
Sculpting a Movie The Analogy between the Filmmaking Process and Human Experience READ THE TRANSCRIPT |
| SPEAKERS: . Armando Fumagalli Director of the Master Program in Screenwriting, Fiction and Movies Catholic University of Milan - Italy Richard Pepperman Professor of the Art of Editing School of Visual Arts Salvatore Petrosino Director of Operations Film, Video, and Animation Department School of Visual Arts |
Wednesday, September 26, 2007 at 7:00PM 3rd floor Amphitheater, Room 311 School of Visual Arts 209 East 23rd Street, New York |
| BEAUTY WILL SAVE THE WORLD Discovering the world of arts: performances and presentations |
| ABOUT THE EVENT This discussion is dedicated to movie making, and specifically to the crucial creative process that leads from screenwriting to editing. The panelists are outstanding scholars and teachers in this field, who are not only experts in a technical sense but also have a deep grasp of the artistic unity of cinematography, of what makes it a form of art. Every artistic expression is, in one way or another, an attempt at gauging the depths of human experience, in order to discover its secret and find a point of unity that reveals its significance. The difference between a random sequence of images and a story emerges when there is the presentment of a meaning, of a larger picture to which all the various details point discretely. Thus, also the beauty of a movie is enhanced when nothing is by chance, but every particular image builds the whole story and reveals the truth beneath the surface. Especially today it is clear, however, that the ability to recognize every detail as a sign of the meaning of the whole story is not "natural" but the fruit of an education. For this reason, Crossroads is delighted to host three outstanding educators who can teach us how to look at cinema less superficially. Prof Armando Fumagalli is Director of the Masters program in Screenwriting, fiction and movie at the Catholic University of theSacred Heart in Milan, Italy, where he is also Extraordinary Professor of Semiotics. He has taught screenwriting for many years, including at the Italian National School of Cinema. He is the author of several books on communications, the media and the relationship between literature, cinema and television. He is also a development consultant for the Lux vide TV production company. Prof. Richard Pepperman is Editing professor at School of Visual Arts. and has worked in film for more than 42 years. His credit include work as an editor,post -production supervisor and consultant on features,documentaries,industria ls,and commercials. His collaborations have received several awards, including the Academy of Motion Pictures Arts & Science Oustanding Documentary Award, the Andy Award and the Clio Award. ~ |