From Wednesday 5 June to Sunday 16 June 2019, the 66th Sydney Film Festival will bring more than 250 of the world's best new films to Sydney for 12 days and nights of screenings, talks and other special events.
The University of Sydney has supported the Festival since its inception and is proud to be its Education Partner in 2019.
"Just as the films screened during the Sydney Film Festival challenge audiences to think differently about the world around them, the research of our colleagues encourages others to see things differently, to embrace the unexpected and sometimes even to find counterintuitive solutions to issues of global importance," said Dean of the Faculty of Arts and Social Sciences Professor Annamarie Jagose.
In keeping with this ethos, scholars from diverse disciplines across the University have offered their research-backed insights into a selection of films being screened at the Festival:
- Senior Film Studies lecturer Dr Bruce Isaacs explains why the visually-arresting High Life is destined to be a sci-fi classic.
- Multispecies Justice Research Lead Professor Danielle Celermajer discusses discusses Anthropocene: The Human Epoch, a visually stunning cinematic essay on humanity's devastating impact on the planet.
- Power Professor of Art History and Visual Culture Mark Ledbury looks at the way art and history collide in Never Look Away, inspired by the life of German painter, Gerhard Richter.
- Professor of Practice (Sociology and Political Theory) Tim Soutphommassane offers his thoughts on The Final Quarter, documenting AFL champion footballer and Indigenous leader Adam Goodes' divisive public call-out of racism.
The 2019 Sydney Film Festival takes place in venues across Greater Sydney. To find out more about our involvement in the Sydney Film Festival click here.
Top image: Still from High Life, being screened at the 2019 Sydney Film Festival. Courtesy: Sydney Film Festival.