Corey K Creekmur
As contributor
As reviewer
As commenter
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On the Video Clip
Alas, the linked video here is misleading: it's the visual sequence from the episode, but with the original song only as the soundtrack: the sound in the actual episode is more complex, and a mix of the continuous songs and sounds from the various lo ... -
Televisual Seriality, Cinematic Sequels, and Comics Continuity
This is a compelling piece for me because I move between film studies and comics studies (rather than television studies): mainstream comics fans and some creators are obsessed with what they call continuity, the long-term serial structure that ostensibly ... -
Exemplary!
I find that this video essay, with the accompanying texts, exemplifies the goals of [in]Transition: the video essay is a suggestive work of criticism itself, and the texts richly expand upon it without displacing it. And the texts begin to build a genuine ... -
The Critic and the Fan
This is a very interesting commentary to me because I at first considered discussing "tributes" (I was thinking of calling them "homages") in my own contribution to this issue: I assume Kogonoda's "Hands of Bresson," whi ... -
Film Studies and the Question of Illustrations
Thanks, Girish, for these kind words: I do think there is a history to be uncovered of (what to call it?) unconventional scholarship in the history of published film studies that (among other things) engaged critically and creatively with design, layout, ... -
Film Books and Visual/Video Essays
Yes, that was one of the earlier shot by shot analyses of a full film in book form, from 1981. It followed the 1979 volume on Eisenstein's OCTOBER by Ropars-Wuilleumier, Sorlin, and Lagny, only translated in part into English, and the studies by Bell ... -
Footnotes towards additional comments
No essay is ever finished, of course, and any essay is limited by (among other things) what one has read and seen up to the point of its composition. When I wrote this essay-- attempting to think of the terms we employ as well as the legacies and traditio ... -
Re: Intersection
Cinephilia/Eating/Sex
Girish, your gustatorial (?) query, with the interesting notion of quick and slow release applied to cinema, makes me wonder about my question in my contribution to this issue, (motivated by Jason Livingston's THE END) regarding another form of delay ... -
Re: Intersection
As a notoriously
As a notoriously fashion-hampered person, I was completely unaware of the "slow clothes" movement, but that's fascinating (and your brief account brings to my mind the central and symbolic role clothing-- or cloth/khadi-- played in Gandhi ...