Component 1a: Hollywood 1930-1990 (Comparative Study)

The next component we are studying is Component 1a: Hollywood 1930-1990. This section of the course entails two films of study, Casablanca (Michael Curtiz, 1942) and Bonnie and Clyde (Arthur Penn, 1967) . Throughout this component, the areas of study are the core study areas (including the key elements, contexts, aesthetics and representation) as well as two specialist study areas – Auteurship and Context. This component also involves a direct comparison between the two studied films, unlike previous two-film components.

Being the french word for ‘author’, the concept of auteurship suggests the that each work of art is produced by a single artist alone. In concept, this auteur possesses full creative and artistic control over the film and thus, their ‘style’ becomes highly distinctive. Auteurs are often defined by specific reoccurring traits and techniques that appear throughout their body of work, placing their name above the film itself.

Context details the relevant cultural, historical, institutional, political, social, and technological background information surrounding the two films we will study.

Component 1a mind map

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