Guest post by Julie Le Hegarat. The film Speak Up (Ouvrir la voix in French) opens with women talking about the event that first made them realize they were Black. These shared Fanon-like events set the tone for the rest of the film: what does it mean to be a Black woman in countries like… Read more »
Entries by Establishing Shot
Bombshell: A Study in Workplace Harassment
Guest post by Timothy L. Fort, PhD, JD, Eveleigh Professor of Business Ethics and Professor of Business Law & Ethics at the Kelley School of Business at Indiana University. Given the derecho of events over the past six years, watching the cinematic depiction of the sexual harassment lawsuits against Roger Ailes and others at Fox… Read more »
The Face of the Enemy: The Power of the Film And Then They Came for Us
Guest post by Katelyn Wo. The documentary And Then They Came for Us recounts the testimonies of some of the 120,000 Japanese Americans who were incarcerated in prison camps during World War II after President Franklin D. Roosevelt signed Executive Order 9066 in 1942, ordering all Americans who held at least 1/16 Japanese heritage to… Read more »
Meet Your IU Cinema Staff: B. Elena Grassia
Get to know the people behind your favorite university cinema in our new blog series, “Meet Your IU Cinema Staff.” Using the format of our exclusive filmmaker interviews — all of which can be found on our YouTube channel — we’ve crafted a questionnaire for our staff to help introduce them to you, our audience. For… Read more »
Not-Quite Midnights presents: New York Ninja (2021)
In 1984, Taiwanese actor and martial artist John Liu directed and starred in his only American production, an action comedy shot on location called New York Ninja. Once filming was completed, however, the project was dropped with the footage abandoned in a film lab and many other materials missing. It seemed that the world would… Read more »
Paulin Vieyra: An African Cinema Pioneer and So Much More
One of the most important figures in African film, Paulin Soumanou Vieyra is a name that deserves to be better known. After directing the first substantial film by a French-speaking sub-Saharan African, Afrique sur Seine, in 1955, Vieyra went on to become the first African admitted to study at the Institut des hautes études cinématographiques… Read more »