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Linda Williams: What Really Are Filmmakers Up To?

Linda Williams is a professor in the Film and Rhetoric departments at UC Berkeley. She teaches courses on pornography, melodrama, and “body genres.” In 1989 she published a study of pornographic film entitled Hard Core: Power, Pleasure and the Frenzy of the Visible (second edition 1999).

Welcome to the Cinema of Change podcast with Robert Rippberger and Tobias Deml.

Linda Williams is a professor in the Film and Rhetoric departments at UC Berkeley. She teaches courses on pornography, melodrama, and “body genres.” In 1989 she published a study of pornographic film entitled Hard Core: Power, Pleasure and the Frenzy of the Visible (second edition 1999). More recently she published Screening Sex (Duke, 2008), a history of the revelation and concealment of sex at the movies. In 2001 Williams published Playing the Race Card: Melodramas of Black and White, from Uncle Tom to O.J. Simpson (2001, Princeton)–an analysis of racial melodrama spanning the 19th and 20th centuries of American culture.

  • 00:27 – Intro: Linda Williams
  • 01:04 – How does the depiction of female characters influence women?
  • 02:45 – How can filmmakers avoid including their unconscious bias in their films?
  • 06:14 – The power play between Hollywood and the serial format
  • 10:05 – Can films go beyond entertainment? Do they have a utility in deconstructing ideology?
  • 15:07 – How has “The Wire” impacted you and its audience at large?
  • 18:30 – How does the viewer’s position in society influence a film experience?
  • 22:20 – What’s the relationship between critics, theorists and filmmakers?
  • 23:49 – Is Pornography an instructional tool for our personal sex lives?
  • 26:02 – Relationships in film – do they influence our own romances?
  • 27:44 – What is the role of Film Theory in pushing media?
  • 28:40 – Outro: A collaboration between scholars and practitioners?
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Media has always played an important role around the globe. We live in a world of influence and social change - and as filmmakers, we want to contribute to a better world. The question is: How can we make better films that accelerate progress and help people become stronger critical thinkers? How can we expose issues that are important, and publish content that challenges popular conceptions? These podcasts along with the SIE Voices magazine take a multidisciplinary approach and interviews filmmakers, psychologists, researchers and academics. It analyzes success stories of films that had an impact, and portrays companies that are following this path. SIE Voices is a platform to bring impact filmmakers together to share ideas and to challenge our assumptions through debate.

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