20180913_Complit_Screening_and_panel_discussion_of_Killer_of_Sheep

Location

Rayson Huang Theatre
Rayson Huang Theatre, Main Campus, HKU

More Info

Registration

Date

Sep 13 2018

Time

6:30 pm - 9:30 pm

Department of Comparative Literature

Black in Black and White

African American Independent Filmmaking – History, Politics, and Aesthetics

Screening and panel discussion of Killer of Sheep (1977)

 

Date: September 13, 2018 (Thursday), 6:30pm-9:30 pm

Venue: Rayson Huang Theatre, HKU

 

Screening information of Killer of Sheep

1977 | USA | 80′

Director: Charles Burnett

Screenplay: Charles Burnett

Cinematography: Charles Burnett

Cast: Henry G. Sanders, Kaycee Moore, Charles Bracy

In English with English subtitles

 

Awards:  FIPRESCI Prize at the Berlin International Film Festival, 1981.  National Film Registry, Library of Congress, 1990.   100 Essential Films, National Society of Film Critics, 2002.  Charles Burnett, Honorary Award at the 2017 Governors Awards, Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences

 

Panel Discussion

Opening Remarks: Derek Collins (Dean, Faculty of Arts, HKU)

Moderator:  Gina Marchetti (Comparative Literature, HKU)

Panelists:  Sam Ho (Film critic and curator)

Keith B. Richburg (Journalism & Media Studies Centre, HKU)

Jason Petrulis (Department of History, HKU)

Respondent: Tim Gruenewald (American Studies, HKU)

 

Part of what Clyde Taylor termed the “L.A. Rebellion” in American cinema, Charles Burnett’s Killer of Sheep, along with features by his peers in the UCLA MFA program, including Julie Dash, Billy Woodberry, and Haile Gerima, brought African American lives to the screen in unprecedented ways.  Killer of Sheep, in particular, uses black-and-white cinematography to make the quotidian lives of working class Watts residents luminous and worthy of serious contemplation.  Compared favorably to the work of Italian neorealist filmmakers such as Roberto Roselllini and Vittorio De Sica, Burnett’s Killer of Sheep evinces the same balance between the grittiness of the impoverished lives of its characters and the arresting beauty of the images on screen.

Drawing on their expertise in film, American studies, and media history, a distinguished panel of experts comments on this internationally celebrated film in the context of motion picture history, the Civil Rights Movement, African American filmmaking, and the depiction of gender, race,  and working class life in American independent cinema.  After the screening and panel discussion, the floor will open for questions from the audience.

Enquires:
lylouis@hku.hk

Registration:
https://goo.gl/forms/D5e6hCRolAJBzd6W2

 

Supported by:

Department of Comparative Literature
American Studies, Modern Languages and Cultures
Committee on Gender Equality and Diversity (CGED)
Journalism and Media Studies Centre

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