2. Infinite Bounce 1
• Total of 10 questions
• Each question carries 10 points
• Pounce allowed for all questions.
• For Pounce +10/-10
• If a part of the question is correct in the
pounce then no negative.
3. 1.Id the film
• A memorable feature of the film is the tune that is whistled
by the POWs—the first strain of the march "Colonel Bogey"—
when they enter the camp. The march was originally written
in 1914 by Kenneth J. Alford, a pseudonym of British
Bandmaster Frederick J. Ricketts. The Colonel Bogey strain
was accompanied by a counter-melody using the same chord
progressions, then continued with film composer Malcolm
Arnold's own composition " ___________ March," played by
the off-screen orchestra taking over from the
whistlers, though Arnold's march was not heard in
completion on the soundtrack.
• The two marches have been recorded together by Mitch
Miller as "March from ________ - Colonel Bogey". Due to
this, the "Colonel Bogey March" is often mis-credited as
“_________ March".
6. 2.
• The cartoon on the left won
the Pulitzer Prize for Editorial
Cartooning. Bill
Mauldin produced a political
cartoon lampooning the
Soviet State's campaign
against X.
• The cartoon depicts X and
another convict splitting trees
in the snow. In the caption, X
says, "I won the _________.
What was your crime?"
9. 3.
• X is an important contribution to international avant-garde
developments in the Sixties that extended the definition of
art. Similar to the contemporaneous Nouveau
Réalisme, Fluxus or American Literalist Art, artists regarded
the pictorial surface as no longer suitable because, in the
final analysis, the medium is always illusionistic and, led by
their feelings, they turned to working directly with real
bodies, objects and substances.
• In their efforts to overcome the illusionism of the easel
picture, Günter Brus, Otto Mühl, Hermann Nitsch and
Rudolf Schwarzkogler arrived at performative works
intended to enable a perception of reality as unadulterated
as possible. With their painting and material actions, body
analysis and manifestoes they opposed the state and the
prevailing social order.
16. 5.
• X was a topographic or occupational name for
someone who owned or lived by an orchard, or was
employed in one. The name was originally from the
German word for orchard. There are several villages
named with this word, and so in some cases the
surname may have originated as a habitation name
from one of these. The first hereditary surnames on
German soil are found in the second half of the 12th
century, slightly later than in England and France.
However, it was not until the 16th century that they
became stabilized. The practice of adopting hereditary
surnames began in the southern areas of Germany, and
gradually spread northwards during the Middle Ages.
This name has numerous variant spellings.
19. 6.
• X would recount this incident for decades afterward. It happened, he
said, when he was about five years old. To punish him for some minor
misdeed, his father sent him off to the local police station with a note.
Trembling, little X handed the scrap of paper to the officer in
charge, who read its instructions, led the boy down a corridor, and
locked him in a jail cell for several minutes. “This is what we do to
naughty boys!” the policeman warned him sternly.
• From that single episode, X would claim, arose a lifelong terror of the
police. It was a terror that would surface time and again in his
films, especially those in which the main character is falsely accused
of a crime and pursued by the authorities.
• Whether the incident actually occurred, or whether it was just a
colourful fiction that X trotted out for interviewers, is impossible to
say. Still, the story does suggest that the emotions of fear and anxiety
loomed large in his earliest memories.
22. 7.
• During World War II, X expressed his support for the
German war-effort on several occasions and met with
Hitler. In 1940 he wrote that "the Germans are fighting
for us". After Hitler's death, he published a short
obituary in which he described him as "a preacher of
the gospel of justice for all nations.“
• In the video identify X and the actor who is portraying
X.
• Youtube
link:http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=A_bGMRHVb0
Y
25. 8.
• In 1941 X was diagnosed with cancer and, following
surgery, he started using a wheelchair.
• Eventually by 1950 he stopped painting in favour of his
paper cutouts. The cut out was not an renunciation of
painting and sculpture: he called it “painting with
scissors.” X said, "Only what I created after the illness
constitutes my real self: free, liberated.”
Moreover, experimentation with cut-outs offered X
innumerable opportunities to fashion a
new, aesthetically pleasing environment: "You see as I
am obliged to remain often in bed because of the state
of my health, I have made a little garden all around me
where I can walk... There are leaves, fruits, a bird.
29. • X is a fictional house that is the home of Y Z, a character in
a series of books. Y Z’s full name is ____ Delicatessa
Windowshade Mackrelmint Ephraim's Daughter Z.
• Y was named by Y’s author’s then nine-year-old
daughter, Karin, who requested a get-well story from her
mother one day when she was home sick from school.
32. • Zachariah is loosely based on X’s
novel Y, surrealistically adapted as a
musical Western. The band Z and
A perform as an inept gang of robbers
called "the Crackers," who are always
"looking for people who like to draw."
In the same vein, Zachariah boasts: "I
can think, I can wait, and I'm fast on the
draw." This is a parody of Y's famous
line: "I can think, I can wait, I can fast."
• The group Z and A’s name is derived from communist politics; Z
was a popular name for Joseph Stalin in the 1940s, while A refers
to Mao Zedong's statement that the true revolutionary "moves
through the peasantry as ______ does through water."
33.
34. 10.
• X- Hermann Hesse
• Y- Siddhartha
• Z and A- Country Joe and the Fish
35. Infinite Bounce 2
• Total of 10 questions
• Each question carries 10 points
• Pounce for all questions.
• For Pounce +10/-10
• If a part of the question is correct in the
pounce then no negative.
36. 1.
• In X’s earlier works in the 1920s the human figure is
stripped of sentimentality and the intensity of modern
life is expressed with elements of urban architecture
and with industrial objects.
• X preferred painting workers taking a break than
depict social tensions of the period. X idolises the idea
of rest between working hours and the joys of daily life
and togetherness.
• X visited the US several times. He once said he wanted
to do in his paintings what neon lights did in the New
York spire.
• Mona Lisa with Keys. It presents the contrast between
the regular simple object like a bunch of keys and the
famous masterpiece of Leonardo Da Vinci.
40. 2.
X was a fictional character invented and portrayed by disc
jockey, voiceannouncer, and actor Y as the horror host of late night
Shock Theaterat WJW-TV.Y's irreverent and influential host
character was a hipster. Xi’s costume was a long lab coat covered
with “slogan” buttons, horn-rimmed sunglasses with a missing
lens, a fake Van Dyke beard and moustache, and various
messy, awkwardly-perched wigs.X's stage name and certain aspects
of the character's appearance were devised by Cleveland
restaurateur (and amateur makeup artist) Ralph Gulko, who was
making a pun of the word ____ and his own similar last
name, suffixed with a generic "ethnic" ending. The station created a
"write in" contest for fans after Gulko devised the name, and
station management awarded prizes to several contestants who
sent in ideas for names similar to the one they had already
chosen.He was played by Y,and this character is immortalized now
by Y's son in a particular way.
Give X,Y and how the character has been immortalized.
44. 3.
• Thomas Gainsborough's famous painting
X.The very first film by noted German film-
maker F.W.Manrau(most well known for
Nosferatu) was inspired by this
painting.The film is now lost.In
1924,Manrau invented a camera technique
that allowed film-makers to move the
camera while they filmed.according to
wikipedia,this is "arguably the most
important stylistic invention of the 20th
century,setting the stage for some of the
most commonly used cinematic
techniques of modern contemporary
cinema.This was called the Y camera
technique.Has been paid tribute to
recently in a film.ID X,Y and the tribute.
49. 4.
Real life characters played by Al Pacino.
benjamin "lefty" buggeiro in donnie brasco
lowell bergman in the insider
frank serpico in serpico
phil spector in phil spector
aniello delacroce in Goti:In the Shadow of my
father
50. 5.
• 1889. X witnessed the whipping of a horse while traveling
in Turin, Italy. He tossed his arms around the horse's neck
to protect it then collapsed to the ground. In less than one
month, X would be diagnosed with a serious mental illness
that would make him bed-ridden and speechless for the
next eleven years until his death. But whatever did happen
to the horse? The film Y follows up this question in a
fictionalized story of what occurred. The man who whipped
the horse is a rural farmer who makes his living taking on
carting jobs into the city with his horse-drawn cart. The
horse is old and in very poor health, but does its best to
obey its master's commands. The farmer and his daughter
must come to the understanding that it will be unable to go
on sustaining their livelihoods. The dying of the horse is the
foundation of this tragic tale.
53. 6.
• X is a series of 58 paintings that Y painted in 1957 by
performing a comprehensive analysis, reinterpreting and
recreating several times X by Z. The suite is fully preserved
at the Museu ________ in Barcelona and is the only
complete series of the artist that remains together.
57. 7.
• Lately X has been painting pictures of his travels.
A lot of them look like what you’d find on any
retiree’s easel, set up by the Eiffel Tower or the
Great Wall of China. A few come much closer to
being serious contemporary art. You can
tell, because they’re the ones that have been
making headlines. X has been accused of ripping
off artists like Cartier-Bresson in his new
Gagosian show.
• <The following slides contain X’s paintings.>
62. 8.
• The Seine At Argenteuil, 1873 is a painting by X.
• The title of the film Y is a reference to depictions of
the _____ in some of the paintings of X.
65. 9.
• X is a revered icon of the Virgin Mary and child housed
at the Jasna Góra Monastery in ______, Poland.
• The painting displays a traditional composition well
known in the icons of Eastern Orthodoxy
• The Virgin Mary is shown as the "Hodegetria” ("One
Who Shows the Way"). In it the Virgin directs attention
away from herself, gesturing with her right hand
toward Jesus as the source of salvation. In turn, the
child extends his right hand toward the viewer in
blessing while holding a book of gospels in his left
hand.
• The icon shows the X in fleur de lys robes.
68. 10.
These are the rules for X, which was started by Y and Thomas Vinterberg in 1995. Give
X and Y.
• Filming must be done on location. Props and sets must not be brought in. If a
particular prop is necessary for the story, a location must be chosen where this
prop is to be found.
• The sound must never be produced apart from the images or vice versa. Music
must not be used unless it occurs within the scene being filmed, i.e., diegetic.
• The camera must be a hand-held camera. Any movement or immobility attainable
in the hand is permitted. The film must not take place where the camera is
standing; filming must take place where the action takes place.
• The film must be in colour. Special lighting is not acceptable (if there is too little
light for exposure the scene must be cut or a single lamp be attached to the
camera).
• Optical work and filters are forbidden.
• The film must not contain superficial action (murders, weapons, etc. must not
occur.)
• Temporal and geographical alienation are forbidden (that is to say that the film
takes place here and now).
• Genre movies are not acceptable.
• The film format must be Academy 35 mm.
• The director must not be credited.
72. 1. X & Y
• Disaster Area, claimed to be the loudest band in the
universe, and in fact the loudest sound of any
kind, anywhere. So loud is this band that the audience usually
listens from the safe distance of thirty seven miles away in a
well-built concrete bunker. Disaster Area's lavish
performances went so far as to crash a _____ ____ into the
___ to create a solar flare. Y’s lavish stage shows were the
inspiration for Disaster Area. At the time when the main
characters meet him, in the novel X, one of the
members, Hotblack is spending a year dead "for tax reasons".
(In the book he is described as being connected to a "death
support system" and communicates only by supernatural
means). In 1978, two years prior to the publishing of the
book, the members of the band Y lived outside Great Britain
for exactly one year for tax reasons.
• Give me X and Y.
73. 1.
• X – Restaurant At The End Of The Universe
• Y – Pink Floyd
74. 2.
• The following slides show drawings from an
exhibit by Tim Fiddle, called Scumfuck. The
mostly charcoal drawings depict ghoulish faces
and distorted features. Each sketch has
accompanying captions, including one that
says, 'Treat Me Like Your Mother Or I'll Eat the
Sun,' another that reads 'Goat S****, and a third
that says 'I Don't Owe You Shit‘
• The centrepiece of the exhibit is a portrait of the
American punk rock musician G.G. Allin.
• Who is Tim Fiddle?
79. 4.
• Who on what?
• ”…Their early work was a little too New Wave for my taste, but
when Sports came out in '83, I think they really came into their
own, commercially and artistically. The whole album has a
clear, crisp sound, and a new sheen of consummate professionalism
that really gives the songs a big boost. He's been compared to Elvis
Costello, but I think Huey has a far more bitter, cynical sense of
humor. [...] In '87, Huey released this, Fore!, their most
accomplished album. I think their undisputed masterpiece is “Y," a
song so catchy, most people probably don't listen to the lyrics. But
they should, because it's not just about the pleasures of
conformity, and the importance of trends, it's also a personal
statement about the band itself!”
80. 4.
• Patrick Bateman
• Huey Lewis and the News
• He talks about them right before he axes Paul
Allen
81. 5.
• The album cover for X was designed by photographer Sølve
Sundsbø. Sundsbø had been hired by fashion magazine Dazed &
Confused in the late 1990s to produce something with a
"technological feel, something all white". He suggested taking
shots using a three-dimensional scanning machine.
• The model for the shot wore an all-white makeup because it
produces the "best results"; for the image, the model wore
a twill-coloured cape. The computer could not read the colours
so it was replaced with spikes, and the head in the image was
chopped because the machine only scanned 30 centimetres.
The editor of the magazine liked the image and eventually
featured it in one of their publications. Y saw the image in the
magazine and approached Sundsbø for permission to use the
image as the cover of X. For the album's singles, Y asked
Sundsbø what he could do; the latter suggested scanning the
head of each member of the band.
• X?
82. 5.
• X – Coldplay’s A Rush of blood to the head
83. 6.
• This image of X from 1994 was one of the most
widely circulated and controversial pictures of
the time. Give funda. ID, if you like.
84. 6.
• Varg Vikernes right after he was sentenced to
21 years in prison for the murder of
Euronymous. He smiled creepily at the camera
right as his sentence was pronounced.
85. 7.
• _______ ___ ________ is an art installation
by David Byrne, ex singer of Talking
Heads, and Färgfabriken, an independent art
venue in Stockholm. The concept was later
realized in New York City, in parts of
the Battery Maritime Building, and
in London in The Roundhouse.
• FITB or explain the concept.
86.
87. 7.
• Playing the building
• He rigged an entire building to a piano, and so
people could essentially “play the building”
through the piano.
88. 8.
• The phrase, meaning taking an act to the extreme, was
coined in a scene from the
1984 mockumentary/rockumentary X by the
character Nigel Tufnel, played by Christopher Guest. In this
scene Nigel gives the rockumentary's director, Marty
DiBergi, played by Rob Reiner, a tour of his stage
equipment. While Nigel is showing Marty
his Marshall guitar amplifiers, he points out one in
particular whose control knobs all have the highest setting
of ______, unlike standard amplifiers, believing that this
numbering actually increases the volume of the amp ("It's
___ louder"). When Marty asks why the ___ setting is not
simply set to be louder, Nigel pauses, clearly
confused, before responding, “X". Give X and the movie.
89. 8.
• X – Up to eleven/”These go to eleven.”
• This is Spinal Tap
90. 9.
• Heloísa Eneida Menezes Paes Pinto , better known
as Helô Pinheiro , is a
Brazilian model and businesswoman.
• She became a Brazilian Playboy Playmate in 1987 and
once again in 2003, when she did a pictorial along with
her daughter, Ticiane Pinheiro.
• She also appeared in the second season of The
Amazing Race, for the Beach portion of the first Detour
clue, and on America's Next Top Model, Cycle 12, for a
modelling challenge in Brazil.
• However, she is best known for having inspired
something. What?