Showing posts with label film. Show all posts
Showing posts with label film. Show all posts

Monday, August 29, 2011

Academic Film Archive of North America

 

The mission of The Academic Film Archive of North America is to acquire, preserve, document, and promote academic film by providing an archive, resource, and forum for continuing scholarly advancement and public exhibition.  We also  document and archive historically important films not specifically in the academic genre, including anthropological, ethnographic, and medical subjects. We also engage in special research projects, and are the only institution in the U.S. dedicated to documenting the history of this endangered film genre.  We invite you to help us to save films and provide free access to them on the Internet Archive, by nominating a film and making a donation to fund uploading it. 

AFA director Geoff Alexander's new book "Academic Films for the Classroom: A History" is now available. 
Read Michael Fox's interview with Geoff.

Academic Film Archive of North America

Wednesday, June 30, 2010

FREE WONDER WOMAN!!!- Nikki Finke on Deadline.com/hollywood

 Hollywood Entertainment Breaking News - Nikki Finke on Deadline.com/hollywood

FREE WONDER WOMAN!!! --DC Comics Has Ruined Wonder Woman!

By Nikki Finke | Wednesday June 30, 2010 @ 4:23am PDT

DEADLINE EXCLUSIVE: Don Kramer's Wonder Woman

DC Comics announced that, starting today, Wonder Woman "will appear like you’ve never seen her before". And I wish they'd just left her alone, especially since she's the only comic book character female I've ever admired. Of course, it took a bunch of men to ruin her. Look at the new costume design by DC Comics Co-Publisher Jim Lee below: she looks ready for Goth Day at the Sherman Oaks Galleria. (Shame on Diane Nelson, the head of DC Entertainment, for allowing this to happen. And for not finding a talented woman writer to update the icon's saga.) Here's the announcement about the dumbass stuff that DC Comics is doing to her. So let me start the campaign: FREE WONDER WOMAN!

Hollywood Entertainment Breaking News - Nikki Finke on Deadline.com/hollywood

Wednesday, June 9, 2010

American Rhetoric: The Power of Oratory in the United States

American Rhetoric: The Power of Oratory in the United States 

Online Speech Bank

Database of and index to 5000+ full text, audio and video versions of public speeches, sermons, legal proceedings, lectures, debates, interviews, other recorded media events, and a declaration or two.

See also a special issue: The Rhetoric of 9-11

Rhetorical Figures in Sound

200+ short audio and video clips illustrating stylistic figures of speech ranging from alliteration to synecdoche. Clips are taken from speeches, movies, sermons, and sensational media events and delivered by politicians, actors, preachers, athletes, and other notable personalities.

Top 100 Speeches

Full text, audio, and video  database of the 100 most significant American political speeches of the 20th century, according to 137 leading scholars of American public address, as compiled by Stephen E. Lucas (University of Wisconsin-Madison) and Martin J. Medhurst (Baylor University). Find out who made the cut and experience the power of rhetorical eloquence in this provocative list of "who's who" in American public address.

Movie Speeches

Full text, audio and video database of some 210  Hollywood movie speeches.

Included are military movie speeches, sports-oriented movie speeches, forensic movie speeches, and social-political movie speeches, among others.

American Rhetoric: The Power of Oratory in the United States

Wednesday, February 10, 2010

AllMovie

AllMovie

AMG started out in 1991 in Big Rapids, MI. Our original mission was to create books to help consumers find the "best" music. But, as our databases grew, we saw they could be powerful tools for online retailers and entertainment destinations. We started licensing the All Music Guide in 1993. In 1994, we added the All Movie Guide. Our award-winning websites started in 1995 and helped us find even more licensing customers. In 1998 we created the All Game Guide to address that growing market. In order to accommodate the growth of our business, we moved to Ann Arbor, MI in 1999. Since then, our staff has tripled in size.

What exactly does AMG do?

AMG licenses our entertainment content databases and technologies to a number of clients. We also maintain our websites, continue to produce new editions of our successful music guide series with Backbeat Books, and, in conjunction with Medalist Entertainment, we recently released the first group of CDs enhanced by our content.

AllMovie

Tuesday, December 22, 2009

The Paley Center for Media

The Paley Center for Media

The Paley Center for Media, with locations in New York and Los Angeles, leads the discussion about the cultural, creative, and social significance of television, radio, and emerging platforms for the professional community and media-interested public.

The Paley Center for Media

http://www.archives.org/

 http://www.archives.org/

Archives.org find something interesting * Music * Government Public Records * Video Footage * Download Movies * Free Images * Newspaper Archive * Archive Photos * Online Radio Stations

http://www.archives.org/

Greatest Films - The Best Movies in Cinematic History

Greatest Films - The Best Movies in Cinematic History 

Filmsite.org is an award-winning website for classic film buffs, students, moviegoers and anyone else interested in the great movies of the last century. Detailed plot synopses, review commentary and film reference material are just some of the features available on the site. The site also contains film analysis, original content, information on the top films and most memorable movie scenes, "best of&" articles, and the most popular film quotes in all genres of film. Its many resources include a comprehensive overview of film history, a complete survey of the Academy Awards (Oscars), milestones and turning points in the industry, and background and descriptions for hundreds of classic Hollywood/American and other English-language movies from the last one hundred years. In the mid-1990s when it was first launched, Filmsite.org was one of the first websites to initiate the trend to select 100 Greatest Films in the history of cinema. Film critic and columnist Roger Ebert, author of The Great Movies (2002) and The Great Movies II (2005), has made many detailed references to Filmsite.org in his Chicago Sun-Times "Answer Man" column and in his many writings about the Great Movies. He has written that the site is "an invaluable repository of movie descriptions and dialogue" and that it is an "awesome website [that] contains detailed descriptions of 300 great American films, along with many other riches.

Greatest Films - The Best Movies in Cinematic History

A Glossary of Film Terms

A Glossary of Film Terms 

A Glossary of Film Terms written and designed for the web by Joel Schlemowitz Filmmaking is an art with a very complex, and in some ways confusing, vocabulary of terms. To communicate with labs, negative cutters and with your crew it is best to know the right term to use. The terms can often be used against someone not familiar with them. An old story goes that a P.A. was asked to bring over a half-apple and returned with a sliced-up piece of fruit. Use this glossary to keep those who would try to intimidate you with the lingo from doing so, but remember too, where you started from and do not use this glossary to become one of those intimidators. This glossary is intended to be supplemental to a film production course. It is a glossary of the nomenclature of filmmaking, not an encyclopedia of filmmaking. Many of the more complex issues have not been given a full explanation: such as the how to of any of the processes defined here. This is a list of simple definitions to help you speak film and find and understand the answers to your questions rather than be the answers themselves. Please note: The Glossary and Index can be somewhat slow to load at first, but once they are in your browsers cache they do speed up a little.

A Glossary of Film Terms

Watch Documentaries and Animated Films Online - NFB.ca

Watch Documentaries and Animated Films Online - NFB.ca

NFB.ca is a Web site where you can watch films produced by the National Film Board of Canada (NFB). We’re still testing the site and need your feedback. Please have a look around, watch some films and tell us what you think.

Watch Documentaries and Animated Films Online - NFB.ca

Wednesday, May 6, 2009

Internet Archive: Moving Image Archive

Internet Archive: Moving Image Archive 

Welcome to the Archive's Moving Images library of free movies, films, and videos. This library contains thousands of digital movies uploaded by Archive users which range from classic full-length films, to daily alternative news broadcasts, to cartoons and concerts. Many of these videos are available for free download. Check our FAQ for more information.

Internet Archive: Moving Image Archive

Saturday, February 14, 2009

The Museum of Broadcast Communications

The Museum of Broadcast Communications

The mission of the Museum of Broadcast Communications (MBC) is to collect, preserve, and present historic and contemporary radio and television content as well as educate, inform, and entertain the public through its archives, public programs, screenings, exhibits, publications and online access to its resources.

The MBC is an Illinois non-profit corporation that owns and manages two subsidiaries, Museum.TV and the National Radio Hall of Fame (NRHOF) and its website radiohof.org.

MBC Collection

Each subsidiary focuses on radio or television and the intellectual foundation of each entity is an encyclopedia—the Encyclopedia of Radio (EOR) and the Encyclopedia of Television (EOT).

Each entity has its own separate Steering Committee, made up of outside members as well as select MBC board members. Each Steering Committee reports to the MBC Board of Directors and each entity produces an annual fund raising benefit ---- the NRHOF Induction gala/broadcast held each November and MBC Salutes held each May.


MBC Collection

Since 1987 the MBC has offered free access for public learning to a diverse population, with the presentation of over 180 public programs, and through its online users around the world.

A Chicago-based professional staff and volunteers work on each subsidiary, with oversight of each entities' website provided by the MBC board's Online Committee.

The MBC opened to the public in June of 1987 at River City in Chicago’s South Loop neighborhood. From 1992 until 2003, the museum was located in the Chicago Cultural Center. It is currently raising funds to complete a new 62,000 square-foot home at State and Kinzie Streets in Chicago. Donations are welcome.

The Museum of Broadcast Communications

Tuesday, January 6, 2009

BFI Screenonline

BFI Screenonline

What is BFI Screenonline?

BFI Screenonline is an online encyclopaedia of British film and television featuring hundreds of hours of film and television clips from the vast collections of the BFI National Archive, and several hours of recorded interviews with film and TV personalities. These clips are supplemented by rich and authoritative contextual material by expert writers, specially commissioned for BFI Screenonline alongside thousands of stills, posters and press books. The site also features the BFI Screenonline Education Zone, a free resource to help all subject teachers make the most out of moving image in the classroom.

BFI Screenonline is the single most extensive publicly available resource devoted to British film and television, and is entirely free. Users in registered UK schools, colleges, universities and libraries (see Registration help) can access the entire site, including the moving image materials; users in other locations can see everything but the film and TV clips and recorded audio interviews. The project has been developed by the BFI and funded by a £1.2 million grant from the New Opportunities Fund. You can find out more about the BFI and its activities at www.bfi.org.uk.

BFI Screenonline