FM400 - Independent Film, Filmmaking, and the Sundance Film Festival
Upper-level intensive seminar course engages film theory, history, and practice through the lens of the Sundance Film Festival. A week of intensive screening and discussion at Sundance inspires further critical and creative work on campus, with an emphasis on collaborative practices.
Prerequisite: consent of instructor.
1 unit — Nelson
Previously Featured Offering
Independent Film, Filmmaking, and the Sundance Film Festival investigates film theory, history, and practice through the lens of the Sundance Film Festival. Students will engage in a week-long trip to the Sundance Film Festival in order to inspire critical and creative work on campus.
The premier festival for independent cinema in the U.S., the Sundance Film Festival has launched the careers of many contemporary auteurs, including the Coen Brothers, David O. Russell, Wes Anderson, P.T. Anderson, Quentin Tarantino, and Steven Soderbergh. This course provides the opportunity for advanced film students to hone their own creative and critical visions by viewing and discussing a wide variety of world premiere films, as well as by attending talks by filmmakers, businesspeople, scholars, and critics in the vibrant environment of Sundance. These interactions will be grounded in and stimulate further study in film history, criticism, and practice on campus. The course will explicitly privilege the connection between theory and practice and will help build collaborative relationships among students.
Offerings
Term | Block | Title | Instructor | Location | Student Limit/Available | Updated |
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Spring 2025 | Block 5 | Independent Film, Filmmaking, and the Sundance Film Festival | Dylan Nelson | TBA | 16 / 16 | 11/21/2024 |
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Last updated: 11/21/2024