David Bordwell

David Bordwell

Movies for David Bordwell...

The Gift to Be Simple: Satire and Sympathy in 'The Flavor of Green Tea over Rice'
Title: The Gift to Be Simple: Satire and Sympathy in 'The Flavor of Green Tea over Rice'
Character: Self
Released: August 27, 2019
Type: Movie
David Bordwell, author of Ozu and the Poetics of Cinema, discusses some of the key themes and stylistic qualities that define Yasujiro Ozu's work and The Flavor of Green Tea Over Rice, in this interview for The Criterion Collection.
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Powerful Patterns: David Bordwell on Notorious
Title: Powerful Patterns: David Bordwell on Notorious
Character: Self
Released: January 16, 2019
Type: Movie
An analysis of stylistic and narrative cinematic choices, themes, patterns composing scenes, and shots in Alfred Hitchcock's films, focusing on "Notorious" (1946), that demonstrate his genius as a master craftsman.
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Lighting Up with Hildy Johnson
Title: Lighting Up with Hildy Johnson
Character: Self
Released: January 10, 2017
Type: Movie
In this 25-minute video essay, film scholar David Bordwell, co-author of "Film Art: An Introduction", conducts an analysis of Howard Hawks's "His Girl Friday" (1940), which he believes to be the apotheosis of classical Hollywood storytelling. Bordwell discusses the film's history and the status of Howard Hawks as an auteur before delving into a detailed analysis of various aspects of the film's narrative, dialogue, use of props, editing, and staging.
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Cinema Futures
Title: Cinema Futures
Character: Self
Released: September 2, 2016
Type: Movie
The “digital revolution” reached the cinema late and was chiefly styled as a technological advancement. Today, in an era where analog celluloid strips are disappearing, and given the diversity of digital moving picture formats, there is much more at stake: Are the world’s film archives on the brink of a dark age? Are we facing the massive loss of collective audiovisual memory? Is film dying, or just changing? CINEMA FUTURES travels to international locations and, together with renowned filmmakers, museum curators, historians and engineers, dramatizes the future of film and the cinema in the age of digital moving pictures.