Wednesday, August 27, 2014
Monday, August 25, 2014
Saturday, August 23, 2014
Friday, August 22, 2014
Iklan Film 1977 di Kompas: Teater Mobil & Rhoma Irama Penasaran
Kompas 1 Maret 1977:
Santai yang sebenarnya ada di ....TEATER MOBIL.
Jam 19.00-22.45-24.30
Matinee Show Jam 10-12-14
Film: Shaolin Hero, Gone in 60 Seconds
#iklanfilmjadul
Kompas, 5 Maret 1977 hal III:
“Rhoma Irama Penasaran”.
“Menembus Masyarakat Intelektuil”
“Top! Hot! ASsoooooy!”
“Topik Masa Kini...:
#iklanfilmjadul
Santai yang sebenarnya ada di ....TEATER MOBIL.
Jam 19.00-22.45-24.30
Matinee Show Jam 10-12-14
Film: Shaolin Hero, Gone in 60 Seconds
#iklanfilmjadul
Kompas, 5 Maret 1977 hal III:
“Rhoma Irama Penasaran”.
“Menembus Masyarakat Intelektuil”
“Top! Hot! ASsoooooy!”
“Topik Masa Kini...:
#iklanfilmjadul
Thursday, August 21, 2014
CfP : Cine Excess VIII - Are You Ready for the Country: Cult Cinema and Rural Excess
Source: http://www.cine-excess.co.uk/call-for-papers.html
Call for Papers - The 8th International Conference and Festival on Global Cult Film Traditions
The University of Brighton Presents
Cine Excess VIII - Are You Ready for the Country: Cult Cinema and Rural Excess
The University of Brighton Grand Parade 14-16 November 2014
Cine Excess VIII - Are You Ready for the Country: Cult Cinema and Rural Excess
The University of Brighton Grand Parade 14-16 November 2014
Over the last 7 years, the Cine-Excess International Film Conference and Festival has brought together leading scholars and critics with global cult filmmakers. Cine-Excess comprises of a 3 day conference alongside plenary talks, filmmaker interviews and 5-7 UK theatrical premieres of up and coming cult releases.
Previous guests of honour to the annual Cine-Excess event have included Catherine Breillat (Romance, Sex is Comedy), John Landis (An American Werewolf in London,The Blues Brothers, Trading Places), Roger Corman (The Masque of the Red Death, The Little Shop of Horrors, The Intruder, The Wild Angels, Bloody Mama), Stuart Gordon (Re-Animator, King of the Ants, Stuck), Brian Yuzna (Society, Beyond Re-Animator, The Dentist), Dario Argento (Deep Red, Suspiria, Inferno) Joe Dante (The Howling, Gremlins, The Hole), Franco Nero (Django, Keoma, Die Hard II), Vanessa Redgrave (Blow Up, The Devils, Julia), Ruggero Deodato (Last Cannibal World,Cannibal Holocaust, House on the Edge of the Park) Enzo G. Castellari (Keoma, The Inglorious Bast***s) and Sergio Martino (Torso, All the Colours of the Dark).
With the 2012 relocation of Cine-Excess to the School of Art, Design and Media at the University of Brighton, new developments connected to the event have included the recent 2013 launch of the peer-reviewed Cine-Excess E-Journal (www.cine-excess.co.uk), which publishes a selection of papers from the event.
Cine-Excess VIII is a collaboration between the School of Art, Design and Media and the C21: Centre for research in twenty-first century writings at the University of Brighton. To coincide with the 40th anniversary of Tobe Hooper and Kim Henkel’s ground breaking backwoods classic The Texas Chainsaw Massacre, Cine-Excess VIIIconsiders cult representations of the rural space and its inhabitants, analysing the extent to which depictions of the countryside often reveal fascinating issues of class, sexuality, race and regional distinction.
From early moonshine movies depicting ribald rural rule breaking, to survival splatter epics such as Deliverance (1972), The Texas Chainsaw Massacre (1974), Southern Comfort (1981), The Devil’s Rejects (2005) and beyond, the American countryside and its inhabitants come to evoke longstanding traditions of humour, horror and morbid fascination within a range of cult film genres. Beyond this established Stateside preoccupation with the South, Europe has also used cult imagery to acknowledge its own regional splits and divisions, which have fed into a range of representations, myths and case-studies that extended from eugenic case-study to exploitation cinema. In addition to these territories, other global cultures frequently figure the rural space as a site of either erotic emancipation or fearful foreboding in a range of unsettling and iconic genres that warrant further investigation.
In order to explore these themes further, Cine-Excess VIII will consider the wide variety of representations of the cult countryside from a range of differing theoretical and methodological perspectives, while also considering larger national notions of the rural space within film, television, literature, comics and digital media. A number of iconic international filmmakers associated with rural cult cinema classics will be in attendance at Cine-Excess VIII to discuss their work and interact with academic speakers. Proposals are now invited for papers on any aspect of rural excess. However, we would particularly welcome contributions focusing on:
Please send a 300-word abstract and a short (one page) C.V. by 3RD September 2014 to:
Dr. Xavier Mendik - Director of the Cine-Excess Film Festival - x.mendik@brighton.ac.uk)
Or
Dr. Katy Shaw - C21: Centre for Research in Twenty-first Century Writings - k.shaw@brighton.ac.uk
A final listing of accepted presentations will be released on 17th September 2014. A selection of conference papers from the event will be published in the Cine-Excess E-Journal in 2015.
Previous guests of honour to the annual Cine-Excess event have included Catherine Breillat (Romance, Sex is Comedy), John Landis (An American Werewolf in London,The Blues Brothers, Trading Places), Roger Corman (The Masque of the Red Death, The Little Shop of Horrors, The Intruder, The Wild Angels, Bloody Mama), Stuart Gordon (Re-Animator, King of the Ants, Stuck), Brian Yuzna (Society, Beyond Re-Animator, The Dentist), Dario Argento (Deep Red, Suspiria, Inferno) Joe Dante (The Howling, Gremlins, The Hole), Franco Nero (Django, Keoma, Die Hard II), Vanessa Redgrave (Blow Up, The Devils, Julia), Ruggero Deodato (Last Cannibal World,Cannibal Holocaust, House on the Edge of the Park) Enzo G. Castellari (Keoma, The Inglorious Bast***s) and Sergio Martino (Torso, All the Colours of the Dark).
With the 2012 relocation of Cine-Excess to the School of Art, Design and Media at the University of Brighton, new developments connected to the event have included the recent 2013 launch of the peer-reviewed Cine-Excess E-Journal (www.cine-excess.co.uk), which publishes a selection of papers from the event.
Cine-Excess VIII is a collaboration between the School of Art, Design and Media and the C21: Centre for research in twenty-first century writings at the University of Brighton. To coincide with the 40th anniversary of Tobe Hooper and Kim Henkel’s ground breaking backwoods classic The Texas Chainsaw Massacre, Cine-Excess VIIIconsiders cult representations of the rural space and its inhabitants, analysing the extent to which depictions of the countryside often reveal fascinating issues of class, sexuality, race and regional distinction.
From early moonshine movies depicting ribald rural rule breaking, to survival splatter epics such as Deliverance (1972), The Texas Chainsaw Massacre (1974), Southern Comfort (1981), The Devil’s Rejects (2005) and beyond, the American countryside and its inhabitants come to evoke longstanding traditions of humour, horror and morbid fascination within a range of cult film genres. Beyond this established Stateside preoccupation with the South, Europe has also used cult imagery to acknowledge its own regional splits and divisions, which have fed into a range of representations, myths and case-studies that extended from eugenic case-study to exploitation cinema. In addition to these territories, other global cultures frequently figure the rural space as a site of either erotic emancipation or fearful foreboding in a range of unsettling and iconic genres that warrant further investigation.
In order to explore these themes further, Cine-Excess VIII will consider the wide variety of representations of the cult countryside from a range of differing theoretical and methodological perspectives, while also considering larger national notions of the rural space within film, television, literature, comics and digital media. A number of iconic international filmmakers associated with rural cult cinema classics will be in attendance at Cine-Excess VIII to discuss their work and interact with academic speakers. Proposals are now invited for papers on any aspect of rural excess. However, we would particularly welcome contributions focusing on:
- ‘White Trash’ Auteurs: From Tobe Hooper to Rob Zombie and beyond
- From Deliverance to Dukes of Hazard and Beyond: genres of cult country folk
- White Trash Terror: the American countryside in literature and film
- From Eugenics to Exploitation: historical case-studies of Southern ‘deviance’
- The Return of the Rural: a special panel on The Texas Chainsaw Massacre and its sequels
- Yuppies in Peril: class, culture and the politics of hatred
- Moonshine Madness: comic cycles and the country trickster
- From Southern Belles to Savage Sisters: female vendettas in the rural space
- Backwoods But British: the rural space in British film and literature
- Revenge of Nature: animal revolts in the cult countryside
- The Queer Countryside: sexuality and the rural space
- Small Screen Southerners: TV representations of the countryside
- Europe’s Others: transnational representations of the rural
- Sounds of the South: the role of music and soundtrack in the rural movie
- Cult on Cults: Southern saviours and preachers of hate
- Bucks, Cucks and Harlots: eroticism and rural desire
- ‘Hicksploitation’, ‘Blaxsploitation’ and race conflict within cult cinema
- Deep River Savages: Italian cult cinema and the cruel countryside
- Outback Outrages: the rural space in Australian cinema
- White Trash in Tech: rural rule breaking in online and videogame formats
Please send a 300-word abstract and a short (one page) C.V. by 3RD September 2014 to:
Dr. Xavier Mendik - Director of the Cine-Excess Film Festival - x.mendik@brighton.ac.uk)
Or
Dr. Katy Shaw - C21: Centre for Research in Twenty-first Century Writings - k.shaw@brighton.ac.uk
A final listing of accepted presentations will be released on 17th September 2014. A selection of conference papers from the event will be published in the Cine-Excess E-Journal in 2015.
Wednesday, August 20, 2014
Wednesday, August 13, 2014
a review on HELL RAIDERS aka PASUKAN BERANI MATI
Sunday, August 10, 2014
Indonesian Cult Cinema Era Discussion At Kineforum by Shadia Prasmadji
Indonesian Cult Cinema Era Discussion At Kineforum
written by Shadia Prasmadji (FILM 2015), one of my students at Film Department, Binus International, Bina Nusantara University, Jakarta.
Originally from http://international.binus.ac.id/film/2014/08/10/indonesian-cult-cinema-era-discussion-at-kineforum/
On Saturday, June 14, 2014, Mr. Ekky Imanjaya, our film faculty member who is now on sabbatical to become a candidate of the Doctorate degree in University of East Anglia, Norwich, held a discussion together with Kineforum Jakarta about the Indonesian cult cinema era. Mr. Imanjaya presented his thoughts and ideas about the Indonesian cult cinema back in the 1980s and 1990s, which was the era of Soeharto’s New Order, as part of his Doctoral research in film studies.
Mr. Imanjaya’s explanation and presentation revolved around how those sexploitation and sadistic films were not considered as the official representation of the nation’s cinema, let alone the culture, although it could not be denied that those times were the golden era of the Indonesian sexploitation and sadistic films watched mostly by the working and the lower class.
The sexploitation and sadistic films during the Indonesian cult cinema era were produced massively during the New Order era, although it was denied and not appreciated by the Government as part of the Indonesian culture’s form for its low quality (both in the production mode and the story), although many film academicians and cultural humanists claimed that it should also be considered as Indonesian legitimate culture. The Government and the cultural elites believed that Indonesian cinema should portray the stuff that can offer educational and cultural purposes. At the moment, the Hollywood cinema was so dominating that the Ministerial Decree 71/1967 gave the “obligation to film importers to pay a flat tariff of Rp250.000, – per film”. On the other hand, the other regulations made by the Government also actually supported the rise of the later being called as “trashy films”, which then became the trademark of the Indonesian film industry during the 1980s and the 1990s era.
The trashy films rise when the Government “helped” in a way by giving looser censorship for both Indonesian and imported films, which then made the number of Indonesian films developed dramatically. With the Ministerial Decree no. 47/1976 that stated that “film exporters are obligated to produce 5 films (later, reduced to 3) for the right to import films 1975”, more trashy films were produced for the sake of fulfilling this rule and regulation, so that the film importers can import films. Although the 1977 Censorship Guideline stated that Indonesian “films should avoid issues on destroying the unity of religions in Indonesia, harming the development of national consciousness, and exploiting feelings of ethnicity, religion, or ancestry or incite social tension” and the 1989 Censorship Guideline also stated that Indonesian “films should represent truly “national” characteristics”, the sexploitation film productions could not be stopped or reduced.
The Film Law no. 8 /1992 stated that “a film should be preserving and developing of national cultural values, constructing the nation’s character and personality as well as improving human dignity, maintaining public order and a sense of decency and presenting wholesome entertainment in accordance with the norms of life”. Although not long after it the fall of the trashy films era began to happen, these sexploitations films began to be re-circulated by the transnational film distributors. Labeled as “cult films”, these Indonesian sexploitation films were celebrated by its fans and buffs from all over the world.
Friday, August 8, 2014
Photos: Discussions at Kineforum on New Order's Cult, Exploitation, and B Movies, 14 & 21 June 2014
The discussions took place at Kineforum, Taman Ismail Marzuki, Jakarta.
General Topic: Rethinking New Order's Indonesian Exploitation Cinema.
First discussion:
Public Lecture : "
New Order's Exploitation Films: legitimate, illegitimate, or stepchildren of Indonesian culture?"
Saturday, 14 June 2014, 17.00
second discussion: Indonesia's Transnational FIlms and The Global Phenomenon of “Crazy Indonesia”
with Joko Anwar.
Saturday, 21 June 2014, 19.30
General Topic: Rethinking New Order's Indonesian Exploitation Cinema.
First discussion:
Public Lecture : "
New Order's Exploitation Films: legitimate, illegitimate, or stepchildren of Indonesian culture?"
Saturday, 14 June 2014, 17.00
Me, introducing the films |
Q&A session |
second discussion: Indonesia's Transnational FIlms and The Global Phenomenon of “Crazy Indonesia”
with Joko Anwar.
Saturday, 21 June 2014, 19.30
Matius, Joko Anwar, and Me |
Terima kasih buat Joko Anwar, Matius, Vauriz, Anies, dan semua relawan Kineforum, serta semua yang telah hadir dalam diskusi dan pemutaran film.
Photos courtesy of Anies Wildani/Kineforum
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