Published August 13, 2015 This content is archived.
Updated September 11, 2015 This content is archived.
"Citizen Kane," considered by many to be one of the greatest films ever made, is among the offerings in the fall 2015 edition of the Buffalo Film Seminars, the popular, semester-long series of film screenings and discussions hosted by UB faculty members Diane Christian and Bruce Jackson.
Each session of the Buffalo Film Seminars (BFS) will begin at 7 p.m. on Tuesdays, beginning Sept. 1 and running through Dec. 8, in the Amherst Theatre, 3500 Main St. in the University Plaza, directly across the street from the South Campus.
Christian, SUNY Distinguished Teaching Professor in the Department of English, and Jackson, SUNY Distinguished Professor and James Agee Professor of American Culture in the Department of English, will introduce each film. Following a short break at the end of each film, they will lead a discussion of the film.
The screenings are part of “Film Directors” (Eng 438), an undergraduate course being taught by the pair. Students enrolled in the course are admitted free; others may attend at the theater’s regular admission prices of $9.50 for adults, $7.50 for students and $7 for seniors. Season tickets are available any time at a 15 percent reduction for the cost of the remaining films.
“Goldenrod handouts” — featuring production details, anecdotes and critical comments about each week’s film — are available in the theater lobby 45 minutes before each session. The handouts also are posted online one day before the screening.
The series opens on Sept. 1 with Georg Wilhelm Pabst’s controversial 1929 social drama “Diary of a Lost Girl.” Legendary silent screen actress Louise Brooks stars as young girl who is raped by the clerk in her father’s pharmacy. She becomes pregnant, is rejected by her family and must fend for herself in a cruel world.
The remainder of the schedule, with descriptions culled from the IMDb online movie database: