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Point of View (NYU C&M Vol. 2)
Filmmaker Name:
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Multiple Filmmakers
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Film Length:
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97 min
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Film Year:
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1998-2017
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Duration:
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91-119 min
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Decade:
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2010s
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Series:
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NYU Culture & Media series
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Color:
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color / b&w
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Region:
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North America
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Subject:
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Methods and Practices
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Point of View: First Person to Observational explores different methodologies in ethnographic documentary filmmaking. In each short film, the filmmaker establishes a unique point of view, and thus entry point for the audience, as observer of their own or others' lives. All reveal the importance of observation - of the physical spaces and of their characters' interactions - for engaging audiences in otherwise inaccessible spaces and intimate conversations.
Stories range from a young filmmaker's new appreciation of his mother in his attempt to grow up, that offer a glimpse into a suburban white, economically privileged community; a woman's reflections on her recovery from a breakdown after experiencing an attempted coup in Turkey; a humorous, keen observation of a couple negotiating their newlywed portraits with a lively photographer in a Chinese wedding photography shop; observations of Eastern European women telling stories as they make dumplings in the basement of a Ukranian church; and a filmmaker's encounters with the workers who create manhole covers that, upon their completion, travel from India to the streets of New York.
Films:
Cast in India (Natasha Raheja, 26 min, 2014)
Iconic and ubiquitous, approximately 300,000 manhole covers dot the streets of New York City. This observational documentary takes the viewer behind-the-scenes, to Howrah, India, where skilled workers heat, weld, melt, and mold iron into manhole cover castings. Cast in India gives life to the men, the processes, and the transnational journey behind these everyday objects.
My Mom's Name is Jean (Myles Jewell, 27 min, 2008)
New York City based filmmaker Myles Jewell still relies on his Boston-based mom to complete tasks he is perfectly capable of, such as making dentist appointments and buying new underwear. In an effort to shed his adolescence, Myles moves home for thirty days and calls his mom by her first name. Combining first person narration and observational camera, the film offers a unique approach to the coming-of-age story.
The Bride Who Wouldn't Smile (Camilla Nielsson, 8 min, 1998)
At Nancy's Wedding Center in Chinatown, New York, Nancy Ma and the wedding photographer, Mr. Ma, work to recreate big-screen beauty and glamour for their customers. Through close attention to the interactions between a young Vietnamese couple and the studio owners, and to the material objects around the studio, this short observational film captures the tensions inevitably encountered in the pursuit of the ideal photo.
The Ladies (Tyler Zoanni, 14 min, 2015)
For 50 years, a group of Ukrainian women has gathered in New York's East Village to make dumplings for their church. This observational short offers an evocative portrait of 'the ladies' and the work, faith, gossip, and humor that brings them together.
Back to Me (Zeynep Sertbulut, 22 min, 2017)
In the summer of 2016, an ISIS airport bombing and a military coup in Turkish filmmaker Zeynep Sertbulut's home country set her world off axis. With the camera rolling, she begins her journey down the path of understanding the psychic toll and the process of recovery. Back to Me documents the many stages of recovery from a traumatic event, while exploring identity and change in the midst of global conflict. The film tackles difficult subjects: How do you convey a traumatic event, and how do you evoke a subject's ever-changing internal states?
DVD Produced by: Cheryl Furjanic and Pegi Vail
NYU Culture & Media Series, Volume 2: Point of View
Featured Filmmakers
Myles Jewell Camilla Nielsson Natasha Raheja Zeynep Sertbulut Tyler Zoanni
Series produced by
Cheryl Furjanic and Pegi Vail
NYU Program in Culture & Media Director
Faye Ginsburg
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