A film event: “Give the Devil His Due; or, He’s in Film Too—& What Does He Represent?”

Mar 27th (6-8pm) film class: “Give the Devil His Due; or, He’s in Film Too—& What Does He Represent?” Films: Faust, Angel on My Shoulder, Cabin in the Sky, The Omen

Part of the film studies series:
“If It Moves, It Can Move You”: Opposites in the Cinema! Taught by Ken Kimmelman

This series will show how the art of the cinema, in its technique and meaning, and in all its diversity—from slapstick to spectacle, cinema verité to the fantastic, tragedy to comedy—is a oneness of the permanent opposites in reality:

“All beauty,” stated Eli Siegel, “is a making one of opposites, and the making one of opposites is what we are going after in ourselves.”

Whenever a film is good or beautiful it is because it puts opposites together—rest and motion, light and dark, space and time, nearness and distance, continuity and discontinuity, unity and variety, freedom and order—the same opposites we are trying to make sense of in our lives. The series will study how these opposites are present in the motion picture, from Edwin S. Porter’s The Great Train Robbery of 1903 to the latest cinematic achievement. Short film excerpts will be shown and discussed in each class.











When: Wed., Mar. 27, 2019 at 6:00 pm - 8:00 pm
Where: Aesthetic Realism Foundation
141 Greene St.
212-777-4490
Price: $12
Buy tickets/get more info now
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Mar 27th (6-8pm) film class: “Give the Devil His Due; or, He’s in Film Too—& What Does He Represent?” Films: Faust, Angel on My Shoulder, Cabin in the Sky, The Omen

Part of the film studies series:
“If It Moves, It Can Move You”: Opposites in the Cinema! Taught by Ken Kimmelman

This series will show how the art of the cinema, in its technique and meaning, and in all its diversity—from slapstick to spectacle, cinema verité to the fantastic, tragedy to comedy—is a oneness of the permanent opposites in reality:

“All beauty,” stated Eli Siegel, “is a making one of opposites, and the making one of opposites is what we are going after in ourselves.”

Whenever a film is good or beautiful it is because it puts opposites together—rest and motion, light and dark, space and time, nearness and distance, continuity and discontinuity, unity and variety, freedom and order—the same opposites we are trying to make sense of in our lives. The series will study how these opposites are present in the motion picture, from Edwin S. Porter’s The Great Train Robbery of 1903 to the latest cinematic achievement. Short film excerpts will be shown and discussed in each class.

Buy tickets/get more info now