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Description
Filmmaker Warren Sonbert provides a lecture on Alfred Hitchcock's film "Marnie," and connects the work to his own films and filmmaking aesthetic. "Hitchcock's Marnie was released in 1964, my own fledgling filmic efforts following (comparatively) on its heels: the developed aesthetic fruits ripe for a fall. How to talk about another's ploys and motives while really revealing one's own: this is a challenge both to vary the notoriously predictable form of independent/experimental film programming with its lax, vague and shrilly defensive, inarticulate accoutrements; and to bridge the not terribly mutually exclusive realms of traditional narrative cinema with that of the unwashed underground," he writes.
Type
sound
Format
Original Audio cassette
Extent
1 tape of 1
Identifier
4000-01-807 cbpf_000068
Subject
Sonbert, Warren Hitchcock, Alfred
Provenance
University of California, Berkeley Art Museum and Pacific Film Archive California Revealed is supported by the U.S. Institute of Museum and Library Services under the provisions of the Library Services and Technology Act, administered in California by the State Librarian.
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