Daniel Singleton
Daniel Singleton
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Digital Cinema part 2
Digital Cinema part 2
Переглядів: 193

Відео

What Is Digital Cinema? (part 1 of 2)
Переглядів 2,6 тис.3 роки тому
forthcoming...
Sound & Across the Universe
Переглядів 1074 роки тому
00:01 intro/brief history of film sound 09:00 reviewing vocabulary terms from B/T textbook 19:00 overview of Across the Universe 29:00 analyzing film sound 45:00 outro
Editing in Egoyan's Adoration
Переглядів 1884 роки тому
00:01 intro/What is continuity editing? 16:20 Why do some filmmakers disrupt continuity? 32:30 Who are Atom Egoyan and Arsinee Khanjian? 46:34 What are the main themes of Adoration? 57:20 How does the plot/story distinction apply to Adoration? 1:10:30 Close reading the opening scene
Acting in Do The Right Thing
Переглядів 1964 роки тому
Acting in Do The Right Thing
Cinematography & Raise the Red Lantern
Переглядів 9934 роки тому
This video provides an overview of Bordwell and Thompson's textbook chapter about cinematography and applies some key terms/principles to Zhang Yimou's Raise the Red Lantern. 00:01 Who is Zhang Yimou? 07:23 What are the photographic elements of cinematography? 09:40 What are tonalities, exposures, and filters? 43:45 What are focal lengths and depths of field? 57:50 What are some common elements...
Mise-En-Scene in Citizen Kane and The Fall
Переглядів 3114 роки тому
An introductory lecture about mise-en-scene in CITIZEN KANE (1941) and THE FALL (2008) for CINE 1601 at the University of Iowa. 00:01 recap distinction between story and plot 14:30 intro to mise-en-scene 24:45 setting 49:48 props, costumes, and makeup 1:04:25 lighting and staging 1:17:15 reflection questions
What Is Film Form?/Are Story and Plot the Same Thing?
Переглядів 1,2 тис.4 роки тому
This video lecture defines film form and explains why it matters. It also introduces core vocabulary for understanding film narration as well as analysis of the narrative structure of Orson Welles' Citizen Kane.
Nolan's Insomnia: An Underrated Remake
Переглядів 3,3 тис.4 роки тому
A review of Christopher Nolan's third film, INSOMNIA (2002), to coincide with the upcoming release of TENET (2020). The video discusses the film's status as a remake of the Norwegian INSOMNIA (1997), the performances by Al Pacino and Robin Williams, and its tone/style. Films referenced (in order of their appearance): TENET (2020) MEMENTO (2000) BATMAN BEGINS (2005) INTERSTELLAR (2014) INSOMNIA ...
How Have Digital Technologies Changed the Movies?
Переглядів 1604 роки тому
A short survey of how digital technologies have changed how movies are made and seen.
AMERICAN POP (1980) review
Переглядів 6 тис.4 роки тому
This video essay discusses how Ralph Bakshi's AMERICAN POP (1980) synthesizes different styles of animation and music.
How is JUNO (2007) the archetypal "Indiewood" film?
Переглядів 2944 роки тому
This video discusses how "Indiewood" studios such as Fox Searchlight Pictures, Paramount Vintage, and Sony Pictures Classics have redefined American independent cinema. It includes an extended discussion of Diablo Cody and Jason Reitman's film JUNO Timecodes 00:01 How did Indiewood studio system start? 02:10 How did Indiewood change how movies look and feel? 07:30 What are five common stylistic...
How Do Documentaries (like Werner Herzog's GRIZZLY MAN) Tell Stories?
Переглядів 8144 роки тому
This video explores how documentary filmmakers use basic elements of film form to make arguments and tell stories about the world around them. Much of the video concentrates on Werner Herzog's GRIZZLY MAN (2005). Timecodes: 00:01 What are documentaries? 05:10 How do documentaries represent reality? 16:08 What are some common elements of documentary style? 21:38 Who is Werner Herzog? What are so...
How did Sundance and Miramax change American independent cinema?
Переглядів 5624 роки тому
This video covers the impact of Steven Soderbergh's SEX, LIES, & VIDEOTAPE, the origins and evolution of the Sundance Film Festival, and the influence of Miramax Films on American independent cinema during the 1990s. Timecodes 00:01 independent American cinema before Sundance & Miramax 05:50 Soderbergh's SEX, LIES, & VIDEOTAPE 21:48 Sundance Film Festival 31:41 Miramax in the 1980s 37:59 Mirama...
Dr. Dan and Dr. Andy Owens Talk Vampires!
Переглядів 1314 роки тому
We talk about NEAR DARK and A GIRL WALKS HOME ALONE AT NIGHT. How do the Hollywood genre and transnational art cinema traditions deal with bloodsuckers? Timecodes 00:01 NEAR DARK 20:00 A GIRL WALKS HOME ALONE AT NIGHT
What Is Transnational Art Cinema?
Переглядів 1,1 тис.4 роки тому
What Is Transnational Art Cinema?
What Are Film Genres and Genre Films?
Переглядів 6 тис.4 роки тому
What Are Film Genres and Genre Films?
Genre Mixing in NEAR DARK (1987)
Переглядів 3244 роки тому
Genre Mixing in NEAR DARK (1987)
Casino Royale as Classical Hollywood Cinema
Переглядів 1,6 тис.4 роки тому
Casino Royale as Classical Hollywood Cinema
The Searchers: John Wayne returns to his family's homestead.
Переглядів 214 тис.12 років тому
The Searchers: John Wayne returns to his family's homestead.

КОМЕНТАРІ

  • @LaurenceOConnor-fg4dk
    @LaurenceOConnor-fg4dk День тому

    David Lean, director of "Lawrence of Arabia" was inspired, influenced by John Ford's "The Searchers".

  • @amafirenze-vi1uh
    @amafirenze-vi1uh Місяць тому

    I connect this film with the other great western "Jeremiah Johnson"both are about men whose family was destroyed by natives and their vendetta against them.

  • @larry1824
    @larry1824 2 місяці тому

    Don't let him in there Mose it won't do him any good

  • @erasmoxavierdacosta4962
    @erasmoxavierdacosta4962 3 місяці тому

    Este filme é fantástico.

  • @janh3384
    @janh3384 3 місяці тому

    Warum zeig man den schwarzen Falke nicht in Spielfilmlänge...was soll das...und den Western gibt es auch in Deutsch...man fùhlt sich verarscht😮

  • @vinnart
    @vinnart 3 місяці тому

    I love this movie, and think it is very under-rated. Watch it for yourself to judge. It's a good story.

  • @stevedemarest276
    @stevedemarest276 3 місяці тому

    Ethan slinging the rifle scabbard away is burned in my brain forever.

  • @pushpindermann4139
    @pushpindermann4139 3 місяці тому

    How you dealt with dear horse in The Godfather 1...

  • @richboyd8635
    @richboyd8635 3 місяці тому

    The beautiful Monument Valley area appeared so often in John Wayne movies.

  • @Twag-yh8xc
    @Twag-yh8xc 3 місяці тому

    Next time you watch this movie, look how John Ford uses doorways at various times to focus and frame the action. Masterful. That's why he is John Ford, and I'm not.

  • @BobSmith-dk8nw
    @BobSmith-dk8nw 3 місяці тому

    *_THIS_* is what happened. All the bull shit sob stories about the poor innocent little Indians abused by the Whites - are just that - bull shit. The Indians were a *_Warrior Culture_* . You can't be a Warrior if you don't have someone to fight. The Young Men would gather up a War Party and go off looking for trouble. They were opportunists. They'd see a situation and ask - _"Can we take them?"_ If the answer was - no - or yes but we'll take casualties - they'd go elsewhere. If the answer was yes - they'd attack. They'd steal the horses, kill the men, rape the women, then kidnap any women or children they wanted and kill the rest. The kidnapped children would be raised as their own - the wombs of the captured women would be put to work making babies for their tribe instead of their enemy's. "By Right of Capture" was an Indian justification for what they did. What it meant - was that if I could take your animals, your wife, your children and your life - and you couldn't stop me - then they were mine - By Right of Capture. The Indians had been doing this - _TO EACH OTHER_ for hundreds if not thousands of years. When the Whites showed up - they were not treated any differently. Because of that - these people *_HATED_* each other. The hatred John Wayne is showing for the Indians here - is just like it really was. Nelson Miles - an Army officer trying to bring peace to the plains - had some Lakota Chiefs come to his camp to discuss diplomacy. His Crow Scouts - whose lands the Cheyenne and Lakota had taken - saw these Lakota Chiefs - and killed them. There wee TWICE as many Whites as Indians killed during the American Indian Wars. To put a stop to this - the Indians were restricted to Reservations. Good, fair minded people with the Indians best interests at heart - tried to destroy their horrific culture based on Rape, Theft and Murder. The Indians rejected them and modern shit heads condemned these people. The result was that these Indians lived in poverty - until they had oil or casinos on their lands. Black Kettle summed it up best - saying something like _"There are Good Indians and Good White People. There are Bad Indians and Bad White People. The Bad People keep getting the Good People killed."_ An Indian War Party attacked an Army Logistics Vehicle. On their way home the War Party went through Black Kettles Village. Tracking the War Party - the 7th Cavalry came to Black Kettles Village - thought it was the one the War Party had come from - and attacked it. Black Kettle was killed. I've always wondered if that War Party didn't knowingly lead the people who were tracking them to Black Kettles Village - so they would attack it and not their own. If you look at History, The Greeks, The Romans, The Huns, The Mongols and the Arabs each has their own little ways of killing each other. Why would it be any different here? Why do Human Beings Kill Each Other? Because they can. .

  • @beckypeters5449
    @beckypeters5449 4 місяці тому

    Didn't know this movie was based on a true story

  • @ThomasHoag-k7d
    @ThomasHoag-k7d 4 місяці тому

    This film explored the complexity of human beings and how they live. A masterpiece.

  • @lesliechapman5919
    @lesliechapman5919 4 місяці тому

    GREAT MOVIE

  • @erroleabrown4317
    @erroleabrown4317 4 місяці тому

    Why were they still making westerns that blackened the Indians name in 1970ish?? when all this was over 100\200 years ago, and one indian woman said it was way back in 1600, she said the indian people were almost wiped out then. I don't believe that the Indians were savages because of all the people from other countries that American people have wiped off the face of the earth. But what was going on with those horrible movies??

    • @gachapinCUEVA
      @gachapinCUEVA 26 днів тому

      The Comanche were just as brutal in real life. They were a war tribe that showed no mercy to their enemies, even downright cruelty. The peaceful picture of natives living in harmony is a false narrative. Even before westward expansion, the tribes engaged in bloody conflicts with themselves, with some groups taking in slaves to trade. The introduction of horses by the Spanish made the native war cultures all the more dangerous. This movie shows the harshness of the American West, which had always been romanticized.

  • @jamestkirk3126
    @jamestkirk3126 4 місяці тому

    The brilliant Max Steiner music really shines in this scene.

  • @oswaldonascimento6195
    @oswaldonascimento6195 4 місяці тому

    Melhor faroeste de todos os tempos. Assisti a primeira vez em preto e branco, quando tinha uns 10 anos de idade. Maravilhoso.

  • @jimmymundane1084
    @jimmymundane1084 4 місяці тому

    A respected film...but what the heck were they expecting to ranch or farm in that desert? The Commanche probably ran them out for being unsensable.

  • @xenophonBC
    @xenophonBC 6 місяців тому

    Don’t think you got it.

  • @erikdog2430
    @erikdog2430 6 місяців тому

    1:58 "don't let im look in there Mose, it won't do im any good"...right words there!...(along with other words/scences in this film....) great picture

  • @12classics39
    @12classics39 7 місяців тому

    0:34 that music. *That music.*

  • @shredd5705
    @shredd5705 7 місяців тому

    Way better than the original. I have seen both. Way WAY better. I hate it how remakes always get overlooked, no matter how good they are. Besides, it's not even close to same plotline, maybe 50% is the same. Much better acting in this version, better plot, better music, better everything.

  • @LeslieHill-g9r
    @LeslieHill-g9r 7 місяців тому

    I watch it all the time best film for me shane

  • @gc3k
    @gc3k 7 місяців тому

    Isn't Nolan's ending similar to the ending of The Dark Knight

  • @jamestherry8351
    @jamestherry8351 9 місяців тому

    The way Ethan whips the buckskin sheath from his rifle is poetic. He doesn't just pull it off the rifle, he throws it away, as if summoning all the wrath in the world, the wrath that will drive him not to rescue the girl, but to kill every Comanche he possibly can

  • @dougbrowne9890
    @dougbrowne9890 9 місяців тому

    How can anyone say that Ethan was racist? He saw what Comanche did to settlers before the Civil War and then sees what they did to his family in this scene. Any man worth his salt would want vengeance just as bad as he did. To Ethan, the Comanche were the enemy, just as Union soldiers were.

  • @yaakov2342
    @yaakov2342 9 місяців тому

    One of John Wayne's most powerful films. Another one in which he was robbed of the Oscar.

  • @ArmandoAyalaNoEsUnaParodia
    @ArmandoAyalaNoEsUnaParodia 10 місяців тому

    Just watched the original, before Nolan's seemed ok, now it just sucks

  • @larry1824
    @larry1824 11 місяців тому

    Dukes finest moment on screen

  • @rossmartenak5517
    @rossmartenak5517 11 місяців тому

    Anyone who changes their birth name, other than when getting married, is ashamed of their Father. Giving up one's heritage for the shallowness & greed of 'Hollywood' or the entertainment world in general, shows a lack of character with a desire to obtain perceived greater recognition & monetary gain. If everyone would just roll up their sleeves and get a REAL job, everyone's lives would be much easier. For example in this movie alone, 15 out of the 40 (38%) of the main characters sold-out their names to deceitful agents, managers, or studios: So-called "John Wayne" was born Marion Robert Morrison. So-called "Jeffrey Hunter" was born Henry Herman McKinnies Jr. So-called "Natalie Wood" was born Natalie Zacharenko. So- called "Patrick Wayne" was born Patrick John Morrison. So-called "Vera June Miles" was born Vera June Ralston. So-called "Lana Wood" was born Svetlana Lisa Gordon. So-called "Henry Brandon was born Heinrich von Kleinbach. So- called "Ken Curtis" was born Curtis Wain Gates. So-called "Olive Carey" was born Olive Fuller Golden. So-called "John Qualen" was born Johan Mandt Kvalen. So-called "Beulah Donohue" was born Beulah Archuletta. So-called "Antonio Moreno was born Antonio Garrido Monteagudo So-called "William Steele" was born William Anton Gittinger. So-called "Chief Thundercloud" was born Victor Daniels. So-called "Gertrude Astor was born Gertrude Irene Eyster.

  • @strawberryjones7193
    @strawberryjones7193 Рік тому

    the way John Wayne droops in the doorway.. God that was powerful..

  • @harleymichael83
    @harleymichael83 Рік тому

    Incredible film. None of it would have played out if Dormer didn't care about preserving Ellie's integrity as a cop when he warned her to look at everything before filing the report on Hap's shooting. Because she looked up to Dormer she knew about his backup Walther 9mm. Ive watched this movie hundreds of times and I dont know if he meant to kill Hap or not. If it was Nolan's intention to make us as confused as Dormer he did a really good job of it.

    • @shredd5705
      @shredd5705 7 місяців тому

      He clearly didn't mean to kill Hap. It was an accident.

  • @josephcallahan1664
    @josephcallahan1664 Рік тому

    Tenet was terrible; too bad it is too late to warn you. Skarsgård's cop is more complicated than you let on.

  • @marysanchez4789
    @marysanchez4789 Рік тому

    LOL Benny Hill over the log chase😂🙏. Great review!

  • @yababl
    @yababl Рік тому

    Why do you pronounce "conscience" as if it were "conscious"? [See 8:26 & 9:14.] Fantastic essay, btw. I myself had overlooked the metaphor of light for the witnessing sight of God.

  • @Stargazer771
    @Stargazer771 Рік тому

    What made this so brilliant and chilling was that we didn’t see the bodies but we could tell the horror that was done to them from Wayne’s reaction and inferences.

    • @12classics39
      @12classics39 7 місяців тому

      Sadly a lost art today. Modern films must show every act and result of violence in explicit detail.

  • @hexahexametermeter
    @hexahexametermeter Рік тому

    Original was so much better.

  • @michellejones2416
    @michellejones2416 Рік тому

    I actually saw American Pop at the theater in 1981. I really like it and re- watch it at least once a year. Of course it is dated but, I still like it. Love the soundtrack. Thanks for sharing ❤.

  • @cumhurakin1281
    @cumhurakin1281 Рік тому

    Sfg

  • @Jomartproducts
    @Jomartproducts Рік тому

    Martin was a world class runner. Showed up only seconds after the horses.

    • @stevem2323
      @stevem2323 6 місяців тому

      He was already there not far from the house, and they stopped on that hill too before going down.

    • @Jomartproducts
      @Jomartproducts 6 місяців тому

      ​@@stevem2323then why did Martin ask Mose to ride double?

    • @stevem2323
      @stevem2323 6 місяців тому

      @@Jomartproducts To get there sooner??? Wtf dude 🤦

  • @FRANKTHRING1
    @FRANKTHRING1 Рік тому

    Gets me by the throat every time, a brief hymn to the hundreds, nay thousands, of Texans who died in Comanche raids identical to this. The rights and wrongs of U.S. policy towards the Indians hardly matter, the result was constant raiding by the warriors, death for settlers and also the taking of hostages by the hundred.

  • @larry1824
    @larry1824 Рік тому

    Don't let him go in there mose it won't do him any good..........

  • @briansheehan5256
    @briansheehan5256 Рік тому

    Noyuuka raiders would've killed the dog too. They and the Penatekas were absolutely brutal. Ethan had enough of a heart to not let Martin see Martha's violated, scalped corpse...

    • @stevem2323
      @stevem2323 6 місяців тому

      Maybe they didn't had time to be running after a dog.

  • @armadillo1231
    @armadillo1231 Рік тому

    The whiskey soaked, racist, the one and only- Mr. Marion Robert Robinson.

    • @stevem2323
      @stevem2323 6 місяців тому

      Racist? What you doing here leftie loon? Huh?

  • @2210ethan
    @2210ethan Рік тому

    Incredible film. Best western ever made

  • @Pavia1525
    @Pavia1525 Рік тому

    What happened to the dog?

  • @neuvocastezero1838
    @neuvocastezero1838 Рік тому

    The original is great,. This one is very, very, very, very good. I've probably watched it 10 times. Nolan's casting is spot on, and IMO it's one of Pacino's finest performances, and Hilary Swank plays her part to a tee. It's unbelievable that the film is not more popular. The log flume chase is extremely powerful.

  • @glking6208
    @glking6208 Рік тому

    Best actor of all time John Wayne

  • @hakanbektas922
    @hakanbektas922 Рік тому

    Korku kategorisinde değil de polisiye kategorisinde olabilecek bir film

  • @ed209inCA
    @ed209inCA 2 роки тому

    I think you have to take into account how different animation was back in the 1970s and early 80s. Most of the cartoons we saw back then were very much like the Spiderman series or the old Bugs Bunny style of animation. In those days, films like this, Heavy Metal, and The Lord of the Rings were just amazing because of how realistic the characters movements were. 40 years later, we have a much more advanced way of animating films, so rotoscoping looks far more basic in comparison. It's not unlike the way the special effects in the original Star Wars were mind blowing, compared to the stop motion techniques made popular by Ray Harryhausen. When you compare Star Wars to Rogue One though, the superimposed spaceships don't look anywhere as good as they do with modern CGI. I watched American Pop when it premiered in theaters and thought it was great at the time. It hasn't held up well after all these years, but I'll watch it every handful of years because I love music as much as I love GOOD movies. By the way, Disney used rotoscoping for Snow White and some of their other films, but they also had the budget to pay for top notch artists to hand draw/paint beautiful scenery to blend the styles well. American Pop looked like it was made on a much lower budget. Another fun fact: Netflix's series Love, Death, & Robots is essentially another sequel to Heavy Metal (Heavy Metal 2000 was pretty weak, in my opinion). The series is a great example of how far we've come with animation. The episode "Jibaro" is phenomenal today, but let's see what people think about the CGI used in it 20 or 30 years from now.