L.A. Rebellion

L.A. Rebellion
movement in cinema
Akụkụ nkecinema of the United States Dezie
ụdị ọrụ yacinematography Dezie
named byClyde Taylor Dezie
mba/obodoNjikota Obodo Amerika Dezie
oge obidoro1967 Dezie
oge ngwụcha1989 Dezie
ihe omume dị ịrịba amaWatts riots, civil rights movement, Vietnam War Dezie

Otu ihe nkiri LA Rebellion, nke a na-akpọ mgbe ụfọdụ dị ka " Los Angeles School of Black Filmmakers ", ma ọ bụ UCLA Rebellion, na-ezo aka n'ọgbọ ọhụrụ nke ndị na-eme ihe nkiri Africa na ndị America America bụ ndị gụrụ akwụkwọ na UCLA Film School na njedebe-1960. ruo ngwụcha-1980 wee mepụta sinima ojii nke na-enye ihe ọzọ na sinima Hollywood oge gboo . [1] [2] [3] [4] [5]

  1. Movie movements that defined cinema: L.A. Rebellion|Movies|Empire
  2. L.A. Rebellion: Creating a New Black Cinema. UCLA School of Theater, Film & Television. Retrieved on 2011-10-02. “Beginning in the late 1960s, a number of promising African and African-American students entered the UCLA School of Theater, Film and Television, recruited under a concerted initiative to be more responsive to various communities of color. From that first class through the late 1980s, and continuing well beyond their college days, these filmmakers came to represent the first sustained undertaking to forge an alternative black cinema practice in the United States. Along the way, they created fascinating, provocative and visionary films that have earned an impressive array of awards and accolades at festivals around the world, in addition to blazing new paths into the commercial market.”"L.A. Rebellion: Creating a New Black Cinema". Los Angeles, California: UCLA School of Theater, Film & Television. Retrieved 2011-10-02. Beginning in the late 1960s, a number of promising African and African-American students entered the UCLA School of Theater, Film and Television, recruited under a concerted initiative to be more responsive to various communities of color. From that first class through the late 1980s, and continuing well beyond their college days, these filmmakers came to represent the first sustained undertaking to forge an alternative black cinema practice in the United States. Along the way, they created fascinating, provocative and visionary films that have earned an impressive array of awards and accolades at festivals around the world, in addition to blazing new paths into the commercial market.
  3. Hornaday. "From L.A. Hotbed, Black Filmmakers' Creativity Flowered", Washington Post, 2007-06-03. Retrieved on 2011-10-02. “In 1967, after studying electrical engineering at Los Angeles Community College, Burnett arrived at UCLA to study film. For the next 10 years, UCLA students would develop a fecund, cosmopolitan and politically engaged movement that came to be unofficially known as the Los Angeles School of Black Filmmakers.”
  4. The L.A. Rebellion. Film Reference. Retrieved on 2011-10-02. “Armed with a knowledge of "traditional" film history now infused with an introduction to the Third Cinema movement and exposure to revolutionary films from Latin America and Africa, these filmmakers took advantage of their "outsider" positioning, reinvigorating the push for a politically driven cinema...”
  5. Patterson. "L.A. Rebellion:Creating a New Black Cinema", L.A. Weekly, 2011-10-06. Retrieved on 2011-10-10. “This collection of the highlights of the legendary but only partially understood African-American film explosion at UCLA in the '70s and early '80s is a priceless work of excavation and restoration, and as an L.A.-specific filmic event it's unlikely to be surpassed in the near future.”

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