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Film Part of Humanities

鈥淏order Crossings鈥 event launches the new Centre for International Film Research

Published: 12听闯耻濒测听2016
border crossings event audience
The audience of the Border Crossings event at The Cinema Museum in London.

On 2 July 2016 黑料社鈥檚 Film Department invited students, academics and the general public to join them at the Cinema Museum in south London for a one-day symposium to celebrate the university鈥檚 new Centre for International Film Research (CIFR); a research centre that provides an interdisciplinary forum for research into film. CIFR will showcase the university鈥檚 research excellence while engaging wider communities through public events, visiting speakers, and research initiatives.

This inaugural event was titled 鈥淏order Crossings鈥 and explored the ways in which film entails a range of 鈥淏order Crossings鈥, whether geographical, political, industrial, metaphorical, or aesthetic. Globalisation and transnational flows are pressing political contemporary concerns, and film throughout its history has been both a product of, and a stimulus for, international exchange. From its intermedial origins to present-day digital convergence film has been caught up amidst a range of intersecting borders. By bringing together key scholars in the field, the papers, screenings, and debates of this event aimed to open up new perspectives on this critical domain.

After a welcoming address from Film鈥檚 Head of Department Professor Lucy Mazdon, the programme opened with three of the department鈥檚 newest colleagues presenting their research. Dr Louis Bayman鈥檚 paper 鈥淪ic transit: Travel in serial killer films鈥 investigated journeying as a motif in serial killer films and positioned this motif in relation to debates on mobility, modernity and serial killing. Dr Ruby Cheung then discussed cross-border film business activities in East Asia in her talk: 鈥淭he Border-crossing Effects of Film Policies: Contemporary East Asian Film Business Networks鈥. Finally, Dr Corey Schultz analyzed the peasant migrant worker figure in contemporary Chinese cinema in his presentation: 鈥淎 Need for Roots? The Floating Population and Precarious Migration in Jia Zhangke鈥檚 Films鈥. Afterwards, Dr Mike Hammond joined the speakers in a discussion with the audience.

After a lunch break where the speakers and audience had a chance to admire the impressive film memorabilia collections at the Cinema Museum, another of the Film department鈥檚 new colleagues 鈥 Dr Malcolm Cook 鈥 provided an in-depth introduction to the experimental animation films by Len Lye. In collaboration with the BFI National Museum we were able to screen five Len Lye films, to the utter enjoyment of the audience. The first one, Tusalava (1929) was screened with live accompaniment by Dr Mike Hammond and Alex Hammond of the Dodge Brothers. It was followed by Experimental Animation/Peanut Vendor (1933), A Colour Box (1935), Trade Tattoo (1937) and, finally, Rainbow Dance (1936).

In the closing section of the day Professor Lucy Mazdon chaired a round-table discussion on the theme of 鈥淏order Crossings鈥 with a number of leading scholars in the field: Professor Laura Rascaroli (University College Cork), Professor L煤cia Nagib (University of Reading), Dr Karl Schoonover (University of Warwick), Professor Dina Iordanova (University of St Andrews) and Professor Paul McDonald (King鈥檚 Colleague London). The invited speakers each presented some thoughts in answer to questions such as: 鈥淲hat challenges are posed to how we understand film by the increasing transnational nature of its financing, production, distribution, exhibition and reception?鈥 and 鈥淲hat role is played by film, and Film Studies, in contemporary issues of migration, diaspora and globalization?鈥. The audience was then invited to join the discussion with the speakers, resulting in a lively and engaging debate.

The symposium was very well attended, and CIFR plans to follow up with plenty of other exciting events in the future.

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Dr Mike Hammond, Dr Ruby Cheung, Dr Louis Bayman and Dr Corey Schultz are responding to questions from the audience
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Dr Malcolm Cook's presentation before the screening of Len Lye films
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Dr Mike Hammond and Alex Hammond of the Dodge Brothers, ready to play live during a screening of Len Lye's "Tusalava" (1929)
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Professor Paul McDonald, Professor Dian Iordanova, Dr Karl Schoonover, Professor L煤cia Nagib, Professor Laura Rascaroli and Professor Lucy Mazdon participating in a roundtable discussion
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