- F-160-2-0-0-0-122
- Item
- 1978
Part of Dennis Roberts fonds
A, B - Doug Gyseman, audio specialist (then AV) (Comment)
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Part of Dennis Roberts fonds
A, B - Doug Gyseman, audio specialist (then AV) (Comment)
Gorf: A Parable for Archaeology
Production was sponsored by the Department of Archaeology. Contributions by Editha Stephens, Elizabeth Carefoot, Chris Hildred, Doug Gyseman, Frank Campbell, Geoff Holland, Ann-Marie Logan, and Nicky Higson.
From the SFU Library catalogue record: "Lewis Carroll's famous nonsense poem adapted for the screen with a new twist." Directed by Walter Griba, with contributions by Elizabeth Carefoot, Chris Hildred, and Doug Gyseman.
"(8 minutes) 16mm colour documentary. One job‚ one man, who has been happy for thirty-five years making peanut butter‚ "the best‚ (no additives)!" [1977/78 SFU Film Workshop Productions program]. Only one element (noted as work print, but no splices so likely final). Miscellaneous note: "Woodward Stores Ltd."
"Based on the book 'Symbols of Transformation' by C.G. Jung. This animated film grew out of a classroom slide production designed to illustrate C.G. Jung's theory of archetypes and its application to the study of the hero in literature." [http://troy.lib.sfu.ca/record=b5511707~S1a]
This is Simon Fraser University
Item is a film featuring the sights and sounds of all aspects of attending SFU in early 1970s, from the bus ride to registration to lectures, lunch, and leisure. Current research, issues of the day and the various departments are presented through original lecture audio. Impressions of SFU by students and staff are revealed in interview-style discussion, coupled with thoughtfully shot footage. Interspersed are artistically shot scenes of a sunny campus with a gentle guitar strum. Unlike more contemporary moving image profiles created by SFU, it is not narrated with a script nor overtly promotional.