMI – Call for Proposals for 16-17 film programme – Deadline 17 June 2016

Call for proposals: BIMI programme 2016-17

BIMI events proposal form 2016-17

Birkbeck Institute for the Moving Image (BIMI) is currently planning its programme of events for 2016-17.

We welcome proposals from researchers and students working in any discipline or field across the Schools of Arts, Law, SSHP, and Science.

We are very happy to work in collaboration with research centres and institutes at Birkbeck or at other institutions.

All our events take place in the Birkbeck Cinema, typically on Friday evenings 6-9pm and Saturdays 10-5pm.

We can show films in 16mm and 35mm, as well as a variety of digital formats.

We are especially keen to foreground film and other moving image material that is rarely screened in public.

If you would like to propose an idea for an event, please use the attached form and send it to bimi@bbk.ac.uk – the deadline for submission is Friday 17 June.

The BIMI Steering Group will make a selection of proposals by the end of the summer term, Friday 1 July.

Looking forward to hearing about your ideas.

Michael Temple, Director, Birkbeck Institute for the Moving Image, and Essay Film Festival

Matthew Barrington, interim BIMI Manager

Sign up to our newsletter: bimi@bbk.ac.uk

Twitter: https://twitter.com/Birkbeck_BIMI

Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/Birkbeck-Institute-for-the-Moving-Image-542278625939273/

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BIMI Summer 2016 Programme

The summer programme of Birkbeck Institute for the Moving Image is now available here: http://www.bbk.ac.uk/arts/research/birkbeck-institute-for-the-moving-image/events

BIMI events are free and open to all, and take place at Birkbeck Cinema, 43 Gordon Square, WC1H 0PD.

Highlights include

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CILAVS Seminar Series talk: ‘Memory as Montage: The Visual Archive of the Spanish Civil War’, Tuesday 9 February 2016

You are warmly invited to the next Seminar Series talk organised by the Centre for Iberian and Latin American Visual Studies (CILAVS)

Professor Sebastiaan Faber (Oberlin College)

Memory as Montage:
The Visual Archive of the Spanish Civil War

Tuesday 9 February 2016, 6.00pm

Keynes Library, School of Arts
Birkbeck, University of London
London WC1H 0PD

http://www.bbk.ac.uk/cilavs/events/

Images were central to the story of the Spanish Civil War and continue to be central in its memory today. After all, the war in Spain was the first major armed conflict to be covered by the modern visual media, equipped with newly portable photo and film cameras. Telling this visual story was not a mere matter of shooting films and photographs, however; it was also one of cutting and pasting. The photomontage, whose use had spread rapidly since the 1920s, became a crucial tool not just for propaganda posters but in journalism as well. And yet the centrality of montage as a tool for truth-telling has not been sufficiently acknowledged. A treasure hunt through the visual archive of the Spanish Civil War yields some surprising finds that place long-standing debates about the historical memory of the conflict in a new light.

Sebastiaan Faber is Professor of Hispanic Studies at Oberlin College and visiting researcher at the Radboud University in Nijmegen. He has published widely on Spanish and Latin American literature and culture. He is the author of Exile and Cultural Hegemony: Spanish Intellectuals in Mexico, 1939-1975 (Vanderbilt, 2002) and Anglo-American Hispanists and the Spanish Civil War: Hispanophilia, Commitment, and Discipline (Palgrave, 2008), and has co-edited Contra el olvido. El exilio expañol en Estados Unidos (U de Alcalá, 2009). From 2010 till 2015 he served as the Chair of the Abraham Lincoln Brigade Archives (ALBA), whose quarterly journal The Volunteer he co-edits.

A drinks reception will follow.

All welcome, no booking is required

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BIMI Spring Term 2016 Programme Announced

The 2016 Spring programme for Birkbeck Institute for the Moving Image has been announced: http://www.bbk.ac.uk/arts/research/birkbeck-institute-for-the-moving-image/events

Highlights include:

  • Mike Taanila-Erkki Kurenniemi/“The Future Is Not What It Used to Be” in collaboration with LUX and MIT Press
  • Essay Film Festival preludes: Sue Clayton/“The Song of the Shirt”; Vincent Dieutre/“Orlando Ferito”; Basil Wright/Harun Farocki double-bill; Filippos Koutsaftis/“Mourning Rock”
  • Jean-Luc Godard: Out-takes from a Retrospective
  • Veronica Pravadelli book launch/ “Classic Hollywood. Life Styles and Film Styles 1930-1960”

Plus: regular Guilt Group and Sci/Film events, and Children’s Film Club

And on the horizon: the second BIMI Essay Film Festival in collaboration with the ICA, 17-24 March – programme to be published shortly.

Looking forward to seeing you at Birkbeck Cinema, 43 Gordon Square, WC1H 0PD.

Follow us on Twitter: @Birkbeck_BIMI

Contact: bimi@bbk.ac.uk

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