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[ecrea] Remaking European Cinema: Symposium
Sat May 19 09:19:22 GMT 2018
Remaking European Cinema
A symposium on the theory and practice of the film remake in a European
context
1 June 2018, Ghent University, Belgium
Registration via the conference website: https://remakingeurope.com/
Full programme:
08:30 - 09:00
Registration & coffee
09:00 - 09:10
Welcome address
09:10 - 09:55
Keynote: Thomas Leitch (University of Delaware): Hollywoodizing,
Americanizing, Europeanizing
09:55 - 10:15
Coffee break
10:15 - 11:50
Panel: Remaking European cinema: current trends
Chair: Iain R. Smith (King’s College London)
Eduard Cuelenaere, Stijn Joye & Gertjan Willems (Ghent University):
Performing the national: towards a model of localization strategies in
the Dutch-Flemish film remake
Boris Noordenbos & Irina Souch (University of Amsterdam): Nostalgic
mediations of the Soviet past in Nikolai Lebedev’s remake of The Crew (2016)
Sara F. Hall (University of Illinois at Chicago): Babylon Berlin:
Remaking Weimar cinema in the era of global streaming
Núria Araüna (Rovira i Virgili University): “We are the replicants” or
Androids Dream: Blade Runner’s dystopia as a quasidocumentary portrayal
of contemporary Spain
Miguel Fernández Labayen & Ana Martín Morán (Universidad Carlos III de
Madrid & Rey Juan Carlos University): Manufacturing proximity: the case
of local-language comedies’ remakes
11:50 – 12:20
Industry talk: Meg Thomson (Globalgate Entertainment): The Business of
Remakes
12:20 - 13:30
Lunch @ Faculty Council Room/Facultaire Raadzaal
13:30 - 14:15
Keynote: Lucy Mazdon (University of Southampton): Rethinking the Remake:
Assimilation or Foreignization?
14:20 - 16:00
Panel: Rethinking the remake
Chair: Thomas Leitch (University of Delaware)
Jennifer Forrest (Texas State University) Bringing up babies: The
politics of pronatalism in La Maternelle
Mario Slugan (Ghent University): R. W. Fassbinder’s Berlin
Alexanderplatz as a remake
Anke Brouwers (University of Antwerp): (Not) skipping a beat: De battre
mon coeur s’est arrêté (2005) as cinematic ekphrasis
Peter Verstraten (Universiteit Leiden): European art-house remake:
Sehnsucht in tandem with Le Bonheur
Constantine Verevis (Monash University): A Bigger Splash: Refashioning
the Remake
16:00 - 16:20
Coffee break
16:20 - 17:40
Panel: Remaking national cinema
Chair: Lucy Mazdon (University of Southampton)
Kamalika Sanyal (KU Leuven): The colour remakes of Swedish classics in
the 1950s: Production, promotion and critical reception in the context
of a new technology
Stefanie Mathilde Frank (Humboldt University of Berlin): Goodbye
Goebbels? Remakes of Nazi Films in the 1950s
Kathleen Loock (Freie Universität Berlin): Remaking Winnetou,
reconfiguring German fantasies of American Indians and the Wild West
Balázs Varga (ELTE University Budapest): One step forward two steps
back: Millennial remakes and the transformation of Hungarian popular cinema
17:45 - 18:30
Keynote: Iain R. Smith (King’s College London): Beyond the Hollywood
meme: A meme’s eye view of film remakes in a European context
18:30 - 18:45
Closing remarks
18:45 - 21:00
Reception with walking dinner @ Faculty Council Room/Facultaire Raadzaal
The film remake, whether as a practice or a concept, has been around
since the very beginnings of cinema. While the earliest studies of the
remake provided general overviews trying to sketch patterns and localize
differing practices, this was followed by substantial attempts to define
the remake as both a textual and cultural artefact and as a commercial
business. Building on adaptation theories, scholars eventually
pinpointed the intertextual properties that are inherent to the
(relationship between) a source film and its remake(s). These evolutions
in the research field spurred the idea of the remake as a kind of prism,
which can be used to examine a variety of aesthetic, cultural, economic
and social questions. For quite some time, most studies in the field
were confined to the Hollywood practice of remaking non-Hollywood films,
or, vice versa, non-Hollywood film industries remaking Hollywood films.
More recently, attempts are being made to look beyond Hollywood,
inquiring into other nations or regions that, for example, remake their
own films or the films of neighbouring countries. Notwithstanding these
promising evolutions, there is still a lack of sustained research
analysing the specific context(s) of European cinema. As a continent,
Europe is known for its fragmentation and diversity due to the multitude
of different languages and cultures existing next to and through each
other within a relatively small geographical area. Although attempts to
pinpoint the characteristics of European cinema are always questionable
given that ‘Europe’ is as much a social, contingent and dynamic
construction as other geopolitical entities, various cultural, economic
and political dynamics grant the concept of European cinema analytical
value. Accordingly, the purpose of the symposium is to bring together
scholars with expertise in the currently vibrant field of remake studies
for a discussion of the dynamics and particularities of the film remake
in a European context.
This symposium is organized by Gertjan Willems, Eduard Cuelenaere and
Stijn Joye, Centre for Cinema and Media Studies (CIMS) at Ghent
University. The symposium is funded by the FWO research project ‘Lost in
Translation? A multi-methodological research project on same-language
film remakes between Flanders and The Netherlands’ and sponsored by the
Film Studies section of ECREA and the Popular Communication division of
NeFCA.
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