Chris Robé
Film’s Overlooked Histories: Charles Burnett and the L.A. Rebellion
The general absence of the L.A. Rebellion from most film history text books and Burnett's relative marginalization within film and media studies speaks to the socio-economic myopia and privileges that define both areas of study.
Tarkovsky’s ‘Stalker’ Warns of a World Where Escape Can Lead to New Forms of Imprisonment
Brush Up on Your Film Studies With ‘Martin Scorsese’s World Cinema Project No. 2’
‘The Watermelon Woman’, or, Whatever Happened to New Queer Cinema?
Documenting the Little Abuses: Copwatching, Community Organizing, and Video Activism
The ascent of affordable video technology and application in community issues such as copwatching assists in propelling movements for self-determination and self-respect.
Enterprising Women and the Femme Fatale of Film Noir
Too Late for Tears and Woman on the Run remind us that today’s financial and gender anxieties have long histories.
‘Disruptive Film’ Creates a Constellation Where the Past and Present Meet
Pathological Visions: Desire and Alienation in the Films of the Quay Brothers
The Laboring Body in Dardenne’s Brothers’ ‘Two Days, One Night’
Although one might hesitate to call Two Days, One Night a propaganda film for labor, it nonetheless expresses concern for those who labor by exploring under precarious working conditions.