Download as pptx, pdf, or txt
Download as pptx, pdf, or txt
You are on page 1of 14

FILM PRESENTED BY: GROUP 2

LEADER: CHYNNA MAE BLAZO


ASSISTANT LEADER: JOHN ALLEN MANGULABNAN
MEMBERS: MINDI MAY AGUILAR
CLARISSE EMATA
SOPHIA BIANCA DELA CRUZ
MARK NICOLE RAYMUNDO
SHAINA RHEA CASTILLO
What is film?
• It refers to a sequence of moving pictures shown on television or
in cinema.
• One of the most popular forms of entertainment today.
• It is an important tool for expressing ideas, feelings, attitudes,
dreams, and aspirations.
• Cinema or movies, aside from being a major source of mass
communication and entertainment, is also a powerful tool in
conveying realistic issues such as poverty, corruption, violence,
suffering and others.
• Today, film is not only an art form but it is also a form of
business.
There are different types of film that are used to
instruct such as:
• educational films/ feature films - these films tell fictional stories
based on real events,
• documentary films render facts or events with a particular
viewpoint, and;
• industrial films made by companies to advertise or publicize
their products and to generate favorable image.
National Artist for Film
Lamberto V. Avellana (February 12, 1915 –
April 25, 1991)
• He was born in Bontoc in the Mountain Province on
February 12, 1915.
• Avellana was tagged as the “The Boy Wonder of Philippine
Movies” as early as 1939.
• He was also known as the first Filipino filmmaker who
directed "Kandelerong Pilak" -- the first Philippine film ever
shown at the Cannes International Film Festival -- as well as
founder of the first Philippine theater group, the Barangay
Theater Guild (1939).
• Sakay, which depicted the
• Kandelerong Pilak life story of the Filipino hero • Badjao, which portrayed the
(Silver Candlesticks) Macario Sakay. indigenous seafaring people of
Mindanao
Manuel Conde (October 9, 1915 – August
11, 1985)
• He was an actor, director, and producer. Conde has
posthumously conferred the Order of National Artist for Film
and Broadcast Arts in 2009 for enlivening the Philippine
cinematic language with folk literature, political criticism, and
grandeur.
• known for producing and directing films based on old Filipino
tales such as Siete Infantes de Lara (1950), Si Juan Tamad
(1974), and Ang Ibong Adarna (1941). He also brought to the
silver screen stories from other parts of the world like Genghis
Khan (1950).
Siete Infantes de Lara (1950) Si Juan Tamad (1974) Ang Ibong Adarna (1941)
Eddie S. Romero (July 7, 1924 – May 28,
2013)
• He was a screenwriter, film director and producer
• His film Ganito Kami Noon…Paano Kayo Ngayon? set at the turn
of the century during the revolution against the Spaniards and, later,
the American colonizers, follows a naïve peasant through his leap of
faith to become a member of an imagined community.
• Banta ng Kahapon his ‘small’ political film, is set against the
turmoil of the late 1960s, tracing the connection of the underworld
to the corrupt halls of politics.
• His 13-part series of Noli Me Tangere brings the national hero’s
polemic novel to a new generation of viewers.
Ganito Kami Noon…Paano Kayo Banta ng Kahapon 13-part series of Noli Me Tangere
Ngayon?
International Artist for Film

Sam Taylor-Johnson
• In her lush, highly charged photographs and films,
Sam Taylor- Wood examines "who we are and how we
work through our identity, how we perceive ourselves
in the world," as she describes.
• Her works abound with psychological and physical
tension, often placing their characters in allegorical
scenarios.
International Artist for Film

Douglas Gordon

• From Hollywood films to scientific footage to classical


literature, Gordon takes seemingly familiar imagery
and twists it with a deft, often ironic touch.
• His best-known work is probably 24-Hour Psycho, for
which he slowed down Alfred Hitchcock's classic film
into a full- day duration, absurdly eliminating all
elements of suspense.
International Artist for Film

Yang Fudong

• One of China's best-known filmmakers, Yang draws


influence from his training as a painter and
photographer to craft his films- sequences of slow-
moving, tableau-like dreamscapes with figures cast in
surrealistic scenes.
• His works are more evocative of moods and
impressions than any clear narrative; as he says: "There
is no result, no answer."
THANKS FOR
LISTENING!!! :)

You might also like