Resultats de la recherche : graduate

The Graduate Trailer - 195 sec
The original trailer for the Graduate.
Auteur : smwScott
Tags:the graduate trailer
Graduate end scene - 293 sec
My favorite scene from the movie... top 5 scense ever
Auteur : chunkybutt420
Tags: the graduate dustin hoffman katherine ross
The Graduate "One Word: Plastics" - 57 sec
The Graduate "One Word: Plastics"
Auteur : slowcurl
Tags: Graduate plastic
The Graduate 1967 - 593 sec
One of my favourite scene
Auteur : spykrat
Tags:The Graduate 1967 Dustin Hoffman Sound of Silence
The Graduate (The Sounds of Silence) The Simon and Garfunkel - 181 sec
MUSIC
Auteur : openeyevcd
Tags:Dustin Hoffman
Harlan Hatcher Graduate Labyrinth - 263 sec
No map devised by mortals can show you the way out of this library once you become lost. Update! 24 July 2007. Today in the second floor south elevator lobby, I noticed a vending machine containing the following study aids: pens, highlighters, energy bars, tic tacs, earbud headphones, blank CDs, Tylenol, packs of index cards, and 512MB USB thumb drives (only $10!). I am not making this up. "Staff at the Information Center desk get a few phone calls every term from students on cell phones trying to find their way out of the stacks." - according to a blog on lib.umich.edu! http://mblog.lib.umich.edu/Firehose/archives/2008/04/virtual_library.html
Auteur : deidzoeb
Tags: university michigan u-m uofm hatcher library labyrinth r'lyeh
The Graduate Preview (Re-Edit) - 104 sec
In Homage to Mike Nichols, this is a Re-Edited preview for the 1967 film The Graduate.
Auteur : klander1
Tags:The Graduate Kevin Lander Preview Mike Nichols 1967 Dustin Hoffman Anne Bancroft
The Graduate - "I Survived" ICON MES - 151 sec
Like this video? Come see thousands more at the Net's biggest, uncensored, completely d.i.y. punk, hardcore, indie and alternative Like this video? Come see thousands more at the Net's biggest, uncensored, completely d.i.y. punk, hardcore, indie and alternative music video site, BlankTV.com! We've got News, Games, Contests and the stuff that we can't show on YouTube! Free! Uncensored! Retarded! BlankTV.com! Director:
Auteur : BlankTV
Tags: Springfield ambient alternative pop indie rock music video BlankTV graduate
The Graduate - 356 sec
I shot this scene taken from the script of 'The Graduate' for my directing class.
Auteur : alexander10552
Tags:directing scene movie
Graduate - Elvis should play Ska´ - 191 sec
Pocos recuerdan este tema...
Auteur : Jordisarda
Tags: graduate elvis sarda ska
Mike Figgis - European Graduate School - 2008 1 - 577 sec
http://www.egs.edu/ Michael "Mike" Figgis (born February 28, 1948) is an English film director, writer, and composer. Figgis's early interest was in music and he played keyboards for Bryan Ferry's first band. After working in theatre (he was a musician and performer in the experimental group The People Show) he made his feature film debut with the low budget Stormy Monday in 1988. The film earned him attention as a director who could get interesting performances from established Hollywood actors. He initially made a splash in America in the 1990s with the gritty thriller Internal Affairs that helped to revive the career of Richard Gere. His next Hollywood feature Mr. Jones was misunderstood by the studio who attempted to market the downbeat story as a feelgood movie resulting in a box office flop. Figgis poured his disenchantment with the film industry into Leaving Las Vegas, creating star turns for Nicolas Cage and Elisabeth Shue which earned Figgis Academy Award nominations for Best Directing and Best Screenplay. His most ambitious film to date is the low budget film The Loss of Sexual Innocence, a loosely based autiobiographical movie of the director himself. Forays into digital video technology led him to conceive of and direct Timecode, which took advantage of the technology to create an ensemble film shot simultaneously with four cameras all in one take and also presented simultaneously and uncut, dividing the screen into four quarters. Since then, his work output has almost exclusively been on the cutting edge of creative digital filmmaking, with the exception of star-laden Cold Creek Manor. He returned to the Timecode quad-screen approach for his section of Ten Minutes Older, but has also worked on documentary pieces including a segment of The Blues (called Red, White, and Blues) and a short piece on the flamenco. His curiosity with the cinematic use of time has led him to cite Robert Enrico's film version of An Occurrence at Owl Creek Bridge as an influential film for him. Figgis has a well-documented love-hate relationship with the Hollywood system which leads him to often be an outspoken critic of the system while also despairing the lack of a better alternative, in his mind, at the moment. At an appearance at Camerimage in 2005, he expressed the view that filmmaking had become "boring and perhaps need[ed] to become even worse before anything better can emerge" successfully at least in reaction. He was the founding patron of the independent filmmakers online community Shooting People. Adetailt one of their events in 2005 he said that filmmaking with a small digital camera made the experience more like painting or novel writing than the movie industry. His fascination with camera technology has also led him to create a camera stabilization rig for smaller video cameras, called the Fig Rig which places the camera on a platform held within a steering wheel-like system and has since been released by Manfrotto Group. In 2007, Figgis shot his newest feature "Love Live Long" set between Istanbul and Bratislava on the infamous Gumball 3000 Rally, starring Sophie Winkleman and Daniel Lapaine. According to recent rumours Figgis is currently working on an experimental film called "Life Captured" with 21 talented individuals from across the world. From a press release: Its an honour to be working with a film director of Mikes calibre. Life Captured will challenge the boundaries of traditional photography, and showcase to the world an emerging form of film-making using a mobile phone. The film is a once-in-a-lifetime opportunity for aspiring film-makers, photographers and visual artists to work with a world-renowned director and have their work showcased to top industry figures". Life Captured will premiere at the 16th Raindance Film Festival in London on the 2nd October 2008 and the five Outstanding Achievers from Life Captured with Sony Ericsson, selected from the top 21 around the world, will be there to join in the party. Public open lecture for the students of the European Graduate School EGS, Media and Communication Studies department Film program, Saas-Fee, Switzerland, Europe, 2008
Auteur : egsvideo
Tags: Mike Figgis filmmaker composer EGS European Graduate School
Donna Haraway - European Graduate School - 2000 1/9 - 598 sec
http://www.egs.edu/ Donna Haraway speaking about the birth of the kennel, cyborgs, dogs and companion species, humans, machines, computer, organisms, technoscience, genetics, nature, culture, consciousness, philosophy, emergent ontologies, social relationships, societies, michel foucault, figure, reference, cyborg manifesto, and socialist feminism. Free public open video lecture for the students and faculty of the European Graduate School EGS, Media and Communication Studies department program, Saas-Fee, Switzerland, Europe, 2000. Donna Haraway. Donna Haraway, born September 6, 1944 in Denver, Colorado, is the author of Crystals, Fabrics, and Fields: Metaphors of Organicism in Twentieth-Century Developmental Biology (1976), Primate Visions: Gender, Race, and Nature in the World of Modern Science (1989), Simians, Cyborgs, and Women : The Reinvention of Nature (1991), and Modest_Witness@Second_Millennium.FemaleMan©Meets_OncoMouse™ (1997). Haraway earned a degree in Zoology and Philosophy at the Colorado College and received the Boettcher Foundation scholarship. She lived in Paris for a year, studying philosophies of evolution on a Fulbright scholarship before completing her Ph. D. from the Biology Department of Yale in 1972. She wrote her dissertation on the functions of metaphor in shaping research in developmental biology in the twentieth century. Haraway has taught Women's Studies and General Science at the University of Hawaii and Johns Hopkins University. In September, 2000, Haraway was awarded the highest honor given by the Society for Social Studies of Science, the J. D. Bernal Award, for lifetime contributions to the field. Haraway has also lectured in feminist theory and techno-science at the European Graduate School in Saas-Fee, Switzerland. Haraway is a leading thinker about people's love and hate relationship with machines. Her ideas have sparked an explosion of debate in areas as diverse as primatology, philosophy, and developmental biology.
Auteur : egsvideo
Tags:Donna Haraway cyborg manifesto dogs companion species feminism egs european graduate school Philosophy
Mike Figgis - European Graduate School - 2008 3 - 540 sec
http://www.egs.edu/ Michael "Mike" Figgis (born February 28, 1948) is an English film director, writer, and composer. Figgis's early interest was in music and he played keyboards for Bryan Ferry's first band. After working in theatre (he was a musician and performer in the experimental group The People Show) he made his feature film debut with the low budget Stormy Monday in 1988. The film earned him attention as a director who could get interesting performances from established Hollywood actors. He initially made a splash in America in the 1990s with the gritty thriller Internal Affairs that helped to revive the career of Richard Gere. His next Hollywood feature Mr. Jones was misunderstood by the studio who attempted to market the downbeat story as a feelgood movie resulting in a box office flop. Figgis poured his disenchantment with the film industry into Leaving Las Vegas, creating star turns for Nicolas Cage and Elisabeth Shue which earned Figgis Academy Award nominations for Best Directing and Best Screenplay. His most ambitious film to date is the low budget film The Loss of Sexual Innocence, a loosely based autiobiographical movie of the director himself. Forays into digital video technology led him to conceive of and direct Timecode, which took advantage of the technology to create an ensemble film shot simultaneously with four cameras all in one take and also presented simultaneously and uncut, dividing the screen into four quarters. Since then, his work output has almost exclusively been on the cutting edge of creative digital filmmaking, with the exception of star-laden Cold Creek Manor. He returned to the Timecode quad-screen approach for his section of Ten Minutes Older, but has also worked on documentary pieces including a segment of The Blues (called Red, White, and Blues) and a short piece on the flamenco. His curiosity with the cinematic use of time has led him to cite Robert Enrico's film version of An Occurrence at Owl Creek Bridge as an influential film for him. Figgis has a well-documented love-hate relationship with the Hollywood system which leads him to often be an outspoken critic of the system while also despairing the lack of a better alternative, in his mind, at the moment. At an appearance at Camerimage in 2005, he expressed the view that filmmaking had become "boring and perhaps need[ed] to become even worse before anything better can emerge" successfully at least in reaction. He was the founding patron of the independent filmmakers online community Shooting People. Adetailt one of their events in 2005 he said that filmmaking with a small digital camera made the experience more like painting or novel writing than the movie industry. His fascination with camera technology has also led him to create a camera stabilization rig for smaller video cameras, called the Fig Rig which places the camera on a platform held within a steering wheel-like system and has since been released by Manfrotto Group. In 2007, Figgis shot his newest feature "Love Live Long" set between Istanbul and Bratislava on the infamous Gumball 3000 Rally, starring Sophie Winkleman and Daniel Lapaine. According to recent rumours Figgis is currently working on an experimental film called "Life Captured" with 21 talented individuals from across the world. From a press release: Its an honour to be working with a film director of Mikes calibre. Life Captured will challenge the boundaries of traditional photography, and showcase to the world an emerging form of film-making using a mobile phone. The film is a once-in-a-lifetime opportunity for aspiring film-makers, photographers and visual artists to work with a world-renowned director and have their work showcased to top industry figures". Life Captured will premiere at the 16th Raindance Film Festival in London on the 2nd October 2008 and the five Outstanding Achievers from Life Captured with Sony Ericsson, selected from the top 21 around the world, will be there to join in the party. Public open lecture for the students of the European Graduate School EGS, Media and Communication Studies department Film program, Saas-Fee, Switzerland, Europe, 2008
Auteur : egsvideo
Tags: Mike Figgis filmmaker composer EGS European Graduate School
The Sound of Silence en The Graduate - 142 sec
The Graduate (Mike Nichols, 1967)
Auteur : haem0globin
Tags:the sound of silene graduate mike nichols simon garfunkel
The Graduate-Alfa Romeo - 597 sec
Great clips of Dustin Hoffman and his trusty Alfa Duetto
Auteur : jontg429
Tags:alfa romeo graduate spider
Third Eye Blind - "Graduate" - 195 sec
Third Eye Blind "Graduate"
Auteur : Jenna8423
Tags: Third Eye Blind Graduate
Mike Figgis - European Graduate School - 2008 2 - 601 sec
http://www.egs.edu/ Michael "Mike" Figgis (born February 28, 1948) is an English film director, writer, and composer. Figgis's early interest was in music and he played keyboards for Bryan Ferry's first band. After working in theatre (he was a musician and performer in the experimental group The People Show) he made his feature film debut with the low budget Stormy Monday in 1988. The film earned him attention as a director who could get interesting performances from established Hollywood actors. He initially made a splash in America in the 1990s with the gritty thriller Internal Affairs that helped to revive the career of Richard Gere. His next Hollywood feature Mr. Jones was misunderstood by the studio who attempted to market the downbeat story as a feelgood movie resulting in a box office flop. Figgis poured his disenchantment with the film industry into Leaving Las Vegas, creating star turns for Nicolas Cage and Elisabeth Shue which earned Figgis Academy Award nominations for Best Directing and Best Screenplay. His most ambitious film to date is the low budget film The Loss of Sexual Innocence, a loosely based autiobiographical movie of the director himself. Forays into digital video technology led him to conceive of and direct Timecode, which took advantage of the technology to create an ensemble film shot simultaneously with four cameras all in one take and also presented simultaneously and uncut, dividing the screen into four quarters. Since then, his work output has almost exclusively been on the cutting edge of creative digital filmmaking, with the exception of star-laden Cold Creek Manor. He returned to the Timecode quad-screen approach for his section of Ten Minutes Older, but has also worked on documentary pieces including a segment of The Blues (called Red, White, and Blues) and a short piece on the flamenco. His curiosity with the cinematic use of time has led him to cite Robert Enrico's film version of An Occurrence at Owl Creek Bridge as an influential film for him. Figgis has a well-documented love-hate relationship with the Hollywood system which leads him to often be an outspoken critic of the system while also despairing the lack of a better alternative, in his mind, at the moment. At an appearance at Camerimage in 2005, he expressed the view that filmmaking had become "boring and perhaps need[ed] to become even worse before anything better can emerge" successfully at least in reaction. He was the founding patron of the independent filmmakers online community Shooting People. Adetailt one of their events in 2005 he said that filmmaking with a small digital camera made the experience more like painting or novel writing than the movie industry. His fascination with camera technology has also led him to create a camera stabilization rig for smaller video cameras, called the Fig Rig which places the camera on a platform held within a steering wheel-like system and has since been released by Manfrotto Group. In 2007, Figgis shot his newest feature "Love Live Long" set between Istanbul and Bratislava on the infamous Gumball 3000 Rally, starring Sophie Winkleman and Daniel Lapaine. According to recent rumours Figgis is currently working on an experimental film called "Life Captured" with 21 talented individuals from across the world. From a press release: Its an honour to be working with a film director of Mikes calibre. Life Captured will challenge the boundaries of traditional photography, and showcase to the world an emerging form of film-making using a mobile phone. The film is a once-in-a-lifetime opportunity for aspiring film-makers, photographers and visual artists to work with a world-renowned director and have their work showcased to top industry figures". Life Captured will premiere at the 16th Raindance Film Festival in London on the 2nd October 2008 and the five Outstanding Achievers from Life Captured with Sony Ericsson, selected from the top 21 around the world, will be there to join in the party. Public open lecture for the students of the European Graduate School EGS, Media and Communication Studies department Film program, Saas-Fee, Switzerland, Europe, 2008
Auteur : egsvideo
Tags: Mike Figgis filmmaker composer EGS European Graduate School
Judith Butler. European Graduate School EGS 2006 1/10 - 599 sec
http://www.egs.edu/ Judith Butler, feminist philosopher lecturing about "Primo Levy for the Present"; narrative accounts, forgiveness, holocaust, Auschwitz, victims, execution, war, and crime, while asking the question: "What is to give an Account of Oneself?". Public open lecture for the students of the European Graduate School EGS, Media and Communication Studies department program, Saas-Fee, Switzerland, Europe, 2006, Judith Butler Judith Butler is the Maxine Elliot professor in the Departments of Rhetoric and Comparative Literature at the University of California, Berkeley and an American feminist and post-structuralist philosopher interested in feminism, queer theory, political philosophy, ethics, zionism, israel, oppression, academic freedom and cultural narrative. Judith Butler is the author of Giving An Account of Oneself; Undoing Gender; Precarious Life: The Powers of Mourning and Violence; Contingency, Hegemony, Universality: Contemporary Dialogues on the Left (with Ernesto Laclau and Slavoj Žižek); Antigone's Claim: Kinship Between Life and Death; The Psychic Life of Power: Theories in Subjection; Excitable Speech: A Politics of the Performative; Bodies That Matter: On the Discursive Limits of "Sex"; Gender Trouble: Feminism and the Subversion of Identity; and Subjects of Desire: Hegelian Reflections in Twentieth-Century France.
Auteur : egsvideo
Tags:Judith Butler philosopher narrative account palestine ethics holocaust EGS European Graduate School lecture crime war
Jacques Derrida at European Graduate School EGS 2004 1/11 - 597 sec
http://www.egs.edu/ Jacques Derrida in his Paris seminar "A Critique of Psychoanalysis", a reading focusing on texts from Gilles Deleuze. Public open video lecture with students of the European Graduate School EGS, Media and Communication Studies department program, Saas-Fee, Switzerland, Europe, France, 2004 Jacques Derrida (born July 15, 1930 -- October 8, 2004) was an Algerian-born French philosopher, known as the founder of deconstruction. His voluminous work had a profound impact upon continental philosophy, French philosophy, and literary theory. Derrida taught philosophy at the Sorbonne, and from 1964 to 1984 at the École Normale Superieure. He completed his Thèse d'État in 1980; the work was subsequently published in English translation as "The Time of a Thesis: Punctuations". Beginning with his 1966 lecture at Johns Hopkins University, at which he presented his essay "Structure, Sign, and Play in the Discourse of the Human Sciences" (see below), his work assumed international prominence.In 1967 Derrida published his first three books — Writing and Difference, Speech and Phenomena, and Of Grammatology. Until his death Derrida was director of studies at the École des Hautes Études en Sciences Sociales in Paris. With François Châtelet and others, he co-founded the Collège international de philosophie (CIPH) in 1983, a research institution intended to give a place to philosophical research and lectures which could not be carried out elsewhere in the academy. He was elected as its first president. Derrida held a series of visiting and permanent positions. In 1986 he became Professor of the Humanities at the University of California, Irvine (which now has a major archive of his manuscripts). He was a regular visiting professor at several other major American universities, including Johns Hopkins University, Yale University, and New York University, and The New School for Social Research. Derrida was a member of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences and received the 2001 Adorno-Preis from the University of Frankfurt. He was awarded honorary doctorates by Cambridge University (after a great deal of controversy), Columbia University, The New School for Social Research, the University of Essex, University of Leuven, and Williams College. In 2003, Derrida was diagnosed with aggressive pancreatic cancer, which reduced his speaking and traveling engagements. He died in a Parisian hospital on the evening of Friday, October 8, 2004.
Auteur : egsvideo
Tags:Jacques Derrida Deleuze Freud Lacan Rhizome psychoanalysis Philosophy egs european graduate school paris culture forgive
Jacques Derrida at European Graduate School EGS 2004 2/11 - 598 sec
http://www.egs.edu/ Jacques Derrida in his Paris seminar "A Critique of Psychoanalysis", a reading focusing on texts from Gilles Deleuze. Public open video lecture with students of the European Graduate School EGS, Media and Communication Studies department program, Saas-Fee, Switzerland, Europe, France, 2004 Jacques Derrida (born July 15, 1930 -- October 8, 2004) was an Algerian-born French philosopher, known as the founder of deconstruction. His voluminous work had a profound impact upon continental philosophy, French philosophy, and literary theory. Derrida taught philosophy at the Sorbonne, and from 1964 to 1984 at the École Normale Superieure. He completed his Thèse d'État in 1980; the work was subsequently published in English translation as "The Time of a Thesis: Punctuations". Beginning with his 1966 lecture at Johns Hopkins University, at which he presented his essay "Structure, Sign, and Play in the Discourse of the Human Sciences" (see below), his work assumed international prominence.In 1967 Derrida published his first three books — Writing and Difference, Speech and Phenomena, and Of Grammatology. Until his death Derrida was director of studies at the École des Hautes Études en Sciences Sociales in Paris. With François Châtelet and others, he co-founded the Collège international de philosophie (CIPH) in 1983, a research institution intended to give a place to philosophical research and lectures which could not be carried out elsewhere in the academy. He was elected as its first president. Derrida held a series of visiting and permanent positions. In 1986 he became Professor of the Humanities at the University of California, Irvine (which now has a major archive of his manuscripts). He was a regular visiting professor at several other major American universities, including Johns Hopkins University, Yale University, and New York University, and The New School for Social Research. Derrida was a member of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences and received the 2001 Adorno-Preis from the University of Frankfurt. He was awarded honorary doctorates by Cambridge University (after a great deal of controversy), Columbia University, The New School for Social Research, the University of Essex, University of Leuven, and Williams College. In 2003, Derrida was diagnosed with aggressive pancreatic cancer, which reduced his speaking and traveling engagements. He died in a Parisian hospital on the evening of Friday, October 8, 2004.
Auteur : egsvideo
Tags:Jacques Derrida Deleuze Freud Lacan Rhizome psychoanalysis Philosophy egs european graduate school paris culture forgive