17 June

Marco Grosoli (IFILNOVA)

ABSTRACT Leonora addio (2022) is the first film that Paolo Taviani authored without his brother Vittorio (who died in 2018) in more than 60 years. It is openly a film about death: it starts with the death of renowned writer Luigi Pirandello, then recounts the grotesque (real-life) journey of his corpse’s burial, cremation, exhumation, transfer (from Rome to Sicily) and then some over more than ten years, before showing in the last thirty minutes an adaptation for the screen of “The Nail” (Pirandello’s last novella, on a child murdering another child). Obviously, multiple (Pirandello-esque) games of mirrors between Pirandello’s death and Vittorio’s can be glimpsed in the film. My talk will not only analyze these intricate games of mirrors (especially from the angle of Deleuze’s “crystal-images”), but also take a close look at Kaos (a 1984 film the Tavianis adapted from Pirandello, and overtly referenced in Leonora addio) applying Lacanian gaze theory. By reading these two films alongside one another, I will show that the thematization of death in Leonora addio is the background against and through which a wider political subtext is brought forth on cultural heritage and the exploitation of its value. In this way, I hope to show as well that philosophical explorations of death in given films can easily be in fruitful dialogue with other interpretive and methodological frameworks discernible in the same films.

Marco Grosoli has been an Assistant Professor at Habib University (Karachi, Pakistan; 2016-2021), and a Research Fellow at the University of Kent in Canterbury (2012-2015, as a British Academy Postdoctoral Fellow), at Filmuniversität Konrad Wolf in Potsdam, at Goethe-Universität in Frankfurt am Main (in both cases in 2022, as an Alexander von Humboldt Experienced Researcher) and at Università di Bologna (2023), where he also earned his PhD in Film Studies in 2010. Along with several academic papers and book chapters, he has authored an Italian-language monograph on Béla Tarr, and a book on the early days of French politique des auteurs (Eric Rohmer’s Film Theory, Amsterdam University Press, 2018). As a film critic, he collaborates with various Italian film magazines, among which FilmTv, Gli Spietati and FilmIdee.

The session is hybrid and will be held on June 17, 2024, at 15:00 PM (Lisbon time), at Colégio Almada Negreiros (room SE1) and online, via Zoom. Note that to receive information about joining the meeting online, it is mandatory to register in advance here.

Film and Death
Film and Death
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Film-Phil Seminars

It consists of a set of monthly seminars open to the academic community and the general public.
The seminars will be delivered by team members and by invited speakers and collaborators.

P2 Close-Up on Film-Philosophical Time

2026

25 February: Vasco Baptista Marques (NOVA University Lisbon)

More details to follow (Hybrid)

2025

29 January: Cristóbal Escobar (University of Melbourne), "A Classic Never Dies: On Cinematic Intensity and the Contemporary"

Online event

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19 February: Outi Hakola (University of Helsinki), "Filming the Moment of Death”

Hybrid

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26 March: Marc Cerisuelo (Université Gustave Eiffel and Institut Universitaire de France), "Psychopomp fictions"

Hybrid

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16 April: Federico Rossin "How experimental cinema deals with death"

Hybrid

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28 May: Muhammad Haris (Habib University), "Natural Language Generation and the Script for a Film on Genocide"

Online event

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4 June: Jeremi Szaniawski (UMass Amherst), "Death, Dying, and the Death Throes (?) of Necrorealism in the Films of Alexander Sokurov and Yevgeny Yufit"

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23 July: Bárbara Bergamaschi (NOVA University of Lisbon), "Eroticism, Formlessness, and Death in Tscherkassky’s Cinematic Hauntology"

Hybrid

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24 September: Davide Sisto

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15 October: Seán Cubbit

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27 November: Christine Greiner

More details to follow (Online event)

2024

18 September: Christine Reeh-Peters (​Protestant University of Applied Sciences/Bochum), "Film Specters - Towards an Ethics of Film and Death"

Hybrid

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23 October: James Williams (Deakin University), "Death, Démontage and Time in Bande Dessinée as a Precursor to Film: The Works of Jean-Marc Rochette"

Hybrid

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20 November: Lucas Ferraço Nassif (IFILNOVA), "Where the Desertshore Was, There Should Be the Crypt"

Hybrid

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4 December: Anna Magdalena Elsner (University of St. Gallen), "Documenting Dying or Capturing Care? The Afterlives of Palliative Care in French End-of-Life Documentaries"

Hybrid

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P1 Close-Up on Film-Philosophy as Metaphilosophy

2023

22 November: Robert Sinnerbrink (Macquarie University), “What is a Philosophical Reading of Film? On Film-Philosophy and Philosophical Film Criticism”

Online event

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11 December: Jakob A. Nilsson (Örebro University), "Cinecepts: On the Articulation of Philosophical Concepts Through Audiovisual Media"

Online event

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2024

24 January: Thomas E. Wartenberg (Mount Holyoke College), “Thoughtful Cinema: Illustrating Philosophy Through Film”

Hybrid

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14 February: David Ferragut (Universitat Autònoma de Barcelona), “Matter and Mind. On philosophy in Early Cinema”

Hybrid

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9 March: Thomas Lamarre (University of Chicago), “Half Life: Radiation and Animation”

In-person event

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24 April: Lucy Bolton (Queen Mary University of London), “The desecration of the beautiful star: death and the female biopic”

Hybrid

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15 May: Bernd Herzogenrath (Goethe University of Frankfurt), “The Way of All Flesh: Decasia and Death of|as Film”

Hybrid

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17 June: Marco Grosoli (IFILNOVA), "Looking Through the Eyes of Those Who Are No Longer: Death and Cultural Politics in Leonora addio (Paolo Taviani, 2022)"

Online event

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4 July: Catherine Wheatley (King's College London), "Tomorrow and tomorrow and tomorrow: film, mourning, and the passing of the world"

Hybrid

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Funded by the European Union (ERC, FILM AND DEATH, 101088956). Views and opinions expressed are however those of the author(s) only and do not necessarily reflect those of the European Union or the European Research Council Executive Agency. Neither the European Union nor the granting authority can be held responsible for them.

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