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I AM AN OLD TREE : (CN, Michael Rubbo, 1975)
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The documentary art of filmmaker Michael Rubbo / D.B. Jones Calgary, Alberta, Canada: University of Calgary Press, 2017.
Call No: 10545Author: Jones, D.B. Source: CAPlace: Calgary, Alberta, CanadaPublisher: University of Calgary PressPubDate: 2017PhysDes: 247 pages ; illustrations, portraits ; 23cmSeries: Cinemas off centre seriesSubject: MICHAEL RUBBO Summary: "Michael Rubbo's groundbreaking work has had a deep and enduring impact on documentary filmmaking worldwide, though his name has remained relatively unknown. In The Documentary Art of Michael Rubbo, author D.B. Jones traces Rubbo's filmmaking from his days as a film student at Stanford, through his twenty years at the National Film Board of Canada, where Rubbo developed his distinct documentary style. Jones then describes Rubbo's post-NFB venture into feature film directing, followed by Rubbo's return to his native Australia, first as an executive with the Australian Broadcasting Corporation, and later as a director of feature-length documentaries and maker of short, personal films for YouTube. Exploring locales from Montreal to Vietnam, topics as diverse as plastic surgery and French Marxism, and from interviewing Margaret Atwood to documenting a failed attempt to interview Fidel Castro, Rubbo's wide-ranging work establishes his innovative, personal, lyric, and spontaneous documentary style. In The Documentary Art of Michael Rubbo D.B. Jones reveals not only the depth of meaning in Rubbo's films, but also the depth of their influence on filmmaking itself."-- excerpt from publisherISBN: 9781552388709Contents: Learning the craft. The true source of knowledge these days; early films at the NFB -- Making it personal. Sad song of yellow skin -- Nudging things along. Persistent and finagling -- Filmmaker front and center. Wet earth and warm people -- Family matters. OK ... camera; The streets of Saigon; Jalan, jalan; The man who can't stop -- How it works. Waiting for Fidel; I am an old tree -- Where the action isn't. Log house; The walls come tumbling down; I hate to lose; Tigers and teddy bears -- Something's happening. Solzenitsyn's children ... are making a lot of noise in Paris -- Facial expressions. Yes or no, Jean-Guy Moreau; Daisy : the story of a facelift; Not far from Bolgatanga -- Long shots. Margaret Atwood : once in august; Atwood and family -- A break from "reality". The peanut butter solution; Tommy Tricker and the stamp traveller; Vincent and me; The return of Tommy Tricker -- New tools of the trade. ABC; The little box that sings; Much ado about something; all about Olive -- Plein air documentary. YouTube films; bicycle art; painting with film.
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Documenting the documentary : close readings of documentary films and video / edited by Barry Keith Grant and Jeannette Sloniowski, forward by Bill Nichols Detroit MI: Wayne State University Press, 1998.
Call No: 761 DOCAuthor: Grant, Barry Keith ; Sloniowski, Jeanette Place: Detroit MIPublisher: Wayne State University PressPubDate: 1998PhysDes: 488 p. ; 23 cmSubject: DOCUMENTARY FILMS ; FLAHERTY, ROBERT ; VERTOV, DZIGA ; EISENSTEIN, SERGEI M. ; BUNUEL, LUIS ; WRIGHT, BASIL ; RIEFENSTAHL, LENI ; NANOOK OF THE NORTH (US, Robert Flaherty, 1922) ; CELOVEK S KINOAPPARATOM (UR, Dziga Vertov, 1929) ; QUE VIVA MEXICO! (UR, Sergei Eisenstein, [prod. 1932]) ; HURDES, LAS (SP, Luis Bunuel, 1933) ; SONG OF CEYLON, THE (UK, Basil Wright, 1934) ; TRIUMPH DES WILLENS (G, Leni Riefenstahl, 1935) ; PLOW THAT BROKE THE PLAINS, THE (US, Pare Lorentz, 1936) ; CITY, THE (US, Ralph Steiner, 1939) ; SPANISH EARTH, THE (US, Joris Ivens, 1937) ; LISTEN TO BRITAIN (UK, Humphrey Jennings/Stewart McAllister, 1942) ; BLOOD OF THE BEASTS (FR, Georges Franju,1949) ; SANG DES BETES, LE (FR, Georges Franju,1949) ; MAITRES FOUS, LES (FR, Jean Rouch, 1955) ; NUIT ET BROUILLARD (FR, Alain Resnais, 1955) ; DONT LOOK BACK (US, D.A. Pennebaker, 1967) ; TITICUT FOLLIES (US, Frederick Wiseman, 1967) ; HORA DE LOS HORNOS, LA (AG, Fernado E. Solanos, 1968) ; ACT OF SEEING WITH ONE'S OWN EYES, THE (US, Stan Brakhage, 1971) ; AMERICAN FAMILY, AN [TV](US, 1973) ; DAISY, THE STORY OF A FACELIFT (CN, Michael Rubbo, 1982) ; THIS IS SPINAL TAP (US, Rob Reiner, 1984) ; SHERMAN'S MARCH (US, Ross McElwee, 1986 [prod. 1981]) ; I DO NOT KNOW WHAT IT IS I AM LIKE (US, Bill Viola, 1986) ; JOURNEY, THE (CN, Peter Watkins, 1987) ; THIN BLUE LINE, THE (US, Errol Morris, 1988) ; ROGER AND ME (US, Michael Moore, 1989) ; TONGUES UNTIED (US, Marlon Riggs, 1989) ; PARIS IS BURNING (US, Jennie Livingston, 1990) ; FINDING CHRISTA (US, Camille Billops/James Hatch, 1991) Summary: Documenting the Documentary features essays by twenty-seven film scholars from a wide range of critical and theoretical perspectives. Each essay focuses on one or two important documentaries, engaging in questions surrounding ethics, ideology, politics, power, race, gender, and representation -- but always in terms of how they arise out of or are involved in the reading of specific documentaries as particular textual constructions. By closely reading documentaries as rich visual works, this anthology fills a void in the critical writing on documentaries, which tends to privilege production over aesthetic pleasure. As we perceive and comprehend the world through visual media increasingly, understanding the textual strategies by which individual documentaries are organized has become critically important. Together, the essays cover the significant developments in the history of the documentary, from the first commercially released feature, Nanook of the North (1922), to modern independent productions, such as An American Family (1973), Tongues Untied (1989), and Finding Christa (1991), and including important national and stylistic movements and various production contexts from the mainstream to the avant-garde. Seth Feldman places Dziga Vertov's Man with a Movie Camera (1929) within the context of constructivism and futurism; Vivian Sobchack discusses the strategies of Bunuel's Las Hurdas (Land without Bread, 1931) in relation to surrealism; and Joanne Hershfield explores Que viva Mexico! (1932) as the presentation of an exotic culture by a European director. Documenting the Documentary offers clear, serious, and insightful analyses of documentary films, and is a welcome balancebetween theory and criticism, abstract conceptualization and concrete analysis. --FROM PUBLISHER'S SITENotes: includes bibliiographic references and indexISBN: 0814326390Contents: Filmmaker as hunter / William Rothman -- Peace between man and machine / Seth Feldman -- Paradise regained / Joanne Hershfield -- Synthetic vision / Vivian Sobchack -- Art of national projection / William Guynn -- Mass psychology of fascist cinema / Frank P. Tomasulo -- American documentary finds its voice / Charlie Keil -- Men cannot act before the camera in the presence of death / Thomas Waugh -- Poetics of propaganda / Jim Leach -- It was an atrocious film / Jeannette Sloniowski -- Dialogic imagination of Jean Rouch / Diane Scheinman -- Documenting the ineffable / Sandy Flitterman-Lewis -- Don't you ever just watch? / Jeanne Hall -- Ethnography in the first person / Barry Keith Grant -- Two avant-gardes / Robert Stam -- Seeing with experimental eyes / Bart Testa -- Bastard union of several forms / Jeffrey K. Ruoff -- Documentary of displaced persona / Joan Nicks -- Gender, power, and a cucumber / Carl Plantinga -- Documentary film and the discourse of hysterical/historical narrative / Lucy Fischer -- Subjectivity lost and found / Catherine Russell -- Filmmaker as global circumnavigator / Scott MacDonald -- Mirrors without memories / Linda Williams -- Documentaphobia and mixed modes / Matthew Bernstein -- Silence and its opposite / Sheila Petty -- Containing fire / Caryl Flinn -- Contested territory / Julia Lesage
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Festival shorts in Filmnews (July 1983) vol.XIII iss.7 p.4
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MAN WHO CAN'T STOP, THE : (AT/CN, Michael Rubbo, 1973)
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MUCH ADO ABOUT SOMETHING : (AT, Michael Rubbo, 2001)
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Projecting Australia : government film since 1945 / Albert Moran Sydney: Currency Press, 1991.
Call No: 210.4(94) MORAuthor: Moran, Albert, 1942 Place: SydneyPublisher: Currency PressPubDate: 1991PhysDes: xii, 192 p., [16] p. of plates : ill., ports. ; 21 cmSubject: AUSTRALIA ; DOCUMENTARIES. AUSTRALIA ; STATE AND THE CINEMA. AUSTRALIA ; HEYER, JOHN ; HAWES, STANLEY ; AUSTRALIAN NATIONAL FILM BOARD ; FILM AUSTRALIA ; AUSTRALIAN FILM COMMISSION ; ANNIE'S COMING OUT (AT, Gil Brealey, 1984) ; MAN WHO CAN'T STOP, THE (AT, Michael Rubbo, 1973) ; FROM THE TROPICS TO THE SNOW (AT, ?, 1964) Notes: Includes indexes; Bibliography: p. 157-165ISBN: 0868192929 : $25.00LON: abn91225572; 8179305
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Short Film Appraisals in Filmviews (Autumn 1986) vol.31 iss.127 p.43-44
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SOLZHENITSYN'S CHILDREN ARE MAKING A LOT OF NOISE IN PARIS : (CN, Michael Rubbo, 1979)
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TOMMY TRICKER AND THE STAMP TRAVELLER : (CN, Michael Rubbo, 1988)
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VINCENT ET MOI : (CN, Michael Rubbo, 1990)
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WAITING FOR FIDEL : (CN, Michael Rubbo, 1976)
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