[Previous message][Next message][Back to index]
[Commlist] Unmissable: Symposium Walter Salles
Sat May 28 07:18:56 GMT 2022
On the occasion of the University of Reading’s conferment of an
*Honorary Degree* to Brazil’s iconic filmmaker, *WALTER SALLES*, a
symposium in his honour will take place on 30^th June-1^st July,
addressing his oeuvre and artistic vision, including a keynote by the
director himself. *See full programme below*.
*This event will take place in person only. Attendance is free but
places are limited. To book a place, please click*here
<https://eur03.safelinks.protection.outlook.com/?url=https%3A%2F%2Fwww.eventbrite.co.uk%2Fe%2Fwalter-salles-symposium-tickets-346600269737&data=05%7C01%7Cl.nagib%40reading.ac.uk%7C0dc37d848fc74ab66bd308da3fe3d432%7C4ffa3bc4ecfc48c09080f5e43ff90e5f%7C0%7C0%7C637892544990764735%7CUnknown%7CTWFpbGZsb3d8eyJWIjoiMC4wLjAwMDAiLCJQIjoiV2luMzIiLCJBTiI6Ik1haWwiLCJXVCI6Mn0%3D%7C3000%7C%7C%7C&sdata=HuyjHmWTC6FqAMYB95VEO1YL6E6ggfdwgudN3etlzCk%3D&reserved=0>.
A ticket gives you the right to attend the event in full or any parts of it.
Further information: (l.nagib /at/ reading.ac.uk) <mailto:(l.nagib /at/ reading.ac.uk)>
*WALTER SALLES SYMPOSIUM*
*Convened by Lúcia Nagib*
*Sponsored by: Department of Film, Theatre & Television; School of Art
and Communication Design; CFAC – Centre for Film Aesthetics and Culture*
**
*30^th June – 1^st July 2022*
Minghella Studios
Whiteknights Campus, Shinfield Road
University of Reading
Reading RG6 6BT
United Kingdom
*Walter Salles*’s filmic work centres on issues of national identity and
displacement. /Foreign Land /(/Terra estrangeira/), which focused on the
Brazilian political turmoil of the early 1990s, received the prize for
Best Brazilian Film in 1995. /Central Station/ (/Central do Brasil/) won
the Golden Bear and the Silver Bear for best actress at the 1998 Berlin
Film Festival. During its development, /Central Stations/’s screenplay
received the Sundance/ NHK award. His other films received prizes at the
Cannes (/Linha de Passe/), Venice (/Behind the Sun/), and San Sebastian
Film Festivals. Salles also won the Golden Globe and the British BAFTA
twice (/The Motorcycle Diaries /and /Central Station/). Films that
Salles has directed or produced have received a total of 8 Oscar
nominations, including one win for /The Motorcycle Diaries/. In 2014,
Salles directed /Jia Zhangke, a guy from Fenyang/, a documentary on the
Chinese independent film director. /The World of Jia Zhangke/, a book
with interviews conducted by Salles and Jean-Michel Frodon, was launched
at the 2014 São Paulo International Film Festival. Salles is also a
producer of first features made by young directors from Brazil, such as
Karim Aïnouz, Sérgio Machado, Eryk Rocha and Flávia Castro. In 2020,
Salles received the FIAF Award, in recognition of his work in film
preservation. He was also the recipient of the Robert Bresson Award from
the Venice Film Festival, and the Marc’Antonio d’Oro Award from the Rome
Film Festival.
*PROGRAMME*
**
*30 June 2022*
16:00-16:15 - Opening address – *Lúcia Nagib*
16:15-18:25 – Screening: /The Passenger/ (Michelangelo Antonioni, 1975):
‘The film that made me a filmmaker’
18:25-18:30 – Comfort break
18:30-19:30 – *Walter Salles* in conversation with *Laura Mulvey*
19:30-20:00 – Reception
*01 July 2022*
10:00-11:30 - Panel 1
*Tiago de Luca*: ‘/Central Station, /Revisited’
*Stephanie Dennison*: ‘/When the Earth Trembles/: Walter Salles and
BRICS filmmaking’
*Natália Pinazza*: ‘On Board: Vehicles in Walter Salles’ Films’
11:30-11:45 – Coffee break
11:45-13:15 – Panel 2
*Claire Williams*: 'Looking for Latin America: Identity in /The
Motorcycle Diaries/'
*Cecília Mello*: ‘Walter Salles and China: breaching an antipodal
distance, affectively’
*Lúcia Nagib*: ‘Deconstructing Foundational Myths: /Foreign Land/’s
Geography of Exclusion’
13:15-14:15 – Lunch
14:15-15:15 – Keynote Speech
*Walter Salles*: ‘What can cinema do for us today?’
15:15-15:30 – Tea break
15:30-16:50 – Screening: /Central Station /(Walter Salles, 1998)
16:50-17:00 – Comfort break
17:00-18:30 – *Walter Salles* in conversation with *Geoff Andrew*
*ABSTRACTS *
**
*‘/Central Station, /Revisited’*
*Tiago de Luca*
/Central Station /(/Central do Brasil, /Walter Salles, 1998) was the
most emblematic film to emerge from the Retomada (Brazilian Film
Revival). It accordingly received voluminous critical and scholarly
attention upon and after its release, often in relation to questions of
national identity and its perceived aestheticisation of the /sertão/. In
this paper I want to revisit this film from today’s perspective and thus
away from the debates that overdetermined much of its critical
reception. With the benefit of hindsight, some features of the film fall
into the background while others become newly salient in return. In
particular, I would like to explore the role played by physical objects
in the film and how they accrue semiotic value through the narrative as
it unfolds over a specified time period. In a similar gesture, I want to
look at these objects and the film itself /in time/, that is, from a
contemporary standpoint that compels us to see /Central Station/ in a
new light and as a historical object in its own right.
*‘/When the Earth Trembles/: Walter Salles and BRICS filmmaking’*
*Stephanie Dennison*
This paper will discuss Walter Salles’ 2017 contribution to a
portmanteau film, /Where Has Time Gone?/, the first in a series of films
co-produced by Jia Zhangke, made to showcase cultural cooperation among
the BRICS countries. The contribution, entitled /When the Earth
Trembles/, is a fictional account of the aftermath of the real-life
mudslides caused by a dam bursting in Mariana, Minas Gerais, with loss
of life and the displacement of hundreds of inhabitants. I will begin
with a brief contextualising of the film in Salles’ other contributions
to international portmanteau films, before turning my attention to the
Mariana environmental disaster, and the broader context of BRICS filmmaking.
**
*‘On Board: Vehicles in Walter Salles’ Films’*
*Natália Pinazza*
There has been a marked increase in road movies in Latin America since
the 1990s with filmmakers from the region breaking into the global
market. In this context, the work of Walter Salles emerges as a unique
and pertinent contribution to the road movie genre, interweaving
journeys of self-discovery and national and even regional concerns as
with the case of /The Motorcycle Diaries/. This paper will analyse a
selected body of Salles’ films and the ways in which vehicles, a
quintessential motif of the road movie genre, inform the dramatic
structure of the journey. In focusing on vehicles and their impact on
the narrative structure in Salles’ work, this paper will examine the
extent to which they create a distinctive cinematic language.
**
*‘Looking for Latin America: Identity in /The Motorcycle Diaries/’*
*Claire Williams*
Walter Salles’s /The Motorcycle Diaries /(/Los diarios de motocicleta,
/2014) is a truly pan-American film. It can be read on many levels: as a
road movie, a historical travel documentary, a travelogue and guide to
sites of symbolic or tourist significance across Latin America, and a
representation of two young men’s rites of passage. This paper will
consider the construction of a Latin American identity that recognises
differences and celebrates common struggles.
**
*‘Walter Salles and China: breaching an antipodal distance, affectively’*
*Cecília Mello *
My paper will focus on Walter Salles’s relationship with the People’s
Republic of China – its geography, people, culture and cinema. Salles
has made some significant visits to China, the first as a teenager in
1979, travelling as far as Guilin near the border with Vietnam, at a
time when the two countries fought a brief war. The second visit
happened in the 1980s, when he supervised and later edited the
documentary /China: The Empire of the Centre/, directed by his brother
João Moreira Salles, a profound gaze upon the country as it was being
reshaped by Deng Xiaoping’s reforms. The documentary opened a window
into China after decades of isolation, and was broadcast in two parts by
TV Manchete. Notwithstanding the major differences in style, the
documentary invites comparisons with Antonioni’s /Cina, /made in the
early 1970s for television channel RAI. Antonioni is also behind some of
the affinities between Walter Salles and his Chinese colleague Jia
Zhangke, who prompted another visit to China and who is affectionately
portrayed in Salles’s 2014 documentary, /Jia Zhangke: A Guy from
Fenyang. /In this documentary, intertextuality works as a means to
reflect upon China’s unprecedented transformations and upon the place
and the role of cinema within them.
**
*‘Deconstructing Foundational Myths: /Foreign Land/’s Geography of
Exclusion’*
*Lúcia Nagib*
/Foreign Land /(/Terra estrangeira/),//directed by Walter Salles and
Daniella Thomas in 1995, has gained new relevance in the face of
Brazil’s disastrous government currently in power. It allows us to view
today’s political crisis not as a historical blip, but as the result of
foundational myths dating back to the country’s colonial past. The film
focuses on the election and brief ruling of a previous nefarious
government in the early 1990s, which caused a massive exodus of
unemployed Brazilians to the old colonial centre, Portugal. Shot mainly
on location in São Paulo, Lisbon and Cape Verde, it promotes the
encounter of Lusophone peoples who find common ground in their marginal
situation. Viewed from afar, their native countries are reduced to
invisible proportions, despite their great territorial extensions. Even
Portugal is defined by its location at the edge of Europe and by beliefs
such as Sebastianism, whose origins go back to the time when it was
dominated by Spain. As a result, notions of ‘core’ or ‘centre’ are
devolved to the realm of myth. This paper attempts to demonstrate how a
perspectival shift between great and small, centre and periphery
permeates the film at all levels and accounts for its enduring qualities.
**
*Keynote Speech: ‘What can cinema do for us today?’*
*Walter Salles *
At a time of radical changes to the way we interact with our
surroundings, can cinema still serve as a powerful medium to unveil the
world? In this talk, I will endeavour to look back at the invention of
the cinematograph, the Lumière brothers and Thomas Edison as an attempt
to shed light on this debate.
*BIOGRAPHIES*
*Geoff Andrew* is Programmer-at-large for BFI Southbank. Formerly Head
of Film Programme for BFI Southbank, he was also film editor of /Time
Out/ magazine for many years, and is a regular contributor to /Sight &
Sound/; he is also a programme advisor to the BFI London Film Festival.
His numerous books on the cinema including studies of Nicholas Ray and
the American ‘indie’ filmmakers of the 1980s and ‘90s, and BFI Classics
monographs on Kieslowski’s /Three Colours Trilogy/ and Kiarostami’s
/10/. He is the editor of /Sight & Sound/’s ‘Auteurs Series’ anthologies
devoted to Jean-Luc Godard and Martin Scorsese. He has contributed to
many anthologies and DVD extras, lectured widely on the cinema, and
served on film festival juries in Cannes, Venice, Istanbul, Turin,
Krakow, Morelia, Sarajevo and elsewhere. In 2009 the French government
made him a /Chevalier de l’Ordre des Arts et des Lettres. /He writes on
film, music and the other arts at geoffandrew.com
<https://eur03.safelinks.protection.outlook.com/?url=http%3A%2F%2Fgeoffandrew.com%2F&data=05%7C01%7Cl.nagib%40reading.ac.uk%7C0dc37d848fc74ab66bd308da3fe3d432%7C4ffa3bc4ecfc48c09080f5e43ff90e5f%7C0%7C0%7C637892544990764735%7CUnknown%7CTWFpbGZsb3d8eyJWIjoiMC4wLjAwMDAiLCJQIjoiV2luMzIiLCJBTiI6Ik1haWwiLCJXVCI6Mn0%3D%7C3000%7C%7C%7C&sdata=lSHK%2Beww0gT6pmLX3BppSjDngKet5l3gJh54e5SmlrA%3D&reserved=0>.
*Dr Tiago de Luca* is Reader in Film Studies at the University of
Warwick. He is the author of /Planetary Cinema: Film, Media and the
Earth/ (2022) and /Realism of the Senses in World Cinema: The Experience
of Physical Reality /(2014), and the co-editor of /Slow Cinema/ (2016)
and /Towards an Intermedial History of Brazilian Cinema/ (2022). He is
the editor, with Lúcia Nagib, of the /Film Thinks/ series (Bloomsbury).
*Prof Stephanie Dennison*holds a Chair in Brazilian Studies at the
University of Leeds, where she directs the Centre for World Cinemas and
Digital Cultures. She led an AHRC-funded project on soft power,
filmmaking and the BRICS countries. Her two most recent books are the
monograph /Remapping Brazilian Film Culture in the Twenty-first/
/Century /(Routledge, 2020) and the co-edited volume /Cinema and Soft
Power: Configuring the National and Transnational in Geo-politics
/(Edinburgh University Press, 2021).
*Prof **Cecília Mello* is Professor of Film at the Department of Film,
Radio and Television, University of São Paulo, Brazil, and currently
Visiting Scholar at King’s College London. She is the author of /The
Cinema of Jia Zhangke: Realism and Memory in Chinese Film /(London:
Bloomsbury, 2019).
*Prof Laura Mulvey* is Professor of Film at Birkbeck College, University
of London. She is the author of: /Visual and Other Pleasures/ (Macmillan
1989/2009), /Fetishism and Curiosity/ (British Film Institute
1996/2013), /Citizen Kane /(BFI Classics series 1992/2012), /Death
Twenty- four Times a Second: Stillness and the Moving Image /(Reaktion
Books 2006) and /Afterimages: On Cinema, Women and Changing Times
/(Reaktion Books 2019). She made six films in collaboration with Peter
Wollen including /Riddles of the Sphinx/ (British Film Institute 1977;
dvd 2013) and /Frida Kahlo and Tina Modotti/ (Arts Council 1980). With
artist/filmmaker Mark Lewis, she has made /Disgraced Monuments /(Channel
4 1994) and /23 August 2008/ (2013).
*Prof Lúcia Nagib* is Professor of Film at the University of Reading.
Her research has focused, among other subjects, on polycentric
approaches to world cinema, new waves and new cinemas, cinematic realism
and intermediality. She is the author of many books, including /Realist
Cinema as World Cinema: Non-cinema, Intermedial Passages, Total Cinema
/(Amsterdam University Press, 2020), /World Cinema and the Ethics of
Realism /(Bloomsbury, 2011) and /Brazil on Screen: Cinema Novo, New
Cinema, Utopia/ (I.B. Tauris, 2007). Her edited books include /Impure
Cinema: Intermedial and Intercultural Approaches to Film /(with Anne
Jerslev, I.B. Tauris, 2013), /Theorizing World Cinema /(with Chris
Perriam and Rajinder Dudrah, I.B. Tauris, 2011), /Realism and the
Audiovisual Media /(with Cecília Mello, Palgrave, 2009) and /The New
Brazilian Cinema/ (I.B. Tauris, 2003). She is the writer and director,
with Samuel Paiva, of the award-winning feature-length documentary,
/Passages /(UK 2019).
*Dr Natália Pinazza* is a lecturer in Portuguese Studies at the
University of Exeter. She holds a PhD and MA from the University of Bath
and a BA from the University of São Paulo. Her research interests centre
on journey narratives, film industry and issues of transnational cinema
with a particular focus on Latin America and the Portuguese-speaking
world. Her book /Journeys in Argentine and Brazilian Cinema: Road Movies
in a Global Era/ was published by Palgrave Macmillan in 2014. Her other
books as an editor include /World Film Location São Paulo/ (2013)/,/
/World Cinema Directory: Brazil /(2013), /New Approaches to Lusophone
Culture /(2016) and /Journeys on Screen: Theory, Ethics, Aesthetics
/(2018)/. /
*Walter Salles *(for Wlater Salles’s biography, please see the beginning
of this document)
Walter Salles’s Filmography (from 1995 onwards)
2022- /I’m Still Here/ (in development)
2017 – /When the Earth Trembles/, a short for /Where Has Time Gone/
2015 – /Jia Zhang-ke, a guy from Fenyang/
2013 – /The Square/- a short for Venice 70: Future Reloaded – La
Biennale di Venezia.
2012 – /On the Road/
2008 – /Linha de Passe/ (co-directed by Daniela Thomas)
2007 – /A 8.944km de Cannes/ and /Letter to V/- shorts for /Chacun son
cinema/, for the 60^th Cannes Film Festival
2006 – /Loin du 16eme/, a short for /Paris je t’aime/
2005 – /Dark Water/
2004 – /The Motorcycle Diaries/
2002 – /Un petit message du Brésil/, a short for the Quinzaine des
Réalisateurs for the Cannes Film Festival
2001 – /Behind the Sun/
2000 – /Midnight /(co-directed by Daniela Thomas)
1998 – /Central Station/
1995 – /Foreign Land/ (co-directed by Daniela Thomas)
*Dr **Claire Williams*is Associate Professor in Brazilian Literature and
Culture at the University of Oxford. Her research focuses on twenty and
twenty-first century women’s writing, minority writing and life-writing
from the Lusophone world, and her research interests include cinema and
translation.
---------------
The COMMLIST
---------------
This mailing list is a free service offered by Nico Carpentier. Please use it responsibly and wisely.
--
To subscribe or unsubscribe, please visit http://commlist.org/
--
Before sending a posting request, please always read the guidelines at http://commlist.org/
--
To contact the mailing list manager:
Email: (nico.carpentier /at/ commlist.org)
URL: http://nicocarpentier.net
---------------
[Previous message][Next message][Back to index]