knowledge of the pertinent film material

knowledge of the pertinent film material You will be writing 7 short essay/academic journals, each essay will be one page. All 7 essays must contain subject matter that is required in the instruction below, demonstrating knowledge of the pertinent film material, topics considered in lecture and discussions, and subjects covered in the reading assignments. Since it is only one page for each essay, you do not need to cover all the ideas and material. Write about something in the reading or movies that interested you the most, and make sure to use the required reading materials as the main reference! Required books: 1. Blair Davis, The Battle for the Bs: 1950s Hollywood and the Rebirth of Low-Budget Cinema (New Brunswick: Rutgers University Press, 2014) 2. David Sterritt and John Anderson, eds., The B List: The National Society of Film Critics on the Low-Budget Beauties, Genre-Bending Mavericks, and Cult Classics We Love (New York: Da Capo, 2008) Essay one- Lecture and discussion: The consolidation of the American film industry. The classical studio system. Precursors of the classic postwar B picture. Viewing: White Zombie – Victor Halperin, USA, 1932 Reading: Davis, The Battle for the Bs, pp. 1-19 Essay Two- Lecture and discussion: Programmers, block booking, and double features. Hollywood goes to war and propaganda scores a hit. Reading: Davis, The Battle for the Bs, pp. 19-42 Essay Three- Lecture and discussion: Declining ticket sales and the looming challenge of television. Science fiction. The launch of the modern space movie. Viewing: Destination Moon – Irving Pichel, USA, 1950, USA, 1958 Reading: Davis, The Battle for the Bs, pp. 43-66 Essay Four- Lecture and discussion: The golden age of drive-in theaters. Horror, humor, and the absurd. Technological paranoia. Fear and loathing in the lab. Viewing: The Fly – Kurt Neumann, USA, 1958 Reading: Chris Fujiwara, “The Fly,” in Sterritt and Anderson, The B List, pp. 95-98 Davis, The Battle for the Bs, pp. 67-102 Essay Five- Lecture and discussion: The high-end B picture. Stock footage and special effects. Ray Harryhausen’s contribution to fantasy filmmaking. Cold- war ideology, atomic-age fears, rampaging xenophobia. Viewing: Earth vs. the Flying Saucers – Fred F. Sears, USA, 1956 Reading: Davis, The Battle for the Bs, pp. 164-177 Essay Six- Lecture and discussion: The midrange B production. American International Pictures. The rise of 1950s youth culture. Mad scientists! Hypnotherapy! The commercial magic of a catchy title! Viewing: I Was a Teenage Werewolf – Gene Fowler Jr., USA, 1957 Reading: The Battle for the Bs, pp. 103-130, 178-190 Essay Seven- Lecture and discussion: The bottom-drawer B budget. Poverty Row. An abominable movie about the abominable snowman? Viewing: Man Beast – Jerry Warren, USA, 1956 Reading: The Battle for the Bs, pp. 190-200 PLACE THIS ORDER OR A SIMILAR ORDER WITH US TODAY AND GET AN AMAZING DISCOUNT :)