Archive for July, 2008

Modern Drama: Critical Concepts

Thursday, July 31st, 2008

The Arts Library has added the new 4-volume set, Modern Drama: Critical Concepts (Arts Lib. Reference PN1861.M63 2008), from Routledge. Part of the expensive but useful Critical Concepts series, Modern Drama compiles key essays and articles around general themes [Early Critics and Theorists, General Theory of Modern Drama, New Histories, Actors and Props, Design/Architecture/Image, Philosophy, (Post) Structuralism, and languages].

 The UCLA Library also holds several other Critical Concepts sets from Routledge, including Feminism (ed. Mary Evans), Myth (ed. Robert Segal), Film Theory (ed. Philip Simpson), Hollywood (ed. Thomas Schatz), and Television (ed. Toby Miller).

New Resource: The International Encyclopedia of Communication

Thursday, July 31st, 2008

International Encyclopedia of CommunicationThe Arts Library now has available in print the new 12-volume International Encyclopedia of Communication (Arts Lib. Reference P87.5 I58 2008), from Blackwell Publishing. This encyclopedia includes entries on a wide range of media topics, including anime, Bollywood, computer games, design, global media, and more.

Original cut of Metropolis found

Thursday, July 31st, 2008

In archival news, an original cut of Fritz Lang’s Metropolis has been identified at the Museum of Cinema in Buenos Aires. It will likely take years for a restoration of the footage before this version can be distributed more widely.

New Screenplays

Friday, July 11th, 2008

The Arts Library selectively purchases published screenplays for the circulating collection. See below for a list of our newest acquisitions (please visit the Library Catalog to make sure they are not checked out). These titles are in addition to the large script collection held by Performing Arts Special Collections, which are not currently cataloged separately. To see a list of those titles, please visit the finding aid.

New Screenplays at the Arts Library:

Knocked up : the shooting script / screenplay and introduction by Judd Apatow.
New York : Newmarket Press, c2007.
Arts Library PN1997.2 .K62 2007

Little Miss Sunshine : the shooting script / screenplay and notes by Michael Arndt ; foreword by directors Jonathan Dayton and Valerie Faris.
New York : Newmarket Press, c2007.
Arts Library PN1997.2 .L58 2007

Margot at the wedding : the shooting script / screenplay by Noah Baumbach ; introduction by Patricia Bosworth.
New York : Newmarket Press, c2007.
Arts Library PN1997.2 .M368 2007

Juno : the shooting script / screenplay and introduction by Diablo Cody ; foreword by Jason Reitman.
New York : Newmarket Press, c2007.
Arts Library PN1997.2 .J866 2007

Little children : the shooting script / screenplay by Todd Field & Tom Perrotta ; based on the novel by Tom
Perrotta ; introduction by Tom Perrotta.
New York : Newmarket Press, c2007.
Arts Library PN1997.2 .L575 2007

Michael Clayton : the shooting script : screenplay / by Tony Gilroy ; foreword by William Goldman.
New York : Newmarket Press, c2007.
Arts Library PN1997.2 .M53 2007

The Savages : the shooting script / screenplay and introduction by Tamara Jenkins.
New York : Newmarket Press, c2007.
Arts Library PN1997.2 .S27 2007

Atonement : the shooting script / screenplay by Christopher Hampton ; based on the novel by Ian McEwan ;
introduction by Christopher Hampton.
New York : Newmarket Press, c2007.
Arts Library PN1997.2 .A86 2007

Beowulf : the script book / Neil Gaiman and Roger Avary.
New York : HarperEntertainment, c2007.
Arts Library PN1997.2.B47 G35 2007

Lust, caution : the story, the screenplay, and the making of the film / story by Eileen Chang / screenplay by Wang Hui-Ling and James Schamus ; preface by Ang Lee.
New York : Pantheon Books, c2007.
Arts Library PN1997.2.S4 Z43 2007
and, College Library PN1997.2.S4 Z43 2007

Cinema Journal: Archival News & Professional Notes

Tuesday, July 8th, 2008

Cinema Journal, published by SCMS, isn’t just a source for scholarly articles. In each issue, there are typically two additional items for Archival News and Professional Notes. While the online version of the journal (via Project Muse) is now more regularly publishing these two items, some back issues never included it. You can always find them, however, in the print version of the title.

Hammer Museum Video Library

Tuesday, July 8th, 2008

Do you know about the Hammer Museum Video Library? It’s a useful local resource for video art that is very accessible to UCLA students and faculty for use on site. The list of titles isn’t online, although the website provides contact information to receive one. The UCLA Arts Library also has a folder available at the reference desk with a list of available titles in this collection.

Upcoming events from the UCLA Film & Television Archive

Tuesday, July 8th, 2008

Information and calendar are available here.

UCLA Film & Television Archive and the Fowler Museum present

HIGH NOON FILM SERIES AT THE FOWLER MUSEUM
Wednesday, June 25 – Wednesday, July 23
Splash into summer with a film series celebrating creatures—real and imagined—from the sea. Come for the movies and stay to visit the Fowler’s exhibition, “Mami Wata: Arts for Water Spirits in Africa and Its Diasporas.”

*FREE admission! (no reservations required)

*NOTE: Venue is the Fowler Museum at UCLA, Lenart Auditorium, Room A103B. Info: http://www.fowler.ucla.edu / 310.825-8655.

THE ARCHIVE AT OUTFEST
Friday, July 11 – Saturday, July 19
The Archive is proud to be a part of Outfest: The Los Angeles Gay & Lesbian Film Festival through its partnership in The Outfest Legacy Project, a collaborative effort to collect and preserve queer film and video. Several films screening during this year’s Festival have been restored by the UCLA Film & Television Archive or are part of The Legacy Project collection.

*NOTE: Programs will screen at various venues. Info/tix: http://www.outfest.org / 213.480.7065.

PRESERVATIONIST’S CHOICE: Selected Hits from the Archive’s Festival of Preservation
Friday, July 25 – Wednesday, August 13
For this special summer series, the Archive asked its crack team of preservationists to reprise or update a presentation from one of our past Festivals of Preservation. They came back with an eclectic program of surefire crowd-pleasers—and a few new surprises! Archive preservationists will be on hand each evening to share the telecasts, newsreels, outtakes and films being screened and to discuss their work preserving our shared cultural heritage. So here’s your chance to see some of your favorite Festival of Preservation shows again; or if you missed them the first time around, now’s your chance to see what all the fuss was about!

*NOTE: The Archive’s next Festival of Preservation will be held March-April, 2009.

The Lloyd E. Rigler and Lawrence E. Deutsch Foundation and the UCLA Film & Television Archive present

SEX AND THE SINGLE GIRL: The Escapades of Busby Berkeley
Friday, August 1 – Tuesday, August 12
After directing parades as a lieutenant during WWI, Busby Berkeley returned stateside to work with Florenz Ziegfeld on Broadway. The stage led to films when Eddie Cantor (another Ziegfeld protégé) suggested that Berkeley choreograph the dance routines for Samuel Goldwyn’s saucy Whoopee (1930). Although he began his career with Goldwyn (the pre-Code Cantor vehicles are incredibly racy—who could resist the ditty, “Bend Down, Sister!” sung by a chorine of scantily-clad bakers) Berkeley’s career skyrocketed when he moved to Warner Bros. Conceived during the depths of the Great Depression, films such as 42nd Street (1933) and the Gold Diggers series, offered a salve to moviegoers eager for uplift. Berkeley delivered in ways unforeseen: using his single-camera technique, he careened in and out of the showgirls’ legs but also took time to give each of them a close-up. They were all beautiful, why shouldn’t the audience look at them, he conceded, indeed, why not look at hundreds of them? Thinking primarily of the men in the audience, Berkeley appealed to biographer Martin Rubin’s idea of the “seraglio effect:” by placing women in no-men-allowed environments—locker rooms, dorms, changing rooms—the women could be free of inhibition, penetrated only by the viewer’s gaze. With a dip in musical popularity in 1938, Berkeley moved to MGM where Judy Garland and Mickey Rooney were foisted on him to put on a show that neither group were particularly interested in. Soon the brilliant Berkeley was demoted to dance director and come 1941 he was suffering from alcoholism, depression and increasing conflicts with his co-workers. There were still a few grand ideas percolating, however: water was a muse for both he and Esther Williams in Million Dollar Mermaid (1952) and bananas had never carried as erotic a charge as when they danced with Carmen Miranda in The Gang’s All Here (1943).

20th Century Fox Research Library closing

Tuesday, July 8th, 2008

According to the blog Deadline Hollywood Daily, the 20th Century Fox research library is apparently closing its doors. The future fate of the collection there is unknown at this point.

New e-journal: Projections

Tuesday, July 8th, 2008

I’m pleased to announce that we now have an electronic subscription to the new journal Projections: The Journal for Movies and Mind. UCLA’s own Vivian Sobchack is on the editorial board. A description of the journal is below:

Projections is an interdisciplinary, peer-reviewed journal that explores the ways in which recent advancements in fields such as psychoanalysis, cognitive psychology, neuroscience, genetics and evolution help to increase our understanding of film, and how film itself facilitates investigations into the nature and function of the mind. The journal incorporates articles on the visual arts and new technologies related to film. The aims of the journal are to explore these subjects, facilitate a dialogue between people in the sciences and the humanities, and bring the study of film to the forefront of contemporary intellectual debate.”

New database for 19th Century Studies

Tuesday, July 8th, 2008

The UC system now subscribes to C19: The Nineteenth Century Index (via ProQuest on the Chadwyck-Healy platform). More information is available below. This can be particularly useful as a tool to use in conjunction with the Times of London Digital Archive.

C19:
http://uclibs.org/PID/130229

“The most comprehensive and dynamic source for discovering nineteenth-century books, periodicals, official documents, newspapers and archives. The C19 Index draws on the strength of established indexes such as the Nineteenth Century Short Title Catalogue, The Wellesley Index, Poole’s Index and Periodicals Index Online to create integrated bibliographic coverage of over 1.5 million books and official publications, 71,000 archival collections and 16.3 million articles published in over 2,500 journals, magazines and newspapers. C19 Index now provides integrated access to 12 bibliographic indexes, including almost a million records from the ongoing digitization of British Periodicals Collections I and II.”