FTVMS 307

Hollywood and its Others


Please note: this is archived course information from 2016 for FTVMS 307.

Description

This course investigates the historical significance of Hollywood in an international context. It begins by examining the particular form of popular cinema associated with Hollywood and the industrial structures and economic organisation that helped American cinema to become dominant both at home and internationally. The second section of the course explores Hollywood’s historical relationship to European cinema, with a focus on the role of European immigrants in the development of Hollywood, American cinema’s fascination with Europe as a place, and the aesthetic influences that have occurred back and forward across the Atlantic. The third section focuses on Hollywood’s relationship to Asia, from its influence on the development of cinema in China, through the Americanremaking of Asian films to the Asian film industry’s response to the Hollywood’s domination. The course concludes by considering the new global moving image economy dominated by Hollywood.

Students who have completed the courseare expected to

  • Better understand the conceptual and theoretical elements of Film Studies
  • Be more alert to the aesthetic elements that form the film language
  • Be better informed about the evolution of Hollywood as industry and mass medium
  • Be more aware of the world cinema’s ‘dialogues’ with Hollywood
  • Be more capable of using databases to support independent research on set topics
  • Have the ability to apply information to develop a distinctive critical voice

Availability 2016

Semester 2

Lecturer(s)

Coordinator(s) Associate Professor Misha Kavka

Points

FTVMS 307: 15 points

Prerequisites

30 points from FTVMS 201-214, 216-239, MĀORI 271

Restrictions

FTVMS 202