Yahoo Search Búsqueda en la Web

Resultado de búsqueda

  1. The School of Cinema is vested in San Francisco State University’s core values of equity and social justice. Like our faculty and alumni, our students can expect to engage in meaningful discourse and activity, to connect with their communities, and to challenge the artistic, social and political practices of their audiences. In other words ...

  2. Professor McBride, who has taught at SF State since 2002, has written or edited sixteen books. They include the critically acclaimed biographies Frank Capra: The Catastrophe of Success, Steven Spielberg: A Biography, and Searching for John Ford; three books on Orson Welles; and the Howard Hawks interview book Hawks on Hawks.

  3. A grade of C or better is required for Cinema majors and minors. (Plus-minus letter grade only) CINE 204 Introduction to Filmmaking Laboratory (Unit: 1) Prerequisites: Restricted to Cinema majors with sophomore standing or above; concurrent enrollment in CINE 202 *; or permission of the instructor.

  4. Natasha V. studied screenwriting at Columbia University in New York, earned an M.F.A. in Cinema Production from SF State, and both B.A. & M.A. in Rhetoric from UC Berkeley. Her creative interests focus on problems in writing for the female Protagonist as well as alternative narrative structures. Natasha's scripts have been awarded in national ...

  5. He graduated with honors from Brown University and has a master’s in documentary production from Stanford. Prior to coming to SF State, he taught film in various Bay Area film programs, including Stanford, the University of San Francisco, and the California College of the Arts.

  6. M.A. Admissions Committee School of Cinema San Francisco State University 1600 Holloway Ave., FA 245 San Francisco, CA 94132 Phone: (415) 338-1629 Email: cinegrad@sfsu.edu.

  7. Selected Publications & Filmography: "Chinese Cinema Revisits the City: Beijing Trilogy and Global Urbanism of the Nineties, in Chinese Connections: Critical Perspectives on Film, Identity, and Diaspora". Ed. Gina Marchetti and Peter X. Feng. Temple University Press, 2009.