Essay and dissertation writing skills
Planning your essay
Writing your introduction
Structuring your essay
- Writing essays in science subjects
- Brief video guides to support essay planning and writing
- Writing extended essays and dissertations
- Planning your dissertation writing time
Structuring your dissertation
- Top tips for writing longer pieces of work
Advice on planning and writing essays and dissertations
University essays differ from school essays in that they are less concerned with what you know and more concerned with how you construct an argument to answer the question. This means that the starting point for writing a strong essay is to first unpick the question and to then use this to plan your essay before you start putting pen to paper (or finger to keyboard).
A really good starting point for you are these short, downloadable Tips for Successful Essay Writing and Answering the Question resources. Both resources will help you to plan your essay, as well as giving you guidance on how to distinguish between different sorts of essay questions.
You may find it helpful to watch this seven-minute video on six tips for essay writing which outlines how to interpret essay questions, as well as giving advice on planning and structuring your writing:
Different disciplines will have different expectations for essay structure and you should always refer to your Faculty or Department student handbook or course Canvas site for more specific guidance.
However, broadly speaking, all essays share the following features:
Essays need an introduction to establish and focus the parameters of the discussion that will follow. You may find it helpful to divide the introduction into areas to demonstrate your breadth and engagement with the essay question. You might define specific terms in the introduction to show your engagement with the essay question; for example, âThis is a large topic which has been variously discussed by many scientists and commentators. The principal tension is between the views of X and Y who define the main issues asâŠâ Breadth might be demonstrated by showing the range of viewpoints from which the essay question could be considered; for example, âA variety of factors including economic, social and political, influence A and B. This essay will focus on the social and economic aspects, with particular emphasis onâŠ..â
Watch this two-minute video to learn more about how to plan and structure an introduction:
The main body of the essay should elaborate on the issues raised in the introduction and develop an argument(s) that answers the question. It should consist of a number of self-contained paragraphs each of which makes a specific point and provides some form of evidence to support the argument being made. Remember that a clear argument requires that each paragraph explicitly relates back to the essay question or the developing argument.
- Conclusion: An essay should end with a conclusion that reiterates the argument in light of the evidence you have provided; you shouldnât use the conclusion to introduce new information.
- References: You need to include references to the materials youâve used to write your essay. These might be in the form of footnotes, in-text citations, or a bibliography at the end. Different systems exist for citing references and different disciplines will use various approaches to citation. Ask your tutor which method(s) you should be using for your essay and also consult your Department or Faculty webpages for specific guidance in your discipline.
Essay writing in science subjects
If you are writing an essay for a science subject you may need to consider additional areas, such as how to present data or diagrams. This five-minute video gives you some advice on how to approach your reading list, planning which information to include in your answer and how to write for your scientific audience â the video is available here:
A PDF providing further guidance on writing science essays for tutorials is available to download.
Short videos to support your essay writing skills
There are many other resources at Oxford that can help support your essay writing skills and if you are short on time, the Oxford Study Skills Centre has produced a number of short (2-minute) videos covering different aspects of essay writing, including:
- Approaching different types of essay questions
- Structuring your essay
- Writing an introduction
- Making use of evidence in your essay writing
- Writing your conclusion
Extended essays and dissertations
Longer pieces of writing like extended essays and dissertations may seem like quite a challenge from your regular essay writing. The important point is to start with a plan and to focus on what the question is asking. A PDF providing further guidance on planning Humanities and Social Science dissertations is available to download.
Planning your time effectively
Try not to leave the writing until close to your deadline, instead start as soon as you have some ideas to put down onto paper. Your early drafts may never end up in the final work, but the work of committing your ideas to paper helps to formulate not only your ideas, but the method of structuring your writing to read well and conclude firmly.
Although many students and tutors will say that the introduction is often written last, it is a good idea to begin to think about what will go into it early on. For example, the first draft of your introduction should set out your argument, the information you have, and your methods, and it should give a structure to the chapters and sections you will write. Your introduction will probably change as time goes on but it will stand as a guide to your entire extended essay or dissertation and it will help you to keep focused.
The structure of extended essays or dissertations will vary depending on the question and discipline, but may include some or all of the following:
- The background information to - and context for - your research. This often takes the form of a literature review.
- Explanation of the focus of your work.
- Explanation of the value of this work to scholarship on the topic.
- List of the aims and objectives of the work and also the issues which will not be covered because they are outside its scope.
The main body of your extended essay or dissertation will probably include your methodology, the results of research, and your argument(s) based on your findings.
The conclusion is to summarise the value your research has added to the topic, and any further lines of research you would undertake given more time or resources.
Tips on writing longer pieces of work
Approaching each chapter of a dissertation as a shorter essay can make the task of writing a dissertation seem less overwhelming. Each chapter will have an introduction, a main body where the argument is developed and substantiated with evidence, and a conclusion to tie things together. Unlike in a regular essay, chapter conclusions may also introduce the chapter that will follow, indicating how the chapters are connected to one another and how the argument will develop through your dissertation.
For further guidance, watch this two-minute video on writing longer pieces of work .
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How to write your first University essay
- July 30, 2024
The first few weeks at university will be a daunting but exciting experience, and with so much going on you might forget why youâre there – to learn! You might not be tasked with writing an essay straightaway but itâll certainly be on the agenda within a few weeks, so itâll help to be prepared. Enrolling in university as an international student might mean that youâre coming from a very different education system, which could mean different methods of researching and essay writing. This guide is here to help you understand a bit more about how to write your first university essay and, hopefully, make the transition to UK education as easy as possible.Â
Know the Mark Scheme
First of all, you should familiarise yourself with your courseâs mark scheme. It will detail the various steps and requirements needed for an essay in your discipline. Generally speaking, this will include the accuracy of your research, analytical detail, and essay structure. You should also ensure a good standard of spelling and grammar throughout your work, even in the non-literary subjects. If youâre worried about tackling essays as a non-native speaker, be sure to discuss those concerns with your lecturers. Theyâre there to help!
Itâs also common for lecturers and course leaders to share examples of work from previous years, which can be helpful in understanding how to approach your work. But remember – universities are very strict on plagiarism, so make sure your work is completely your own before submitting it.
Choosing and Understanding the Question
Before you even begin writing, you need to understand what the essay question or prompt is asking of you. Your lecturer might have assigned you a single title, or you might be allowed to choose from a list of questions. These are usually taken from past exam papers, which in itself offers a chance to learn how to pick a title that suits you and your skillset.Â
In choosing an essay title there are a few things to consider. Anything too broad will prove difficult to work with – itâs much better to go into detail with a smaller number of points than spread yourself too thinly.Â
It will also help to choose something for which there is a lot of research material available, be it literary texts or published academic essays. Although an essay must be all your own work, to receive a good grade you must consult and demonstrate knowledge of several primary and secondary resources. Further along in your degree, it may prove beneficial to choose the more obscure or less-researched topics, as a way to showcase everything youâve learned, but for your first university essay, youâll be thankful for the use of reliable sources. Now that youâve chosen your question, you should read it through several times, slowly, highlighting any keywords. These could be:
- Compare: Identify the similarities and differences between two or more things.Â
- Argue: Make a case for or against the claims made in the title.Â
- Demonstrate: Use evidence to prove something is true.
- Examine: Look closely at texts and evidence and present your findings in a factual, critical way.
- Assess: Consider all views and facts involved in an argument and come to a conclusion about their strengths and weaknesses.Â
How to Conduct Research for Your Essay
Whether the essay title is a subject about which you know a lot, or something completely new, doing enough research is the key to a strong essay. Your essential course reading list should provide a solid base for finding texts relevant to your essay. It will list primary sources, which are texts that are directly linked to the subject, like contemporary novels, letters, or news articles, as well as secondary sources – these provide analysis or commentary on the primary sources, like academic essays or newspaper editorials.Â
Something you find in your essential reading might spark an idea in your mind that you wish to explore further and for this, your university library will come in very handy. Within the rows of physical books and the extensive online database, you should find dozens of texts offering new information and perspectives on your chosen topic.Â
Of course, a tailored google search is likely to offer you even more research opportunities. There are hundreds of approved websites bearing enough resources for a lifetime of essay writing, and even the most niche topics are likely to have been written on previously. With that in mind, you must ensure that any text you reference in your work is from a reputable source – check with your lecturer if unsure.Â
How to Structure and Plan your First University Essay
Now you have a clear understanding of your essay task, itâs time to learn how to plan your first university essay. This is something youâll either love or hate; some students would rather get stuck in straight away while others appreciate the time to prepare. Try and learn to enjoy planning – the structural guidance it brings will ultimately make your writing experience easier and more time-efficient.Â
It will make sense to plan your essay according to its structure, with the basic outline being:
Introduction â Main Body â Conclusion
As you progress through your course as an increasingly confident writer you will become adept at writing organically, unrestricted by the confines of a set structure. For now, however, having a clear beginning, middle, and an end is a good place to start.Â
Introduction
Your first chance to captivate the reader. Here, you should introduce your overarching thesis. This is the central argument that will run through your essay and tie everything together - your points will either back up or disprove this thesis. Top tip:Â Write out or verbalise your thesis as if someone with no prior knowledge of the subject has asked you to describe it. What does your essay argue? How do you demonstrate this? Why is it important?Â
Main Argument
Come up with a few main ideas that you want to discuss. These should be interesting ideas that come from a nuanced understanding of your primary reading, and which ultimately link back to your argument. Try to avoid treating this section as a chronological analysis of your sources. You should begin with your claim, and then back it up using a suitable quote or piece of evidence from your sources. Bulk up your paragraph with a comprehensive explanation of your ideas and their greater contextual significance, before concluding your paragraph by linking back to the essay title. How have you supported your overall argument?Â
Counter Argument
This is where you demonstrate wider thinking and your ability to consider several points of view. In taking the discussion beyond your main argument and providing an âon the other handâ perspective, the person marking your essay will know that youâve given the topic significant thought. Remember, these paragraphs should also be linked back to the title. Why are these arguments also valid?Â
Phew! Youâve reached the end of your first university essay. You may be tempted to rush your conclusion, but it is one of - if not the most - important parts of your essay. Itâs similar to the introduction in that you will reiterate the argument and sum up your points, whilst also leaving the reader with a lasting impression. What have you learnt? What new questions arise from your findings that could be explored further in future?Â
Referencing
One of the main differences between writing an essay for school and university is the requirement for referencing and a bibliography. In addition to finding reputable sources to use in your essay, you must be able to cite them correctly. The referencing system to use will depend on your institution, with the most common styles being Harvard, APA (American Psychological Association), MLA (Modern Languages Association), and MHRA (Modern Humanities Research Association).Â
Top Tips for How to Write Your First University Essay
- Research widely – Without overloading yourself with material, reading a variety of texts and exploring different perspectives (particularly the literary subjects) will equip you with enough information to produce a detailed and well-rounded essay.Â
- Utilise the help available to you – Your lecturers and seminar leaders will be more than happy to answer any questions you have about the essay and their expectations. Not only will seeking their guidance ultimately help your writing, but it will also present you as a curious and dedicated student.Â
- Don’t leave it until the last minute – Many students will profess to thrive under pressure and produce their best work only hours before the deadline, but you will always thank yourself for starting sooner rather than later. This ensures you have adequate time to research, plan, write and edit. Proper time management will become a significant consideration throughout your degree, so start early for the best results.Â
- Leave time to read it over – Similar to the above tip, it is important to leave enough time to carefully read over your essay and implement any changes. Having a break and returning with fresh eyes will allow you to notice things that you might have otherwise missed.Â
Lastly, stay calm! Learning how to write your first university essay will undoubtedly require hard work, but you have so much time to practice. Above all, it should be a stimulating challenge where you have the freedom to get creative with your readings and lead with your opinion. Enjoy it!Â
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10 of the Most Niche YouTube Video Essays You Absolutely Need to Watch
YouTube’s algorithm is designed to keep your eyeballs glued to video after video (after video, after video...). The dangers of this rabbit hole are well-documented . However, for every ideological radicalization enabled by YouTube, I like to think there’s at least one innocent, newfound pop culture obsession discovered at 3 a.m. via the greatest medium of our time: the Video Essay.
The genre of YouTube video essays is more interesting than it sounds. Sure, any piece of video content that advances a central thesis could be considered a “video essay.” But there are key components of video essays that elevate the genre into so much more than simply a YouTube version of a written article. Over the past few years, the term “YouTube video essay” has grown to evoke connotations of niche fascination and discovery. For creators, the field is highly competitive with strong personalities trying to get eyes on extremely in-depth analysis of a wide range of topics. The “niche” factor is especially important here. Ultimately, the hallmark of a good video essay is its ability to captivate you into watching hours of content about a subject matter you would have never expected to care about in the first place. Scary? Maybe. Fun? Definitely.
Whether you’re skeptical about the power of video essays, or you’re an existing fan looking for your next niche obsession, I’ve rounded up some of my personal favorite YouTube video essays for you to lean in and watch. This is not a comprehensive list by any means, and it largely reflects what the algorithm thinks (knows) I personally want to watch.
Other factors that influenced my selection process: The video essays needed to have a strong, surprising thesis—something other than a creator saying “ this thing good ” or “ this thing bad. ” These videos also stood out to me due to their sheer amount of thorough, hard-hitting evidence, as well as the dedication on the behalf of the YouTubers who chose to share with us hours upon hours of research into these topics.
And yes, I have watched all the hours of content featured here. I’m a professional.
Disneyâs FastPass: A Complicated History
Letâs start strong with a documentary so premium, I canât believe itâs free. Multiple articles and reviews have been dedicated to Defunctlandâs video series about, well, waiting in line. I know what youâre thinkingâthe only thing that sounds more boring than waiting in line is watching a video about waiting in line. But Defunctlandâs investigation into the history of Disneylandâs FastPass system has so much more to offer.
Class warfare. Human behavior. The perils of capitalism. One commenter under the video captures it well by writing âoddly informative and vaguely terrifying.â Since its launch in 2017, Kevin Perjurerâs entire Defunctland YouTube channel has become a leading voice in extremely thorough video essays. The FastPass analysis is one of the most rewarding of all of Defunctlandâs in-depth amusement park coverage.
I wonât spoil it here, but the best part of the video is hands-down when Perjurer reveals an animated simulation of the theme park experience to test out how various line-reservation systems work. Again, no spoilers, but get ready for a wildly satisfying âgotchaâ moment.
Personally, Iâve never had any interest one way or another about Disney-affiliated theme parks. Iâve never been, and I never planned on going. Thatâs the main reason Iâm selling you on this video essay right off the bat. Defunctland is a perfect example of how the genre of video essays has such a high bar for investigative reporting, shocking analysis, and an ability to suck you in to a topic you never thought youâd care about.
Watch time : 1:42:59 (like a proper feature documentary)
THE Vampire Diaries Video
No list of video essays can get very far without including Jenny Nicholson , a true titan of the genre. Or, as one commenter puts it, âThe power of Jenny Nicholson: getting me to watch an almost three hour long video about something I donât care about.â I struggled to pick which of her videos to feature here, but at over seven million views, âTHE Vampire Diaries Videoâ might just be Nicholsonâs magnum opus. Once you break out the red string on a cork board, itâs safe to say that youâre in magnum opus territory.
I havenât ever seen an episode of CWâs The Vampire Diaries , but since this video essay captivated me, I can safely say that Iâm an expert on the show. Nicholsonâs reputation as a knowledgeable, passionate, funny YouTuber is well-earned. Sheâs a proper geek, and watching her cultural analyses feel like Iâm nerding out with one of my smartest friends. If you really donât think The Vampire Diaries investigation is for you (and I argue that itâs for everyone), I recommend â A needlessly thorough roast of Dear Evan Hansen â instead.
Watch time : 2:33:19
In Search Of A Flat Earth
Did you think you could get through a YouTube video round-up without single mention of Flat Earthers? Wishful thinking.
âIn Search of Flat Earthâ is a beautiful, thoughtful video essay slash feature-length documentary. Donât go into this video if youâre looking to bash and ridicule flat earth conspiracy theorists. Instead, Olsonâs core argument takes a somewhat sympathetic gaze to the fact that Flat Earthers cannot be âreasonedâ out of their beliefs with âscienceâ or âevidence.â Plus, this video has a satisfying second-act plot twist. As Olson points out, âIn Search of Flat Earthâ could have an alternative clickbait title of âThe Twist at 37 Minutes Will Make You Believe We Live In Hell.â Over the years, Dan Olson of Folding Ideas has helped to popularize the entire video essay genre, and this one just might be his masterpiece.
Watch time : 1:16:16
The Rise and Fall of Teen Dystopias
Sarah Z is your go-to Gen Z cultural critic and explainer. The YouTuber brings her knack for loving-yet-shrewd analysis to dig into fandom culture, the YA book industry, and why the teen dystopia got beaten into the ground.
Iâve found that one of the most reliable video essay formulas is some version of âwhat went wrong with [incredibly popular cultural moment].â In the case of teen dystopias, itâs a fascinating take on how a generation of teen girls were drawn to bad ass, anti-establishment heroines, only to watch those types of characters get mass produced and diluted into mockery. But maybe Iâm biased here; as the exact demographic targeted by the peak of The Hunger Games, Twilight, and Divergent, this cultural debrief speaks to my soul.
Watch time : 1:22:41
A Buffet of Black Food History
Food is an effective way to combine economic, cultural, and social historiesâand Black American food history is an especially rich one. Food resonates with people, allowing us to connect with the past in a much more real way than if we were memorizing dates and locations from a textbook. Historian Elexius Jionde of Intelexual Media is a pro at taking what could be a standard history lesson and turning it into an interesting journey full of crazy characters and tidbits.
Most of the comments beneath the video are complaints that the video deserves to be so much longer. Itâs jam-packed with surprising facts, fun asides, and, of course, tantalizing descriptions of the food at hand. Jionde even warns you right at the top: âTurn this video off right now if youâre hungry.â
Watch time : 22:39
The reign of the Slim-Thick Influencer
At this point, Iâm assuming you know what a BBL is. Even if you arenât familiar with the term (Brazilian butt lifts, FYI), then youâve still probably observed the trend. Before big butts, it was thigh gaps. The pendulum swing of trending body types is nothing new. Curves are in, curves are out, thick thighs save lives, âskinny fatâ is bad, and now, âslim thickâ looms large. How do different body types fall in and out of fashion, and what effect does this have on the people living in those bodies?
Creator Khadija Mbowe identifies and analyzes a lot of the issues with how womenâs bodies (especially Black womenâs) are commodified, without ever blaming the bodies that are under fire. Mbowe handles the topic with grace and humor, even when discussing how deeply personal it is to them. If youâve ever found yourself staring at a photo of an Instagram influencer, please do yourself a favor and watch this video essay.
Watch time : 54:18
Flight of the Navigator
Once again: I have been sucked into a video about a film that I have never seen and probably never will. Captain Disillusion, whose real name is Alan Melikdjanian, is another giant of the video essay genre, posting videos to a not-too-shabby audience of 2.29 million subscribers. Most of Captain Dissilisionâs videos that Iâd seen before this were of the creator debunking viral videos, exposing how certain visual effects were âobviouslyâ faked. In this video, he turns his eye for debunking special effects not to viral videos, but to the 1986 Disney sci-fi adventure Flight of the Navigator.
This behind-the-scenes analysis of the Disney film is incredibly informative, tackling every instance when someone might ask, â Hey, how did they manage to film that? â It also touches upon the history of the special effects industry, something that deserves a little extra appreciation as CGI takes over every corner of movie-making.
Watch time : 41:28
The Failure of Victorious
YouTuber Quinton Reviews is dedicated to his craft, and I thank him for it. As youâve certainly caught on to by now, you truly do not need to know anything about the show Victorious to enjoy an hours-long video essay that digs into it. What makes this video stand out is the sheer amount of content that this YouTuber both consumed and then created for us. Part of the video lengthâa whopping five hoursâis due to the fact that every single episode of the Nickelodeon show is dissected. Another reason for the length is all the care that Quinton Reviews puts into providing context. And the context is what made me stick around: the failures of TV networks, the psychological dangers of working as child stars, and the questionable adult jokes that were broadcast to young audiencesâŠif youâre at all interested in tainting your memory of hit Nickelodeon shows, this video is for you.
Watch time : 5:34:58 ( And thatâs just part one. Strap in! )
Why Anime is for Black People
In this video Travis goes through the history of the âhip hop x animeâ phenomenon, in which East Asian media permeates Black culture (and vice versa, as he hints at near the end). Although I am (1) not Black and (2) not an avid anime fan, I first clicked on this video because Iâm a fan of comedian and writer Yedoye Travis. And yetâbig shockerâI was immediately engrossed with the subject matter, despite having no context heading into it. Once you finish watching this video, be sure to check out Megan Thee Stallionâs interview about her connection to anime .
I havenât run this part by my editor yet, but now would be a prime time to plug Lifehacker Editor-in-Chief Jordan Calhounâs book, Piccolo Is Black: A Memoir of Race, Religion, and Pop Culture . Just saying.
Watch time : 18:34 (basically nothing in the world of video essays, especially compared to the five hours of Victorious content I binged earlier)
Efficiency in Comedy: The Office vs. Friends
Iâm rounding out this list on a note of personal sentimentality. This is one of the first video essays that got me hooked on the format, mostly because I had followed creator Drew Gooden to YouTube after his stardom on Vine (RIP). This video is one of his most popular, combining comedy and math to pit two of the most popular sitcoms of all time in a joke-for-joke battle.
Gooden in particular stands out as someone who excels as both an earnest comic and a thoughtful critic of comedy. I appreciate his perspective as someone who knows what itâs like to work for a laugh and wants to get to the bottom of why something is or isnât funny. This isnât even one of Goodenâs best videos (I actually think his take on the parallels between Community and Arrested Development has a much stronger argument), but itâs a great example of the sort of perspective best situated to make video essays in the first place. Because what makes all these video essays so compelling is often the personality behind the argument. These arenât investigative journalists or professional critics. Theyâre YouTubers. Really smart YouTubers, but still: These videos are born out of everyday people who simply have something to say.
I believe the modern YouTube video essay is uniquely situated to put cultural critique back into the hands of the average consumerâbut only if that consumer is willing to put in the work to become a creator themselves.
Watch time : 17:36
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Taylor Swift's 2019 Essay Revealed How Concert Violence Was One of Her 'Biggest Fears'
- Oops! Something went wrong. Please try again later. More content below
Taylor Swift has been vigilant about concert safety for years, and the fact that she had to cancel three concerts in Vienna, Austria tells you just how serious the terrorist threat was. Even though two suspects have been arrested, government officials erred on the side of caution while they look other people who are possibly involved. For Swift, this was a nightmare come true.
In 2019, she wrote an ELLE essay on â30 Things I Learned Before Turning 30.â Under the topic of âMy biggest fear,â Swift discussed how âthe Manchester Arena bombing and the Vegas concert shooting â impacted her as an artist. âI was completely terrified to go on tour this time because I didnât know how we were going to keep 3 million fans safe over seven months,â she revealed. âThere was a tremendous amount of planning, expense, and effort put into keeping my fans safe.â Understandably, her high-profile profession requires a lot of security and planning, but those violent incidents also made her change aspects of her personal life, too.
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âMy fear of violence has continued into my personal life. I carry QuikClot army grade bandage dressing, which is for gunshot or stab wounds,â she wrote while criticizing âwebsites and tabloidsâ for doxing her home addresses online. âYou get enough stalkers trying to break into your house and you kind of start prepping for bad things,â she added. Swift isnât wrong to worry about her fans and her personal safety, Sandra Bullockâs terrifying home invasion experience feels traumatic to read about even years later.
In 2014, Bullock was home alone because her then-four-year-old son Louis stayed at the nannyâs house that evening. âIt was the one night that our nanny goes, âLet me just take him to my apartment which is up the street because youâre gonna be out late,ââ Bullock told Red Table Talk . âHad he been home, I wouldâve run to the closet, and it would have changed our destiny forever.â A stalker had broken into her Bel Air residence while she was sleeping. He was there for more than an hour before she realized an intruder had broken in, according to CNN. The incident changed Bullockâs life forever . âI wasnât the same after that. I was unraveling. I havenât been alone since the day it happened,â she admitted.
So, Swift and other A-list celebritiesâ concerns about safety are valid â and itâs a global issue for them. But as Swift reminded everyone in 2019, there is still âgood in the world.â She noted, âWe have to live bravely in order to truly feel alive, and that means not being ruled by our greatest fears.â Still, this major scare will change security for her Wembley Stadium concerts that are still scheduled from Aug. 15-20, and her rumored cameo at the Closing Ceremony at the Olympics.
Before you go, click here to see more celebrities who have suffered through home invasions.
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Home Resources Free Guides Video Essays Guide
Video Essays Guide
Introductory guide to video essays., drawing on the inspiring work of pioneering educators and researchers engaging with this creative method, this guide aims to offer a research-led introduction for students, teachers and researchers approaching the video essay for the first time..
Introduction to Video Essays
Studying and researching film through film
A research-led introduction for students, teachers and researchers approaching the video essay for the first time.
Finding Coherence Across Journals
Guidelines and criteria for making, curating and publishing video essays
A look at the existing guidelines for the production and evaluation of video essays.
How To Make Video Essay Guides
Preproduction, Production, Postproduction
Considerations for planning, making and editing a video essay.
Copyright Considerations
How copyright law regulates the creative reuse of existing materials
Understanding the basic principles of copyright law when producing or using creative works.
Dissemination
A selected list of journals and websites where you can publish video essays.
Video essays as creative assessment method at SOAS, University of London
Reducing the uncertainty around creative assessment methods.
About this guide
Authors's biographies, list of references and contact details
Launch Event
An online event organised by Learning on Screen in collaboration with SOAS, University of London.
The Best Video Essay Channels, Ranked
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Daemon's Vision in House of the Dragon Almost Confirmed the Biggest Game of Thrones Theory
Why this deadpool actor refuses to work with ryan reynolds again, the crew members of netflixâs resurrected rides, explained.
If you’re a die-hard movie fan, you don’t have to be a hardcore collector to know that you can find a lot of your special features free on YouTube – from movie trailers and top-ten lists to reaction videos and cast-and-crew interviews. But the crème de la crème for any budding cinephile is YouTube ’s subculture of video essayists.
The best of these content creators, particularly those focused on dissecting and analyzing film and television, give viewers a lot of food for thought, making them consider things they hadn’t before, even when it comes to movies they have watched 100 times. There is an embarrassment of content out there, but this article seeks to separate the wheat from the chaff – we are recommending only the channels with the best, most refreshing, and most original analysis. If you're a film lover or budding buff, you owe it to yourself to check out these great video essay channels.
What’s So Great About That?
UK creator and pop-culture academic Grace Lee makes video essays examining themes and form in both horror and animated media; she has an affinity for the deeper, more unexpected thoughts evoked by her favorite genres. Whereas many content creators are quippy or sarcastic, Lee’s voiceover narrative approach is one of measured thoughtfulness.
Related: Explained: How Twin Peaks Changed Television
While her output as What's So Great About That? is not as large as some other creators on this list, that is far from a bad thing as Lee seems to focus more on quality than quantity. Each video discusses fairly narrow topics within a given property – examples include the “treachery of language” in the work of David Lynch or the concept of the “unnatural” in the original Evil Dead film.
You might mistake Canadian vlogger Sarah Z (pronounced “Zed”) for your best friend. She sits on the couch with a cup of coffee and speaks directly to you, a monologuist spending hours on end about all of her opinions, from toxic fandoms to true-crime documentaries.
But these monologues are not the boring, meaningless yarns that you might expect. Rather, Sarah’s channel is an ever-deepening trove of incisive and engaging media analysis encased in a shell of light and fluffy entertainment. The whole thing is driven by Sarah’s palpable excitement and enthusiasm for the topics she is covering, and a penchant for long, detailed videos that are extensively researched. Some videos will even stretch far beyond the one-hour mark, including a 90-minute video on geek culture and a full two hours on Dear Evan Hansen .
Another Canadian creator steps up to the plate in the form of Sage Hyden , a fantasy novelist whose essay channel Just Write seems particularly preoccupied with film’s place in the cultural conversation. In particular, Hyden is fascinated with the messages that movies send us, what they are trying to communicate (consciously or subconsciously), and how they shape our perceptions and prejudices.
For topics that can sometimes land on the serious side, Hyden’s tone and writing style are conversational and often funny, and his insights are fairly eye-opening. Topics include Willy Wonka and its relationship to misconceptions about poverty, the importance of the original Mulan film, and the cinematic lineage of the modern murder mystery Knives Out .
If you consider yourself an outsider or find yourself disagreeing with most of your friends on their favorite movies, you might find a mutual kinship with creator Yhara Zayd , whose videos examine film and television through lenses both personal and political. Zayd’s is not the kind of detached analysis you can expect from many YouTubers; rather, though she is very well-researched, she is also full of unapologetic hot takes, and her videos are brimming with the caustic personality of a modern-day Pauline Kael.
Related: These Are the Best Marilyn Monroe Movies
In some ways, Zayd has crafted the perfect synergy between the highly-opinionated critic and the relentless deconstructionist, enthusiastically dissecting and questioning the images and media we regularly consume. She also has a distinct knack for self-awareness, gazing inward as she gazes outward, a quality which separates her content from that of many of her peers. Zayd covers such divergent subjects as the commodification of the great Marilyn Monroe, reflections of housing discrimination in 1980s horror films , and the under-appreciated legacy of Not Another Teen Movie .
For something a little less personal but no less fascinating, it is worth checking out the prolific Susannah McCullough and her channel The Take . McCullough and her extraordinary team make what are probably the best “Explained” videos you’ll be able to find, along with character breakdowns, deconstructions of tropes, and the lessons movies can teach us. They’ve got videos that deconstruct and explain Donnie Darko , The Sopranos , Get Out , and many, many more. They’ve also nerded out with full series on different franchises, including detailed character analyses in shows such as Friends and Breaking Bad .
The writing is smart but accessible, and the arguments are utterly convincing. The videos themselves are breezily edited and full of poppy visuals. The channel also covers many, many genres and types of movies, so you are sure to find something on a movie or TV show you love. The Take offers incisive film analysis in a context that is fun and completely unpretentious.
Maggie Mae Fish
Decadent, performance-driven vlogs like ContraPoints and Philosophy Tube are all the rage these days, and film buffs finally have their own version in the form of Maggie Mae Fish . Ms. Fish is a singular, idiosyncratic voice who pivots wildly from dedicated film scholar to sketch-comedy caricature and back again. She typically sits center-frame in a variety of ornately designed sets, dressed in colorful outfits, while she patiently spoons out detailed, thoughtful analysis over the course of long videos.
For any video-essay enthusiast, Fish is the real deal – wickedly entertaining, subversive, accessible, and always thought-provoking. Her recent two-video series on Twin Peaks is catnip for any fans seeking a new perspective on the show – and an excellent dressing-down of Twin Perfect’s infamous 4.5-hour breakdown. She also deconstructs auteur theory through the works of David Lynch and Stanley Kubrick, and spends two hours discussing Loki ’s debt to Andrei Tarkovsky’s Stalker .
Lindsay Ellis
When it comes to distinct personalities, no vlogger quite matches the likes of the controversial but brilliant Lindsay Ellis . She is a brand unto herself, with an over-the-top, self-deprecating style that can only be described as a hopped-up, sleep-deprived, but no less informed, Adam Curtis. She is often seen drinking wine in her videos, breaking down popular media like Disney movies, musical adaptations, and The Lord of the Rings franchise.
Ellis is one of the originals of the medium, and her work is so singular that her influence has likely extended to all the other creators who occupy this list. Some of her most brilliant work includes “The Whole Plate,” a nine-video series that completely deconstructs the first Transformers film through the lenses of gender, sexuality, and film studies. Her most iconic work includes 40-minute videos ranting about the film adaptations of Rent and The Phantom of the Opera . Due to recent Internet events, she has stopped making videos on YouTube, but her existing videos are still there for all to see and are absolutely worth checking out.
Every Frame A Painting
Sometimes the most obvious answer is still the best one. Taylor Ramos and Tony Zhou’s gorgeous video series Every Frame A Painting is still the benchmark against which all other video essayists are judged. You’ve probably seen their video on Edgar Wright and visual comedy, or the one on silence in the films of Martin Scorsese. The channel has been defunct for several years now, but the content still feels as fresh and original as it did when it was first published.
The topics covered are narrow and unexpected, but they all work extraordinarily well. The writing is tight and evocative, and Zhou’s voice is unforgettably soothing and inviting. The editing is also crisp and beautiful. Ramos and Zhou have become so renowned for their work that they were even invited to contribute to David Fincher’s Voir , a video essay project for Netflix.
The best video essays of 2020
A year of physical separation and isolation was, not coincidentally, a year of unprecedented outreach and collaboration amongst the artists, critics and scholars at work in the burgeoning form of the video essay. Our poll of 42 of those essayists highlights 170 recommendations.
Introduction
As with any retrospective article, newsletter or GDPR -compliant email this year, we must begin with the unavoidable acknowledgement of: wow⊠what a year.
But while many essayists may have understandably been less prolific than in previous years, this yearâs turmoil may have incited an even stronger drive towards the ways we can connect with each other virtually. Last year, the word âcommunityâ was suggested as an overarching theme for the poll, and if a theme has emerged through this yearâs results it would be an evolution of that same communal spirit into one of collaboration. It has repeatedly been collaborative projects that have helped inspire new ideas in a time when motivation wasnât easy to find and allowed us to feel closer when we physically cannot be.
The Video Essay Podcast, created by Will DiGravio, has expanded its scope this year, co-curating The Black Lives Matter Video Essay Playlist (along with Cydnii Wilde Harris and Kevin B. Lee), launching the Notes on Videographic Criticism newsletter to further share news and promote interesting new work, and introducing experimental homework assignments to encourage creativity and new methods of working. Response from the video essay community has been overwhelming: the BLM Playlist (selections of which have already been screened in several online events, discussed and written about) has grown to include over 130 video essays and related audiovisual materials, and nearly 70 videographic exercises have been submitted thus far in response to the various homework assignment prompts.
Another collaborative video essay project, Once Upon a Screen , organised by Ariel Avissar and Evelyn Kreutzer, was published in the latest issue of The Cine-Files, and consists of a series of fantastic essays responding to a singular theme: how formative, traumatic experiences of cinema go on to impact our lives. Meanwhile, Nando v Movies gathered over 180 essayists on YouTube to come together and create the One X-Cellent Scene playlist (a sequel to 2019âs One Marvellous Scene ), collectively exploring the X-Men franchise.
These efforts were matched by increased institutional engagement, with further venues for the production and circulation of video essays joining the fold, such as the Netflix UK commissions (with an emphasis on Black creators); the new online journal Zoom Out ; Monographs , a new series of commissioned essays on Asian cinema by the Asian Film Archive ( AFA ), which premiered at the Dharamshala International Film Festival; and Thinking Images , a new videographic program at the Tel Aviv International Student Film Festival.
Trends and numbers
An overview of the poll, and some numbers and statistics: of the 42 contributors to the poll this year, 27 are male, 13 are female and two are non-binary. They submitted a total of 241 votes, for 170 unique entries which span online video essays, essay films, documentaries, installations and an HBO series; also a Kanye West music video! These works were made â or published â this past year, by both established essayists and newcomers to the field; they range from 24 seconds to 14 hours in length; some were viewed only once or twice prior to appearing on this poll, others had up to 10.4 million views, and everywhere in between.
Unsurprisingly, some prominent trends that emerged in the poll results this year included video essays related either directly or indirectly to the COVID -19 pandemic and its consequences (with 21 mentions); the presence of the BLM movement was also felt (with 22 mentions), as well as a more political slant to this yearâs picks in general. The Once Upon a Screen collection was also featured prominently (with 25 mentions), and included the two top-mentioned videos in the poll.
The top-mentioned videos were: Once Upon a Screen: Explosive Paradox by Kevin B. Lee (12 mentions); My Mulholland by Jessica McGoff (ten mentions); Forensickness by ChloĂ© Galibert-LaĂźnĂ© (nine mentions); and Feeling and Thought as They Take Form: Early Steadicam, Labor, and Technology (1974-1985) by Katie Bird (eight mentions). Catherine Grant and LuĂs Azevedo each had five different videos mentioned on the poll.
The videos are overwhelmingly presented in English (91 per cent) and are predominantly from the US (41 per cent) and the UK (28 per cent), while France makes up 6 per cent of the remaining votes, followed by 18 other countries (mostly in Europe). The dominant focus in terms of medium remains film (71 per cent of videos), with television (five per cent) and gaming (circa two per cent) coming in at distant second and third.
Of the essayists whose work is featured on the poll, 33 per cent are female (up from 24 per cent last year!) and 57 per cent are male (down from 68 per cent last year), with the remaining ten per cent made by mixed-gender teams or non-binary essayists. We did not parse â neither contributors nor picks â by race (among other reasons, as this would have been somewhat challenging), but hope that everyone is thinking more critically about whose voices theyâre choosing to listen to and endorse.
We hope this poll continues to contribute to the ongoing conversation among creators and lovers of video essays worldwide, and that next year will see even more opportunities and venues for collaborating on, making and sharing this form that we are all so enthusiastic about; and also, you know, fewer fires and plagues?
Here are the resultsâŠ
Table of contributors
(click on a name to jump to their picks.)
Film theorist and curator, Charles University in Prague & NĂĄrodnĂ filmovĂœÂ archiv
Forensickness
Chloé Galibert-Laßné
The authorâs ongoing investigation of online communities and desktop interfaces continues to yield fascinating results. This time, it takes the form of a detective story which makes sure that no revelation waits for us at the end, but also, more importantly, that our cultural and technological mechanisms of knowledge-seeking are fundamentally flawed. Instead, it guides us through an endless road of detours whose diversity can surprise even a know-it-all desktop cinema aficionado. Not only a poignant contribution to videographic film studies but also a work that gives the adjective âessayisticâ a truly contemporary meaning.
Feeling and Thought as They Take Form: Early Steadicam, Labor, and Technology (1974-1985)
While examining film technology and its impact on the image content, I often wonder how to make these material interventions visible and open to reflection at the same time. Katie Birdâs exploration of the Steadicam and Panaglide camera devices indicates that videographic scholarship can be employed to overcome this dilemma. By understanding the camera operating as, first and foremost, an affective, embodied experience, many supposed âimperfectionsâ and âinstabilitiesâ can be revealed as things that make the films tick. Moreover, the essay shows that the application of digital tools in archival research may have a more playful, creative side.
Crossings. On Freak Orlando
Johannes Binotto
This essay resurrects a relatively overlooked cinematic trend â the German queer cinema of the 1970sâ80s and the wider tendency of stylistic and bodily excess in avant-garde cinema. What is crucial is that the author uses the short scene from Ulrike Ottingerâs Freak Orlando in a way that renovates the contemporary videographic practice as well. By putting his own body on display and overlaying the action on screen with his performance, he enables us to take the haptic visuality of the shot literally, and not just through the usual analog/digital manipulations. More of this, please.
The Wind in the Trees from Early Cinema to Pixar
Jordan Schonig
I have stumbled upon Schonigâs work thanks to Shane Densonâs new book Discorrelated Images (highly recommended, by the way), and I was happy to find out that he also makes accomplished scholarly video essays. This piece focuses on the contingencies (ârippling waves, rising dust, and fluttering leavesâ) in early films and CGI animation, highlighting how digital algorithms make the distinctions between accidental qualities and careful calculation blurrier than ever. Schonig effectively demonstrates the divergences and affinities between the pre-cinematic and post-cinematic modes of staging accidents while also opening ways for addressing this complicated dialectic in the videographic form itself.
There Must Be Some Kind of Way Out of Here
Rainer Kohlberger
This year has seen the completion of a brilliant experimental film essay The Philosophy of Horror: A Symphony of Film Theory (PĂ©ter Lichter and Bori MĂĄtĂ©). Nevertheless, as I have already mentioned this project in the last yearâs poll, I would like to give a shout to another experimental work. Kohlbergerâs film brings the spectacular world of disaster movies into contact with the dance of coloured dots on the surface of the image. This unpredictable humming occludes the well-worn explosions and catastrophes in Hollywood cinema and exposes them as mere paltry things compared to the horrors of filmic matter.
Live at Appleville
It may not be a videographic essay per se, but⊠In this video, as far from a traditional music concert as possible, the American hyperpop duo is goofing around in a dark room with a laptop showing scenes from Ratatouille. This disturbing yet strangely funny exercise creatively exploits the limitations of Covid and opens yet another place where cinema can be relocated. Somehow it could even fit as an unlikely addition to the Once Upon a Screen videographic project â a childhood cinematic trauma turned into a liberating performance. And I am not even a fan of the bandâŠ
Thinking Audiovisually
Department of Film Studies, Charles University
This is clearly a biased choice, but I still feel obliged to mention three student video essays. A workshop with Kevin B. Lee saw the birth of many short videographic exercises, some of which were developed into full-length pieces. As the videographic practice in the Czech Republic is being invented practically from scratch, I was surprised how accomplished, original, and funny the videos turned out. Thus, Lucie FormĂĄnkovĂĄâs essay on her fascination with Tom Cruiseâs acting, Valerie Ć pulĂĄkovĂĄâs work on a failed Czech dubbing of Twin Peaks, and Otto Urbanâs look on the synecdochic character of trailers deserve a shout.
â Back to top
Ariel Avissar
Media scholar, video essayist and lecturer at the Steve Tisch School of Film and TV , Tel Aviv University
What begins as a personal account of the experience of watching Chris Kennedyâs Watching the Detectives evolves into so much more; part essay film, part desktop documentary, part conspiracy thriller with a twist ending, this epistemological audio-visual meditation expertly weaves together some of my favourite preoccupations â cultural depictions of counter-terrorism intelligence efforts, John Carpenterâs They Live!, conspiracy boards, Game of Thrones fandom and ChloĂ© Galibert-LaĂźnĂ© â into one jumbled, coherent, meandering, beautiful whole. My favourite media object of the year.
A Very Long Exposure Time
This silent visual poem was produced for the Time Complex exhibition at the Yerevan Biennial 2020. While aesthetically the polar opposite of Forensickness, it similarly develops ChloĂ©âs ongoing fascination with images â how we see them, what they reveal, what they leave out, what can we use them for. Simple, stimulating, sublime.
To The Lighthouse
Kevin B. Lee
How do you make a video essay about a film you have no access to? Lee has previously wrestled with the challenges of inaccessibility. Commissioned for the 2020 International Film Festival Rotterdam Critics Choice, this enthralling mashup of 36 different films starring Robert Pattinson and Willem Dafoe, described by Lee as his âfanfic version âof The Lighthouse by Robert Eggers, will make anyone who hasnât seen the film feel as though they have. Arguably more enjoyable than the original, and with considerably less flatulence.
Extreme Is My Name
Johanna Vaude
Made for ARTE âs online magazine âBlow Upâ, this impressive montage is both a tribute to and a study of the works of one of my favourite directors, Kathryn Bigelow. Vaude takes Bigelowâs raw, adrenaline-fused energy then dials it up to eleven. Her video grabs hold of you from the get-go, and doesnât let up until itâs â regrettably â over.
The Age of Emptiness
Oswald iten.
Itenâs lovingly-edited video recuts the lush imagery of Martin Scorseseâs The Age of Innocence, focusing on shots devoid of human presence, and excluding human faces entirely. Fittingly accompanied by Bernard Herrmannâs score from Scorseseâs own Taxi Driver, this tale of Edwardian-era New York aristocracy is recontextualised for our current day and age. The result plays like an annotated relic of the Age of the Coronavirus, such as might be uncovered by future historians seeking to make sense of this bizarre period in human history.
Catherine Grant
This moving epigraphic tribute to the late Irrfan Khan merges Khanâs performance in Vishal Bhardwajâs Maqbool with excerpts from Laura Mulveyâs Death 24x a Second to powerful, touching effect. Another example by Grant of what the videographic epigraph can achieve at its purest and most potent form.
House â Everything but the Kitchen Sink
Jesse Tribble
This ambitious six-part series on House MD , clocking in at four hours(!), is one of the most comprehensive analyses of a television series Iâve seen, certainly one devoted to a network medical procedural (in its early seasons, anyway). House remains one of my favourite (semi-guilty) pleasures, and while this episodic, narration-led effort by Tribble, highly impressive in its intimate familiarity with the showâs eight seasons, might not be ground-breaking in form or content, I found it extremely enjoyable and ridiculously watchable. Try the first part then see if you can resist the urge to keep on going; I certainly couldnât.
LuĂs Azevedo
Filmmaker for hire. Maker of direct-to-video essays for Little White Lies , Mubi, Fandor, Amazon Prime & Â Barbican
6ix9ine GOOBA except theres no music
Rob Lopez ( RĂB )
Christopher Nolan | Doing It For Real
Julian Palmer (The Discarded Image)
Women Make Film
Mark Cousins ( watch trailer )
Cliff Booth Drives Home
Philip Brubaker
The Visual Architecture of Parasite
Thomas Flight
The Movies Behind Your Favourite GIF s
Leigh Singer (Little White Lies)
What Gordon Parks Saw
Evan Puschak (The Nerdwriter)
Filmmaker/writer
Expands the notion of what a video essay is and can be. Fascinating, even suspenseful. Blends performance in with videographic criticism in a way I had not seen before. Because of Binottoâs video, the way a critic can interact with a film is not what it was even a year ago.
From screening to (live)Â streaming
Davide Rapp & Andrea Dal Martello
An incredible marriage of past and present culture. Rapp & Martello have made a drop-dead hilarious critique of pandemic-era social media that is precisely funny because of how it recontextualises the movies that we grew up watching. It is an in-joke that richly rewards those who get it; how would these movies we loved in the past translate in todayâs world?
Francisca Lila
A breathtaking, thorough taxonomy of flowers, plants and trees from the film canon. Lilaâs brilliant, seamless editing makes the transition from Antichrist to Pather Panchali flow naturally, and part of the joy of this video essay is spotting and identifying the films she draws from.
In the Kitchen with Pedro Almodóvar
LuĂs Azevedo (Little White Lies)
Azevedo makes videos that are so sensuous and nimbly edited that he breathes new life into the clips on his timeline. Here his sensibility finds the perfect match: the kitchen. He finds captivating gestures from AlmodĂłvarâs films and his speaking voice strikes just the right chord between his ideas and the visuals. Bravo.
Bad Vacations
The Criterion Channel
Criterion makes many great, concise supercuts to advertise the films on their streaming service. I wish they would credit the editors more generously, or at all, even. This is one that I have rewatched many times, because I love the arc; how a promising vacation can turn into a nightmare. This was a year full of miserable events that caused me great dismay, but somehow I delight in the pessimism of this teaser.
Change Needs to Come
Nelson carvajal.
Using simple, unadorned straight cuts set to an iconic song of the civil rights movement, Carvajal says what needed to be said. And oh, is it painful. A collection of cell phone imagery of black people murdered in contemporary life is juxtaposed with archival images dating back to slave times to show that in many ways, nothing has changed. We saw coverage of the Black Lives Matter movement throughout 2020, so I would be remiss not to include what I believe to be a very strong entry in this significant genre. I hate watching this video essay.
Video Artist and Founder of Free Cinema Now
Transcending Heidegger â The Cinema of Terrence Malick
Tom van der Linden (Like Stories of Old)
I was surprised by how moved I was by this video essay. Even with the voiceover element, van der Linden never hits the snooze button; his voice inquires, wonders and keeps insisting. By the end, I was floored by this workâs sincerity, the messaging, and its revelations about the human condition. Malick himself would be proud. Itâs the best video essay of the year.
The Unloved â The Siege
Scout Tafoya (RogerEbert.com)
Part of the charm of Tafoyaâs The Unloved series is that it gives us all a chance to beat our chests about our sentimental favorite films or guilty pleasure movies. When this entry on The Siege came out, it was a couple of months into the pandemic here in the States. I, like many people, was working from home, and felt really disconnected from the outside world. The way Tafloya injected socio-political urgency into his thesis for Zwickâs film, was like a bolt of electricity; it woke my senses, and reminded me of the very real world outside.
Wash Us In The Blood
Arthur Jafa
It was released as a music video but as soon as the appropriated images hit the screen and it was revealed to be created by video artist Arthur Jafa, it became, for me, a video essay. The striking juxtapositions Jafa creates between images and Kanye Westâs music is thrilling. This is a vital work disguised as a music video. As I write this, it has 10,370,226 views on YouTube. Thatâs a really good turnout for a video essay if you ask me.
Andris Damburs
Cinefile, creator and moderator of 35 MM â A GROUP FOR CINEPHILES
Nothing at Stake
Everything is a remix:Â reality.
Kirby Ferguson
Aspect Ratio â The Changing Shape of Cinema
Leon Barnard
Physical Storytelling in CĂ©line Sciammaâs Coming-Of-Age Trilogy
Why do you love cinema.
Ignacio Montalvo
Czechoslovak New Wave
Jonathan Keogh
Ian Danskin
Writer/editor/creator of YouTube channel Innuendo Studios .
Children of DOOM
Errant Signal
Errant Signalâs Children of DOOM is a dissection of the first-person shooter, wherein Chris Franklin takes what he considers to be the most important/interesting FPS from a given year and analyses it, planning to do one for every year of the genreâs existence. Chris has long been one of the most thoughtful voices in games criticism, and heâs always at his best discussing FPS . (His video on BioShock Infinite is what set me on the path to becoming a YouTuber.) In a year when watching political deep dives of the kind I typically make felt exhausting, this was my comfort food.
Coronavirus and Americaâs Death Cult
Carlos Maza
This is the year Carlos Maza â having previously been the main reason to subscribe to Voxâs YouTube â went solo and launched his own channel (he picked a heck of a year). Heâs done excellent videos on the primaries and police brutality, but my fave is his video explaining the governmentâs response to the pandemic through the lens of neoliberalism and slowly devolving into a horror film. It does what all great political essays do: helps you understand a current event while also teaching you something fundamental that will help you understand much else about our world.
In Search of a Flat Earth
Dan Olson (Folding Ideas)
What at first appears to be a feature-length dissection of flat earth conspiracy theories telescopes out into the first comprehensive explanation of QA non Iâve seen, a distillation of the nature of conspiracy theories, a list of what other thinkers tend to overlook about conspiracists, and a sprinkling of love for the pursuit of knowledge. âUltimately, itâs not about facts, itâs about powerâ is one of the most important takeaways of 2020.
Is Vine Cinema?
Kyle Kallgren (Brows Held High)
As he did two years ago with his video on bisexual lighting, Kyle Kallgren takes a seemingly innocuous subject â the life and death of Vine â and makes a video about EVERYTHING . About the essential units of filmmaking, about media that crosses social boundaries, about the speed of modern life and the formats best able to capture it, about race uprisings and cultural appropriation, about what happens when every so often The Youth are allowed to dictate culture. And all while montaging together his favorite Vines.
The $150,000Â Banana
Sarah Urist Green (The Art Assignment)
Sarah Urist Greenâs The Art Assignment didnât end this year so much as go into low-power mode. The channel is still updated sporadically, but Sarah has refocused her attentions on other work. But, back in January â remember January? â she discussed Maurizio Cattelanâs then-trending art piece in which he duct taped a banana to a wall. Sarah employs her talent for taking strange, pretentious works on their own terms, digging into the bananaâs surrounding contexts, the artistâs history, and the movement itâs part of, without ever claiming the work is âgoodâ. This is her in her element.
weâre already ded || Zack Snyder, Part 2
Maggie Mae Fish
This year, the criminally under-appreciated Maggie Mae Fish started a series on the works of Zack Snyder, starting with a 15-minute look at how Snyderâs Superman contrasts with Supermen past, and then this 42-minute dive into how Snyderâs calcified, objectivist worldview manifests first in Dawn of the Dead and then across all his films.
Hamilton and the right mess itâs gotten me into
Grace Lee (Whatâs So Great About That?)
Graceâs dense and kaleidoscopic style proves a perfect match for the captivating yet self-contradictory musical that is Hamilton. The video goes back and forth over what makes Hamilton compulsively likable and also frustrating as heck, with every progressive idea undercut by something that seems to say the opposite, and every troublesome moment looking like it might be commentary on itself. Grace proves up to the task, providing not so much answers as a whole lot to think about.
Steven E. de Souza
Itâs a Christmas movie. Bylines: @nytimes @LosAnglesTimes @FadeInMagazine @EmpireMagazine @SightSoundMagazine
How the Safdie Brothers Lie in Uncut Gems
Nehemiah Jordan (Behind the Curtain)
Never has a film essay had so disingenuous a title â but then N.T. Jordanâs essay is all about the art of misdirection. In truth, the brothers dissect as much as they dissemble, revealing more truths about the filmmaking process in 11 minutes than a semester of screenings. From the unanticipated dominoes that fall with casting changes (for instance, from a contemporary setting to a period one and back again), to unexpected sources of inspiration (spoiler alert: a colonoscopy) to the brutal marathon of 160 drafts over 10 years, the Safdies provide an unflinching portrait of the grind that is art.
The Most Important Filmmaker You Havenât Heard Of
Jack Nugent (Now You See It)
Since silent days, women have been present in the editing suite, far too often unheralded (though not, of course, here). Starting with Margaret Booth in the 1930âs, then turning to Dede Allen and the late Sally Menke, Jack Nugent makes a strong case for these three artists as the midwives of modern film cutting. Both insightful and long overdue, Sight & Sound readers are urged to overlook the essayâs click-bait title⊠as they undoubtedly have.
Orson Wells a la Cinematheque Francaise
Pierre-André Boutang, Guy Seligmann
This monthâs release of a major motion picture from an important filmmaker like David Fincher directly to a streaming platform sent a shock wave through HollywoodâŠ. no, not the potential end of theatrical distribution as we know it, along with the shattering of the livelihood of exhibitioners and the shuttering of countless venuesâŠI mean the impossible-to-shutter endless debate over Orson Welles: Boy wonder, or one-and-done-er? Found by Francois Thomas in the archives of the Cinematheque Francais only months ago, Welles gets another one hour 33 minutes with us⊠and we, with him.
Every Stormtrooper In Star Wars, Explained by Lucasfilm
Madlyn Burkert <@alohamaddy> and Doug Chiang
Call it classic or kitsch, revolutionary or rehash, but after 14 theatrical pictures and seven television series over 43 years for a total running time of letâs see, the original trilogy, six hours 20 minutes, then in chronological order Star Wars: Droids thatâs 13 episodes x 23 minutes, plus 121 episodes of Star Wars: The Clone Wars⊠oh wait damn it, between the time Iâm typing this and when it gets eyeballs, two more episodes of The Mandalorian will have been out, God knows what their running time will be, @jonfavs and @TaikaWaititi canât even agree. Anyway, a long overdue taxonomy.
Steven Spielbergâs Use of Reflections
Shera Junushev
Like Bogart, this screenwriter is in a lonely place here with this one: I come to praise it, not critique it â but as observant as this essay is in recognising a signature Spielberg technique, in defining its effect as âallowing the audience to examine the details of a scene without losing connection to the characterâ it reduces psychology to geography. Rather, the subjective reflection shotâs true dynamic lies in flinging the filmgoer literally headlong into the protagonistâs shoes, bonding the viewerâs sense of self to the character with subliminal power.
The Irishman and the Death of the Gangster Film
In 1992 Francis Fukuyama declared The End of History. In 2020, Luis Azevedo is here to tell us that when we werenât looking, Clint Eastwoodâs Unforgiven (1992) declared the End of the Western, and in 2019, Martin Scorsese⊠hmm, how to best put this? Letâs just say that Luis thinks we got a real good genre here, itâd be a shame, a real shame if something happened to itâŠ
Doctor Who and The Fourth Wall
Samuel Davis
From Justus D. Barnesâs gunshot in The Great Train Robbery in 1903 to Michael Caineâs seductive asides in Alfie (1966) to Joe Pesci bringing us full circle in Goodfellas (1990), breaking the fourth wall has been a key part of the motion pictures tool box. But those heralded films arenât where we oh-so sophisticated Cineastes first encountered that jarring technique now, was it? And it wasnât O Lucky Man, AmĂ©lie, or Fight Club, either. Come on, kiddies, fess up, you know the answer: hereâs Samuel Davis to refresh your memory.
Monica Delgado
Peruvian film critic, director of Desistfilm.com
Presence: Call Me By Your Name
Fabian Broeker
I really liked this video: the search for a new topic in the treatment of a very hackneyed film.
On Contamination
Jessica McGoff
I felt interested about the political view of McGoff, because in this video she establishes correspondences between the filmmaker universe (animals and humans coexisting together) and social-environmental context.
Notorious Wavelengths
A Wave of the Hand. A way to the photo. An analysis of the use of the zoom in two opposite films, as a provocation. I never imagined watching this strange duel between Snow and Hitchcock.
Can any Johnny Guitar fan be indifferent to this?
Mariana Dianela Torres
There is a musical intention in this montage that attracts me a lot, that recovers a sensation of movement in the films of Chantal Akerman.
The Other Side of the Street
Cristina Ălvarez LĂłpez and Adrian Martin
Iâm interested in the way in which Adrian and Cristina edit the images, research and voices, in an exact timing and leading us to subtle endings.
For some video essayists itâs a problem to work without complete films (for different restrictions). Kevin finished this challenge in a very playful and fresh way.
Will DiGravio
Host, The Video Essay Podcast ; Creator, Notes on Videographic Criticism ; Contributor, Film School Rejects
Follow the Cat
If there is one video essayist whose style and sensibility I most try to emulate in my own work, it is Johannes Binotto. His videos are rigorous and scholarly, yet deeply personal and emotional. In this video, like much of his work, Johannes turns his cinephilia into a shove which, like Lisa Fremont, he uses to dig deeper and deeper into the fabric of Rear Window. Follow the Cat gives us a new way of understanding familiar images, and thus gets at the heart of what videographic criticism is and what it can do and be.
Jazmin Jones
I think about Unlocked by video artist Jazmin Jones often. In an interview, Jones described the way she shifted the focus of the appropriated videos away from the white people at the centre: âIt was a matter of zooming in⊠trying to reframe so that weâre really focusing on the pleasure and the experience of the black fems.â Jazmin may not have set out to make a âvideo essayâ when she created Unlocked, but the way she manipulates the footage is among the most powerful examples of the form I have seen.
cops ordering food
Manny Fidel
I canât do justice to Mannyâs video in 100 words. Itâs hilarious and deeply insightful. I also love his follow-up tweet: âI made this in like four mins do NOT comment on its quality.â Mannyâs video was made three weeks after the murder of George Floyd, at a time when a narrative emerged in the United States that police officers were somehow the real victims in society. The video makes a mockery of that absurd notion and, in the process, shows that a definition of âqualityâ as it relates to videographic criticism is far more nuanced than one might think.
My First Film
Zia Anger ( watch trailer )
My First Film debuted in 2019 as a live film performance; an innovative desktop documentary that earned high praise in last yearâs poll. Unable to perform in person this year, Anger began streaming live performances throughout the spring. The work continued to break ground and morphed into something new, a film that reflected Angerâs own pandemic experience. During the performance I saw, Anger texted her dad to say she loved him. Watching âMy First Filmâ during such frightening times was a cathartic experience, one that made me briefly feel like I was back at the movies among friends and strangers.
Indy Vinyl: Records in American Independent Cinema: 1987 to 2018
Ian Garwood
Another ground-breaking work this year came in the form of Ian Garwoodâs Indy Vinyl: Records in American Independent Cinema: 1987 to 2018, a project that features a range of video essays and written works. One aspect of video essay-making that often gets overlooked is the amount of time dedicated to making each and every video. Ianâs project, both in size and scope, but also given the fact that he released parts of this project as they were finished, beautifully captures the labor of love that is video-essay making, all while pushing the boundaries of what the form can be.
Tear away Turn back Breathe
Martina Probst and Chantal Hann
Over the past nine months, I have tried to relive my favourite pre-pandemic moviegoing experiences through video essays. This video by Martina Probst and Chantal Hann, two students at the Lucerne School of Art and Design, is among the finest analyses of Portrait of a Lady on Fire I have seen. But what I find so compelling about their essay is their willingness to at times forgo images entirely and embrace a blank canvas: the black screen. Video essayists often feel the need to fill every second with images. Perhaps we should allow our work to, like Marianne, breathe.
Itâs Bad Luck to Compare Hands
Alex Slentz
Meshes of the Afternoon is one of those films that I rewatch all the time, just to try and understand how it works; how it was assembled. I feel the same way about Alex Slentzâs video, which blends together footage from Maya Derenâs film, Persona, and Un Chien Andalou. Similar to the video by Probst and Hann, I am inspired by the way Sletz allows us to see the canvas on which the video essay was created. The fluid movements of the images and their interactions with one another blend together in a beautiful collage and insightful analysis.
Video Essayist and Filmmaker
How Edgar Wright Uses Sound
Sound tends to be an underrepresented subject in the world of video essays. Julianâs essay mimics Edgar Wrightâs editing and sound design to move effortlessly between his films, showcasing Wrightâs unique approach to sound.
The Strange Reality of Roller Coaster Tycoon
Jacob Geller
Jacob Geller expertly ties together internet culture, video game design, and physics in this profound examination of the existential unease that can be found in a theme park simulation game from 1999.
Lies of Heroism â Redefining the Anti-War Film by Tom van der Linden (Like Stories of Old)
Weaving together examples from 49 films during the course of this nearly feature-length video essay, Tom thoughtfully and thoroughly examines depictions of war in cinema and whether itâs truly possible to make an anti-war film.
Dinner with Brad Pitt
Video essays can also just be a lot of fun. Iâm not sure who had more fun, LuĂs Azevedo sitting down to edit this video, or Brad Pitt sitting down to dinner in all these scenes.
Researcher and filmmaker
The Viewing Booth
Raâanan Alexandrowicz ( watch trailer )
An incredibly careful and thorough examination of the spectatorial mechanisms of two protagonists (a filmed spectator, and the filmmaker who is filming her) that exposes how much our beliefs and ideological convictions determine how we make sense of online images. Though rather pessimistic in its conclusion (no image can change a personâs political opinions â so long for a century-long history of activist media and political filmmaking), the film advocates convincingly for the political power of building respectful interpersonal relationships with our political opponents, and for the potential of images to serve as the basis for such conversations.
Il nây aura plus de nuit
Eléonore Weber ( watch trailer )
This essay film looks at thermal imagery produced by helicopter pilots in a war context. We hear only one voice, but the words it speaks contain the gazes of many: from the pilots themselves, to the judges in military courts in charge of examining these images to determine retrospectively the legitimacy of the pilotsâ decisions to kill, to the filmmaker who questions her mixed fascination for these images, to our own uncertainty about what these images expect from us â their probably unwanted, surplus witnesses.
On Contamination and My Mulholland
I equally love these two videos by Jessica McGoff. Re-watching On Contamination at the end of this year of sanitary crisis gives the video an uncanny, definitely prescient quality, but it is a great work independently from its unfortunate topicality. Like My Mulholland (which McGoff produced in the context of the video essay series Once Upon a Screen ), On Contamination explores an intimate form of narration in which the discussed film becomes not so much the limiting frame of the essay, but the substrate from which it grows in unexpected directions.
Elie Ga ( watch excerpt )
This essay â very much like my other picks â proposes a very personal, partly autobiographical, partly fictional narration, loosely based on a collection of images figuring objects found by âbeachcombersâ. Images come in waves onto the filmmakerâs table, who tentatively combines them into spatial arrangements and explorative superpositions, until the surf of the narration prompts their replacement with other images â some we discover, some we see again and again, constantly re-invested with new meanings.
I know very few video essayists who are willing to implicate themselves as much in their videos as Binotto does in this performative, wistfully celebratory and intensely personal short video piece. I admire the growing abstraction of Binottoâs work (such as in his video Trace , another strong candidate for this poll) for it opens up the possibility of unexpected, sensual engagements with the films with which it dialogues. These are video essays where images burgeon with news meanings and unlikely sensations, rather than being pinned down or constricted by the analysis.
Amel Alzakout and Khaled Abdulwahed
This year Iâve seen a number of video essays reflecting on images of migrants on their way to Europe, and this film is by far the one I found the most inspiring. It recalls Philip Scheffnerâs Havarie in its focus on a single, arguably illegible image, and its investment of the soundtrack as the lieu of meaning production. But the perspective is reversed: Havarie watched a ship sink from afar, Purple Sea plunges us in the water. The presentness of the image serves as the loam from which the story unfolds, made of the narratorâs uncertain memories and hopes.
Wild Heart 1981 /Â 2020
Zach Dorn ( watch excerpt )
From randomly filming contemporary online media flows to carefully re-animating on paper a decades-old improvised piece of footage (that was later uploaded to YouTube), this short essay deploys an impressively wide, and very personal narrative arc. The diversity of visual techniques that are employed in this virtuoso single-shot speaks to Dornâs attempts to grasp his digital object and materialise it in the space of his home â a gesture that is fascinatingly articulated as one of self-care and compensation for the anxieties triggered by contemporary online media.
Senior Lecturer in Film and Television Studies, University of Glasgow
Desegregating the Two Shot: The Use of the Frame in The Defiant Ones (1958)
Henry Rownd
This finely detailed audiovisual commentary operates in the best tradition of close mise-en-scĂšne analysis â a surprisingly marginal genre in the academic video essay world. Rownd demonstrates astutely how the image construction of the film tells a nuanced and complex story about race and space in the Civil Rights era, even as the surface narrative hammers home a more heavy-handed message.
Lisa Hanawalt: Being Human by Being Animal
This year I taught a dedicated video essay course for the first time in a while and Grace Lee was the go-to for examples of incredibly smart, quick-witted, well-researched and audiovisually engaging work. Leeâs awareness of the possibilities of animation shines through in this video, an awareness developed through both her critical and filmmaking practice.
Satis House
As is often the case with Catherine Grantâs work, Satis House is an exemplary act of collaboration. Firstly, it invites collaboration from the viewer by giving them more and more visual information to compare, without authorial commentary, as the video proceeds. Secondly, Grantâs accompanying writing refines and deepens the viewing experience, collaborating with it rather than simply describing it. Finally, the collaboration through writing is extended by the inclusion of a reflective piece by the cultural historian Lynda Nead, whose thinking about Great Expectations inspired the video in the first place.
My Mulholland
From my admittedly partial perspective, skewed towards video essays published in academic journals, a turn to the overtly personal seemed evident in a number of examples this year. Maybe it was fitting, then, that the year closed with the publication of the Once Upon a Screen collection in the Cine-Files, where video essayists reflected on formative film-viewing experiences. Iâve had a little more time to watch and think about Jessica McGoffâs contribution than the others, and itâs a wonderful reflection on the allure and perils of online media consumption, funnelled through a memorable first encounter with Mulholland Drive.
âWho Ever HeardâŠ?â
Like Catherine Grantâs Satis House, Payneâs video uses an additive multi-screen compositional process that draws attention to repetitions in the source material â in this case a scene from The Man Who Shot Liberty Valance. Payneâs approach is more overtly manipulative than Grantâs, repeating each shot from the scene to create a visual and aural montage that builds then recedes in intensity. The looping effect of the soundtrack, in particular, is mesmerising.
The Before Sunrise Waltz
This was the act of virtual film tourism I needed in the early months of lockdown. By orchestrating a Google Earth tour of the locations visited in Before Sunrise, Stone re-envisages the film from a panoramic perspective, thereby offering a completely different take on the original, which stays determinedly tied to Jesse and Celineâs ground-level progression through Viennaâs streets.
A Machine for Viewing
Richard Misek, Oscar Raby, Charlie Shackleton
Of course itâs a shame that the pandemic put a (temporary?) stop to the VR -video essay roadshow envisaged as part of Machine for Viewing, but the three videos published in NECSUS demonstrate that the projectâs potential has already been realised. Whilst the demonstration of the technology is impressive, I related most to the videosâ use of VR to reflect on a traditional 2-D cinema-going experience. Who would have thought that the sight of a packed auditorium, witnessing the live VR presentation and commentary at the Sundance Festival, would now seem so poignant?
Hailey Gavin
Video essay creator
Yorgos Lanthimosâs Absurd Worlds
This is an excellent articulation of the questions Lanthimos asks and the visual and structural tools he employs. This is a must-watch for anyone who loved Nimic and conveys the power of shorts to reframe our understanding of auteursâ work.
How Portraits Lie â What to be aware of in your portrait photography
Jamie Windsor
I love this clear exploration of a nuanced topic, supplemented by beautiful motion graphics and fluid editing.
This piece illustrates the sometimes inextricable nature of nostalgia and trauma. I also loved the way the essay draws points of connection between media of different formats from different times.
Audiovisual essayist and Professor of Film at the University of Reading.
Slap That Bass Zoomed
The elephant manâs sound, tracked., the original ending: the last acts of black horror heroes.
Cydnii Wilde Harris
Music and Point of View in Harry Potter and the Prisoner of Azkaban
Patrick Keating
Once Upon a Screen: Explosive Paradox
Video essayist; founding co-editor of [in]Transition: Journal of Videographic Film & Moving Image Studies ; Honorary Research Fellow at Birkbeck, University of London, and elected member of Academia Europea. Currently completing https:screenstudies.video
One of my all-time favourite videographic works by foundational artist and essayist Lee, or indeed by anyone. Part of a brilliant project recently published in issue 15 of the Cine-Files in the collection Once Upon a Screen , commissioned and curated by Ariel Avissar and Evelyn Kreutzer.
Another astonishing work by one of the most innovative and significant of video essayists. Published online in December 2020, this video also deservedly garnered huge festival success, screening in competition at the Marseilles Festival of Documentary Film as well as at the Festival dei Popoli, the Kasseler Dokfest and the festival Caminhos do Cinema PortuguĂȘs.
One of my all-time favourite pieces that we have published at [in]Transition: Journal of Videographic Film and Moving Studies this last (or any) year. A wonderfully ambitious exploration of the first decade of stabiliser technologies and techniques. In surveying the industrial histories of two competing devices, the Steadicam and the obsolete Panaglide, Bird demonstrates, powerfully and movingly, how ânow codified norms of craft labour practice around stabiliserâs aesthetic and generic forms emerged amongst a diverse range of media and eclectic techniquesâ.
Maryam Tafakory ( read synopsis )
I love Tafakoryâs essay films and video essays, and this brilliant piece by her was one of the excellent new series of commissioned essays on Asian cinema, Monographs by the Asian Film Archive ( AFA ).
âDrawing upon histories and archives, both personal and regional, these works reveal new vistas of inquiry; ruminations that evince the essayistsâ personal connections to [Asian] cinema, made more poignant by the fact that they were created during various states of isolation and solitude.â
The series had its world premiere at the Dharamshala International Film Festival held online from 29 October to 4 November 2020.
The latest work by hugely talented video essayist and film McGoff; her video was also part of the high quality collection Once Upon a Screen .
One of an outstanding collection of audiovisual essays devoted to explorations of gesture published in NECSUS : European Journal of Media Studies , curated by the wonderful video essayist and scholar Tracy Cox-Stanton, in December 2019. This video was also added to the essential Video Essay Podcast Black Lives Matter video essay playlist , curated by Cydnii Wilde Harris, Kevin B Lee and The Video Essay Podcast founder and host Will DiGravio.
Indy Vinyl, Interrupted
This video, published in 2020, is the tip of the amazing videographic iceberg that is Garwoodâs work on his hugely original videographic/monographic project Indy Vinyl, as set out here and here .
Reader in Film and Sonic Arts, Liverpool John Moores University.
This audiovisual essay marries form and content in such an affecting manner that I was completely drawn into the essayistâs world. The universality of the space that Lee re-enacts/re-presents urged me to think back to the complexity of early childhood memories. The camera shot and movement choices coupled with the voice (which is sometimes masked) allows for an intimate story that perfectly reflects this particular moment and the trauma of early childhood.
If I could have made any other audiovisual essay, I wish it could have been this one! I love everything about it, from the voiceover, with its centrality of the cat, to the essayistâs own cat watching the screen. It is beautifully paced and offers an insightful point of entry to Hitchcockâs camera moves. It prompts a personal way into questioning cinematic spectatorship and image-making, and draws from an array of interesting representations of cats in cinema.
This audiovisual essay makes me think and feel differently about camera movement in cinema. It details a rich history drawing from technical manuals, instructional videos, film tests and experiments and other archival material to present an embodied argument that allows me to feel the moves of the Steadicam/Panaglide operator(s). The extent of the research is significant, but this is not merely a dissemination of research â the entire essay builds movement into its shape and form. It is truly inspiring work!
Forensickness is a longer audiovisual essay/experimental film that considers Chris Kennedyâs film, Watching the Detectives. Much like Galibert-LaĂźnĂ©âs earlier work, it deconstructs Kennedyâs film, goes to the online archive of material (this time on Reddit) to consider both the news footage circulating around the Boston Marathon bomb attack in 2013 and the Hollywood depiction of these events. This work is about how we see, how we consume images, and how we think about and through images.
McGoffâs My Mullholland is a poignant consideration of traumatic film viewing. The desktop format is most appropriate for examining the online consumption of film, and here the essayistâs own adventures on the internet and into the cinema of David Lynch are richly depicted through this approach. The audiovisual essay details some darker areas of the internet whilst also re-presenting the edgier moments of Lynchâs, Mulholland Drive. It is often fun and playful and the use of text is brilliantly deployed.
Garwood has had a prolific year creating audiovisual essays and has made a number that are inspired by the Zoom app as an aesthetic device, reflecting these recent months and how we have been collectively engaging online. He has created a showcase of this work which is available to audioview here . In a year where Black Lives Matter is at the forefront of political discussion, âSlap That Bass Zoomedâ offers a timely de-centring of the white appropriator, instead offering an array of Black artists (named and unnamed) to take their rightful place onscreen.
Paris Bagdad: Fantasies of America(na) in German-American Cinema
Evelyn Kreutzer
Paris Bagdad: Fantasies of America(na) in German-American Cinema offers a personal route through Paris, Texas (Wim Wenders, 1984) and Baghdad Café (Percy Adlon, 1987). This essayistic approach includes the use of superimposition, which is beautifully rendered and speaks to the sense of place and wanderlust that Kreutzer narrates her way through. This feels like a logical follow on from her earlier inspired work on German cinema, Berlin Moves (2017).
Chiara Grizzaffi
Postdoctoral Fellow at IULM University â co-editor of [in]Transition
MADELEINE / JUDY
The philosophy of horror: a symphony of film theory.
Péter Lichter, Bori Måté ( watch trailer )
Once Upon a Screen:Â Titanic
Victoria Wegner
Safe Bodies, Safe Environment: The Atmosphere of Todd Haynesâs Safe (1995)
Kelsey Draper
Film scholar and video essayist
That she was able to commute the cinematic trauma of Lynchâs work to the universal trauma of growing up during the Wild West years of the internet was a sublime insight. From the choice to take her audience on a journey through her desktop, to her recreations of jump scares and the IMD b message boards, this piece resonated with me on so many levels.
Itâs one thing to understand that your colleague is brilliant. It is another experience entirely to watch an artist, independent of your relationship to them, so handedly exceed their own boundaries. Kevinâs piece on his childhood experiences with the film Platoon are an example of the very power of cinema to shape our relationship with the world, and the worldâs relationship with us. Include that footage, and his deeply personal voiceover all combine to create an experience of childhood trauma so visceral, that I havenât just gained new insight on the war epic itself.
This piece redefined what I believed to be the parameters of the video essay. By making manifest his own desire to enter a film, Joannes transcends the medium technically, and does so by seamlessly immeshing his own visuals, music, and handwriting into the groundbreaking work, Freak Orlando. He uses the style of his piece to supplement both that of the existing property and what the essayist has to say about it. Johannes didnât just redefine how Iâd like to create video essays. He redefined the limitations of how I can enter a film itself.
The greater focus of Danâs essay, distilled what Iâve found so troubling about conspiracy theories, from the Illuminati to QA non, and how more often than not, their unstated purpose is to oppose my very existence. By laying bare the historical context of these theories and their creators, Dan articulated the harm these theories stand to enact, and makes them far less easy to laugh off.
As far as works responding to or including elements of our current reality, Ianâs use of Zoom is perhaps one of the most hopeful. This may also be a standout for how it combines both the Zoom revolution with the Racial Equity revolution, and may be one of the most effective ways Iâve seen the Zoom framework employed. Add to that, the editing is impeccably timed, and I left the video with a healthy list of performers to whom I was newly introduced.
Cocoâs Feel-Good Oppression
Eliquoriceâs video essay on Coco was my gateway drug to the rest of his works. His analysis of the filmâs depiction of immigration within the narrative is poignant, but his comparisons between the failings of the immigration system in Disneyâs magical realm to the failings of the system in our reality make a compelling case for how political ideology is communicated in family films. The inclusion of his own experiences with the immigration system come at just the right moment, thereby narrativising his analysis, while giving a human face to an issue often overshadowed by the enormity of the system.
The Satirical Resurgence of Reefer Madness
Yharaâs recent video essay on Reefer Madness delves into the historical context that lead to the film, its reception upon release, and its place in the canon of midnight features. Her candour, humour, and personality transcend what could have been a simple history lesson into an engaging conversation about the mutability of everything from social attitudes about cannabis to the constantly shifting legacy of a specific film alongside those attitudes. Itâs Yharaâs deft balance of humour and context that reveals to her audience the absurdity that is racial stereotyping and discrimination.
Film scholar, video essayist, animation artist
When was the last time I found myself enjoying a supercut for almost seven minutes? Conforme has a relentless urgency thanks in large part to the driving score by Vaude herself. For me, it captures that contradictory state of frantic stasis that was and is 2020.
Johannes Binotto keeps exploring the possibilities of the video essay in all kinds of directions sidestepping technological wizardry by relying on household items. In Trace he creates tactile sensations from a single film still on a tablet. Seeing it again now, I wonder if it was about that one question all along: what does physical contact feel like?
With her well paced self-reflective long form essays, ChloĂ© Galibert-LaĂźnĂ© has more than once managed to entice me into agreeing then disagreeing with her narration before finally realising that I had been too immersed to âpay attention to that woman behind the curtainâ, so to speak.
With his entry in the Once Upon a Screen collection, Kevin B. Lee confirms that he is an incredible storyteller. Explosive Paradox looks deceivingly simple, but works on so many levels. Most importantly, I found it a deeply moving experience.
Black Lives Matter Video Essay Playlist
Curated by Cydnii Wilde Harris. Kevin B. Lee and Will DiGravio
As our field becomes ever wider, curated lists have become crucial to make sure that notable video essays and voices do not go unnoticed. Among them, the Black Lives Matter Video Essay Playlist is an essential contribution, has a clear-cut profile and is co-organised by three widely connected practitioners.
Nehemiah Jordan
Creator of Behind the Curtain , an online community of screenwriters
The Social Network â Ten Years Later
The Royal Ocean Film Society
The reason why I chose this was primarily its experimental form. Using the topic of Facebook and social media, Andrew Saladino (creator) builds the entire video essay off of the Facebook feed â scrolling from clip to graphic to clip. Something to watch for its inventiveness.
Brave was a Disappointment
This video does a great job of walking through the origins of making this film, breaking down how itâs structured, and finally, how it couldâve been rewritten to be stronger. A long video, but extremely entertaining and well-organised.
The Psycho Chord â Consonance vs Dissonance
Listening In
This channel takes a deep look into an unexplored section of filmmaking: the sound. Specifically, the music and how itâs an integral part of the storytelling. Also, the production quality of these videos are incredibly high.
How Martin Scorsese Integrates The Shadow: A Jungian Practice
Jillian Snead (Jilloms)
A deep but practical analysis of the Shadow, using examples from Martin Scorseseâs filmography to explore how itâs been utilised in different characters. Whatâs so great here is that she translates all of the analysis into practical application for ourselves. How does one begin integrating their own Shadow into their lives? This video gives you the steps.
Christian Keathley
Professor of Film & Media Culture, Middlebury College; Founding co-editor of [in]Transition
Santa y Teresa
Michelle Farrell
Tarkovskyâs Napes
Pavel Tavares
Miklós Kiss
Associate Prof. in Audiovisual Arts and Cognition at University of Groningen, NL /co-author of Film Studies in Motion: From Audiovisual Essay to Academic Research Video
One of the best audiovisual research essays of the year, through its presented information (a rich exploration of the first decade of film stabiliser technologies and techniques) and quality of presentation (technical skill, soundtrack, use of split-screen, etc.).
All Is Not Lost
Amy Rachlin
The video that managed to squeeze all the suspense of living in isolation during a pandemic AND one of the most goose-bumpy scenes of my favourite TV series into less than four minutes. Bonus: itâs also funny.
Davide Rapp and Andrea Dal Martello
Famous film scenes appear in TikToks, Skype calls, distance learning and online conferences. Another COVID -19 cinephile fun.
If you want to watch only one video about GIF s, it should be this one. [insert Robert Redford as Jeremiah Johnson nodding meme.]
Repeating Terror: Contemplating Death in Amat Escalanteâs Heli (2013)
Niamh Thornton
A calm but powerful side-by-side reflection on the ethics of the slow depiction of hyper-realist violence in Amat Escalanteâs 2013 Heli, using repetition and variation of the âsameâ scene. A brilliant demonstration of the potentiality of videographic criticism.
âParasites move from animal to human. Are we the parasites or the hosts?â An eerily prophetic video âon contaminationâ (a response to Janis Rafaâs KALA AZAR ), made for the Criticsâ Choice panel of the 2020 International Film Festival Rotterdam â thus released just weeks before the COVID -19 virus turned into a pandemic.
Contagion â Willy and Rutty
Luca Gentile, Sasha Quinlan Narciso, Romy Weggeman, Sam Klement
A naughty little video made by my Videographic Criticism students at the University of Groningen, mixing Soderberghâs Contagion with the TV speeches of the Dutch king and prime minister during the first wave of COVID -19. Itâs in Dutch, but youâll get the point without understanding the language.
Jaap Kooijman
Associate Professor Media Studies, University of Amsterdam
Explosive Paradox undoubtedly is one of the most personal and moving audiovisual essays that I have after watched, and at the same time presents a convincing criticism of the way Hollywood glorifies violence, not only in films themselves, but also in the way these films are celebrated by film critics and Academy Awards. The essay contrasts the mundaneness of the cinema-turned-liquor-store where Lee first saw the film, back in the 1980s, and the seriousness of the trauma he experienced when confronted with this racially motivated violence. A wonderful piece of videographic criticism and art.
Mastering Dialogue: American Crime
Andreas Halskov and Previously on Perry Mason
Henrik HÞjer
I select these two audiovisual essays together, because they are the first two of a new series by the Danish 16:9 film journal which is based on a very specific parameter, a constraint in length. The audiovisual essays are 169 seconds (thus 2:49 minutes) long and described by the journal as âcondensed audiovisual breakdownsâ. Both take a US American television series as case study. The constraint in length forces the authors to focus on one specific element and to come straight to the point. Viewers are reminded of the short length as the seconds literally tick away.
Although I find the arguments of both audiovisual essays on, respectively, American Crime and Perry Mason, compelling and convincing, I am most fascinated by their shared form and how a relatively arbitrary constraint in length succeeds in condensing academic arguments about US American television into very seductive bites of television studies knowledge.
Days of Linda
One does not have to be familiar with Days of Heaven (Terrence Malick, 1978) to make sense of Days of Linda, a tribute to the actress Linda Manz, whose first film role was playing Linda. The audiovisual essay highlights Manzâs âcentral authorial contributionsâ by combining Manzâs voiceover with footage from the film presented in split screen, with shots of a non-speaking Linda on the left and other scenes (some including Linda) on the right. In this way, character Linda does not only get a voice through actress Linda, but her original marginalised and silenced role is emphasised as well.
Adjunct lecturer and video essayist, Northwestern University
This year I was so short on time that I missed out on seeing a lot of videographic work, so even more than in other years, my suggestions are highly subjective. I picked three videos whose originality and/or currentness caught my attention this year.
Katie Birdâs video essay on early stabilisation technologies is a marvellously executed demonstration of videographic scholarshipâs ability to simultaneously communicate historical film scholarship and evoke aesthetic, phenomenological experiences. Reflecting upon an under-researched, complex topic in a very accessible (and fun!) way, itâs also a perfect video essay to show in film classes.
Who Ever Heard�
Matthew Thomas Payne
Payneâs short and playful videographic engagement with a single scene from John Fordâs The Man Who Shot Liberty Valance spoke to me because of its marvellous use of rhythm, repetition, and sonic layering. As a sound scholar, I often ponder on the possibilities and limitations of videographic methods to investigate and/or express oneâs ideas via sound. Payneâs video certainly does both.
Before the End
Before the End is an interesting case in terms of its circulation and 2020-ness (rather than conceptual or formal novelty). Itâs a very simple, short video that uses the basic principles of editing and the Kuleshov effect to join excerpts from separate zoom interviews with Ethan Hawke and Julie Delpy (without the audio) to suggest a narrative sequel to the Before film series. Stoneâs video went viral, eventually reaching way more viewers than the original interviews had. It speaks to various intersecting technological, narrative, and communicative desires of this particular moment.
Video essayist
What Do IÂ Want?
This video makes great use of the looping format of social media video and, originating from TikTok, an exciting addition to the ever-monstrously-expanding field of video essay.
For All Mankind: Is The Moon Landing Cinema?
Kyle Kallgren
I mean, if your video essay doesnât have lego recreations of your subject matter⊠what are you even doing here? Get out of my house!
Sorry to Bother You â You canât just tame people
Curio (Eric Sophia and Natalie)
Curio has made so many amazingly ambitious essays this year, but I especially liked this more low key video on white supremacy and capitalism in Sorry To Bother You which people may have missed amidst the excellent creative flair of their higher profile videos.
Iâm sure this will be on many lists this year, but Kevin continues to be the most inventive, versatile video essayist out there and⊠come on⊠I couldnât NOT mention this video (as well as the Once Upon a Screen project in general).
We Are Here Because of Those That Are Not
Danielle Brathwaite-Shirley
Iâm maybe stretching the definition of video essay more than I ever have but if there isnât at least one pick on a list that makes you think âcome on now, this is just taking the pissâ then is it even a Sight & Sound video essay poll list? This interactive archive of black trans experiences may be neither strictly video nor essay, but itâs one of the most important, creative and emotional things I saw this year. Itâs got audio, itâs got visuals and itâs going on the list!
Filmmaker, Director of the first Masters program for Video Essays and Desktop Documentaries (at Merz Akademie)
Purple Sea and Shipwreck at the Threshold of Europe, Lesvos, Aegean Sea: 28 October 2015
Amel Alzakout and Khaled Abdulwahed, Forensic Architecture
These are separate works, but together they encompass the vast range of possibilities that video essays can have in using the same source material. Explanatory in the best sense, Forensic Architecture uses Alzakoutâs footage as part of a potent account of a disastrous shipwreck. Alzakout takes her footage in the opposite direction, with a deep exploration into the thoughts and experiences the footage does not reveal. In doing so the film offers a strong rebuke to the instrumentalisation that dominates image discourse.
More about Purple Sea can be found here .
Originally a VR video essay performed live at the 2020 Sundance Film Festival, this virtual exploration of the cinematic experience is all the more poignant in a year in which cinemas face an existential crisis and so much of daily life has migrated to a digital simulacrum of itself. Along with Zia Angerâs live online performances of My First Film, it points to exciting new directions for the video essay â interactive and in real time.
Various Creators with the Asian Film Archive (detailed info here )
I should acknowledge that I served as editorial consultant on this, but there is simply no precedent for this massive series of video essays on Asian cinema commissioned by the Asian Film Archive in Singapore, involving an impressive roster of filmmakers, moving image artists and scholars. They premiered last month at the Dharamshala International Film Festival and will circulate over the coming months. I am especially enamoured of Ghosts Like Us by Riar Rizaldi, Spirit Film by Raya Martin, and Irani Bag by Maryam Tafakory.
The most thoroughly and impressively researched academic video essay Iâve seen this year, bringing a heightened and expanded awareness of the physical labor that goes into a shot and how different approaches to technology and craft yield different effects of cinematic embodiment. A video essay that deepens oneâs appreciation for the bodily experience of film viewing and filmmaking alike.
Also: Sonic Chronicle Post Sound by Cormac Donnelly.
An experiment in watching propaganda leads to a wholesale reassessment of the assumptions behind progressive documentary filmmaking. A brave self-critique of oneâs longstanding practices and ideals in the face of an emerging set of sobering realities.
See also: Indy Vinyl, Interrupted by Ian Garwood.
Part of the Once Upon a Screen series of video essays on childhood film viewing-as-trauma, published on the Cine-Files Journal â this particular entry brings the topic out of the past tense with an exceptional liveness and presence. As my other selections would attest, questions of spectatorship and an expanded cultural and technological framework for understanding cinema are the foci for the video essays that I find most exciting right now. This desktop documentary engages all those themes brilliantly.
Real Talk: Is Breadtube Discussing Race âRightâ?
Professor Flowers
Working on the Black Lives Matter Video Essay Playlist was among the most significant experiences of the year for me, and through it I learned about several fantastic video essayists working in academia, YouTube and social media. I found especially noteworthy this careful consideration of the performativity of progressive racial politics on YouTube.
Eric Sophia McAllister
Video essayist working on YouTube covering media and cultural analysis, with a particular political focus on queer and leftist topics
I have to get this pick up front because it is the single greatest piece of video essay/documentary content on YouTube, not just this year. Olson has raised the bar absurdly high with this moving, insightful, well-researched, funny, well-shot and ideologically devastating look into the worlds of internet conspiracy theory. This isnât just a YouTube video about conspiracy theorists, it is a phenomenology. What is always impressive about Dan Olson is how well he structures information for maximum impact, and the âmid point twistâ of this video hits like an atom bomb.
A Prison of Our Own Loneliness
Sarah Zedig (letâs talk about stuff.)
This piece subverts the oft-derided talking head form of the YouTube video essay by having Sarah sit staring into the camera NOT talking while her pre-recorded voice-over delivers this essay about the pandemic, loneliness, nations, world politics and media, culminating in a silent scream and then breakdown into tears that is simply one of the most moving things I have ever seen on the platform. By the end of watching this you definitely will feel the catharsis of letting everything out with a âgood old cryâ, but most likely because you will actually cry.
Tyr & Grem (Pamphleteer)
Itâs best to acknowledge up front that this video is aping off the style of a video that I made, simply because I want to say that I see how self-serving it might appear to select it but I had to anyway, because this video is simply so so SO good. Tyr & Grem had a double realisation earlier this year when Tyr came out as a trans woman and Grem realised they were, and always had been, a lesbian. This video takes the form of a âMartian Poemâ inspired by Alan Mooreâs Watchmen and will knock your socks off.
The Ideology of Apocalypse
Jack has been at the top of his game as a media analysis and political commentary essayist for a while â from his âCopagandaâ trilogy about police movies to his evolving series on cartoon animals as race metaphor and all the inherent problems therein â but this masterwork taking a broad survey across apocalyptic fiction to study its cultural and ideological trends is the tippy top of the tippy top. Not to mention that in the year of our Lord 2020 the cultural question of how we perceive and process the apocalypse seems uncomfortably relevant.
Twitter and Empathy
In the world of liberal and progressive politics, the notion of âempathyâ is often invoked as a virtue, but this essay is really special for questioning what we actually mean when we talk about empathy. Big Joel knocks it out of the park by dissecting the way we evoke this concept and the revelation that itâs actually several different, intersecting and nebulous concepts being crammed under the one umbrella.
Oblivion & Â Women
Lilly (mothcub)
Did you know feminism makes games more fun, not less? Lilly knows this. While her channel doesnât usually engage in media analysis or produce video essays, this was still one of my favourite media analysis essays this year. Lilly takes us on a journey through a quest in Bethesdaâs Elder Scrolls IV : Oblivion and how it seemingly for no reason at all pulls the rug out from under itself and makes the quest less fun, when the obvious answer to any feminist gamer chad would be to go the other way entirely.
The Beginnerâs Guide: This Is Not For You
Graceâs essays are always stunningly good. Shockingly good. Upsettingly good. Their essays are sharp, funny, insightful, well researched and paced so well that at the end of a ten-minute Whatâs So Great About That video I feel like Iâve just watched an hour, but in the best possible way. To paraphrase my esteemed colleague in political commentary, Mr. Rubin, Graceâs videos put my brain in recovery mode from all the high-level important ideas. This particular essay takes a hard look at the cultural, social, and personal implications of interpretation and when and how we should and shouldnât do it.
Critical writer and video essayist
Days Passed: Lee Kang-Sheng Through the Eyes of Tsai Ming-Liang
Michelle Cho
Once Upon a Screen: On Psycho and The Witches
Daniel mcilwraith.
Video essayist and video editor
Blissfully Between Binaries with Apichatpong Weerasethakul
Carlos natålio.
Film Teacher and Researcher at Católica University (O Porto); Film Programmer at IndieLisboa Film Festival; Film Critic at à pala de Walsh website
One of the reasons why Kevin B. Leeâs work is ground-breaking in video essays because his imagination is always one step ahead. He is constantly reminding us that working with the body of cinema is working with your memories and affections, and circumventing material limitations. Here, childhood cinema is projected on a shadowy wall of a former movie theatre, Platoon is remembered between leaves and treesâ reflections. Violence of the past, violence of the present. An essay about memory and the permanence of racism. Video essays are tools to reedit the present.
Forensickness is a real detective story. ChloĂ© understands the whodunnit potential of the desktop film form and the intellectual investigation of a visual construction. She takes us by the end through her own investigation processes, while making us realise that there are only combinations, versions of the truth. Weâve passed the moment where critical theory intellectuals would point out the âspectacleâ in images. At the moment, the faking and âunfakingâ of images is a two-way business, intellectuals go along with pastors and internet police works share regards with so-called police experts.
Some Visual Thoughts About Perceptions in Rebecca
Ricardo Vieira Lisboa
Lisboa is a very ironic and shrewd video essayist. Here he is fooling around with Hitchcockâs Rebecca, using cinemaâs toolbox of directors and works â Kiarostamiâs Copie Conforme, Langâs Secret Behind the Door, Godardâs Adieu au Language, ClĂĄudia VarejĂŁoâs No Escuro do Cinema Descalço os Sapatos. The essay dismantles Rebeccaâs work from the themes of signature, drop/marriage, sea/see, idealisation, signature appropriation. In Lisboaâs works always expect the unexpectable: a laugh or an unhappy emoticon, next to a brilliant capacity for film analysis.
In Memoriam
LucĂa Alonso Santos
2020 is a year of confinement, although we are able to film inside our homes, inside our heads, and travel virtually. In this honest video essay, LucĂa Santos is âverifyingâ what she knew of Thailand through Apichatpongâs films using Google Street Views. Memories of something not happening as she anticipates Memoria by the Thai director. In what way do the images we have access to replace the cinematic experiences we might have?
LâAssassinat Kennedy au cinĂ©ma
Editing together various films and also archive footage, this video essay signals the assassination of John F. Kennedy 57 years ago. More than just documenting and representing the tragic event, Luc Lagier aims at expanding our perception by combining several other films that confuse, momentarily, our perception and feelings towards the event. Suspense without graphic violence is also at play here.
I have always had a fascination with the idea that directorsâ works and films can sensually meet and clash through video essays. Which beautiful monsters can be brought to life via these experiments? Ian Magor does this by joining an iconic shot from Notorious by Alfred Hitchcock to Michael Snowâs classic avant-garde Wavelength. The result is disquieting and this tells us how video essays, despite their analytical potentialities, might also look like Dr. Frankensteinâs experiment laboratory.
Shadows of Our Forgotten Montages
Dianela Torres
From watching films other films are born. Giving a form to our cinephile gaze, a body of montage made with what I see and what I make of that seeing. In this beautiful, oneiric video essay, on Sergei Parajanovâs film Shadows of Our Forgotten Ancestors, Dianela states she aimed for âinterpretation and dialectical appropriation of rhythmic and metricâ, âemotions and the fluid time-space, music and coloursâ. Montage unto montage, organic appropriations, essay convey aesthetics and we are reminded of Marcus Aureliusâ words: âall things are implicated in one another.â
Daniela Persico
Programmer, Locarno Film Festival / founder, filmidee.it
A video about the investigation as a drive of contemporary man and a gesture of cinematic love.
The expressive elegance of making the art of editing perceived in Parajanov (and in particular in the film Shadows of our forgotten ancestors) as a process of bringing shadows back to life. Fantasmatic and inspiring.
Once Upon a Screen
A collection of gazes on the evocative theme of traumatic childhood encounters: different styles and perspectives that articulate a critical and cinephile discourse open to different interpretations.
Managing Editor at No Film School
Kevin lays bare something you donât often see in film analysis: a personal account of how a film traumatises. He takes us to the theatre, now a BevMo!, where he first saw Platoon and tells the intensely intimate story of how the film affected him as a kid. Itâs a direct emotional connection between the film analyst and the film heâs analysing: the site of traumatisation may have changed but the trauma itself remains.
This video is a shock to the system of film analysis.
How Movies Prepared Us For Coronavirus
Answer: Surprisingly, they pretty much didnât.
Weâre living in a disaster movie.
No, in My Room | A desktop documentary on the making of a video essay
Beyond the Frame
Video essays make me feel dumb. This one makes me feel like weâre all dumb. I love it so much.
David Lynch | Movies As Therapy
The Discarded Image
Clearly thereâs a pattern to my selections this year, you guys. Iâm very obviously a nervous and emotional wreck or something because I really gravitated to this video essay by The Discarded Image about how David Lynch uses filmmaking as his therapy.
Why The Red Shoes Looked So Stunning
If you want to know how colour can be used to tell a story, watch The Red Shoes. Boom. Itâs an absolute masterclass and itâs beautiful and it almost convinced me that ballet was kinda cooler than basketball. This video essay is an excellent primer into the filmâs aesthetic and narrative use of red.
Jonathan Rosenbaum
Film critic
In alphabetical order:
LâAnnĂ©e DerniĂšre Ă Â Dachau
Mark Rappaport ( read synopsis )
A look at the emotional and historical complexity of our aesthetic preferences.
Her Socialist Smile
John Gianvito ( watch trailer )
It offers some things we may not have known about Helen Keller, socialism, and ourselves.
A House is Not a Home: Wright or Wrong
Mehrnaz Saeed-Vafa ( watch trailer )
It offers a lyrical and personal look at the relations between architecture and familial dysfunction by examining Frank Loyd Wrightâs Rosenbaum house in Alabama. It isnât my film, but I was interview subject, consultant, and camera assistant on it.
The Social Dilemma
Jeff Orlowski ( stream on Netflix or watch trailer )
It examines the corruption of communications via marketing, demonstrating how capitalism isnât a victimless crime.
Sportinâ Life
Abel Ferrara ( watch trailer )
Ferra accurately calls it a documentary on the act of making documentaries.
Women According to Men
Saeed Nouri ( watch trailer )
An archival look at Iranian gender relations.
Charlie Shackleton
Filmmaker and sometime film critic
How To with John Wilson
John Wilson (stream on HBO Max or watch trailer )
I canât think of anything that gives me greater pleasure than lo-fi on a hi-budget, and nobodyâs fi is loer than John Wilson, whose sublime new HBO (!) show captured the beauty of the mundane with an ethereal grace made only more poignant by Wilsonâs trademark fumbled voiceover. I didnât expect the field of video essay to produce a more unexpected mainstream crossover this year than Theo Anthony getting an ESPN special (the excellent Subject to Review) but here it was.
Those That, at a Distance, Resemble Another
Jessica Sarah Rinland ( watch trailer )
At one of the last social gatherings I attended before the pandemic, a friend told me that their favourite kind of film is one in which ânothing happens, many timesâ. That description stuck with me in Britainâs first national lockdown, as I rediscovered my taste for cinematic minimalism in newly streaming films like Ben Riversâs Now, At Last! and â most memorably â this mesmerising study of archaeological restoration. As with all the best films where nothing happens, many times, Rinlandâs work was a catalyst for a torrent of personal imaginative thought, and just when I was starting to feel incapable of it.
In a busy year for video essays on conspiratorial thinking (I also enjoyed Dan Olsonâs In Search of a Flat Earth and Kirby Fergusonâs Constantly Wrong ), ChloĂ© Galibert-LaĂźnĂ©âs characteristically probing and precise film was the only offering that seemed more concerned with asking questions than giving answersâsurely a prerequisite of getting to grips with a cultural sphere increasingly dominated by conspiracy theories.
Leigh Singer
Film Journalist, programmer, video essayist
One of the saving graces of this awful year has been a greater involvement and engagement with student video work. The results across various courses and different countries has been a revelation â so much insight, originality and technical accomplishment. Though I advised on a couple of the videos below, the finished pieces are entirely the studentsâ own and I feel very fortunate to have watched the work take shape and then become so expertly realised. In the world of video essays, at least, the future looks bright.
Elizaveta Gushchynskaya
A brilliant, probing pop culture mash-up reflecting and refracting life under lockdown that doubles up as a superlative music video. Itâs also the first video essay as part of a student course at the Polish-Japanese Institute of Technology, produced within five days, which makes the results even more extraordinary.
Ways of Looking:Â Playtime
Sergio MartĂnez Esqueda (password:Â Tati)
A dazzlingly original, present tense negotiation of Jacques Tatiâs comic masterpiece that reveals so much about its multiple, often simultaneous visual delights and examines how different viewing experiences play a part in these discoveries. Another revelatory first time student video, made on the UK âs National Film & TV Schoolâs MA in Film Studies, Programming and Curation.
Mandy: The Film Concert
Too few video essays go into the audio textures of a film and its score. This one does a superbly effective, visually striking job at conveying complicated technical effects with great clarity. Yet another unbelievably accomplished student project, from the ever-impressive University of Warwick Film Studies department.
So simple, original, elegant, and strangely haunting.
Magnolia Zoomed
A terrific idea, beautifully executed, that resonates in a range of different ways in this most unsettling of years. Could be 2020âs video essay anthem.
Comedy and Tragedy in Bong Joon-hoâs Parasite
A video essayist whose growing sophistication and playful touch when examining serious issues gets better every year. Parasite is the video essay gift that keeps on giving, but this is up there with the best feeding off of Bongâs hits.
Letâs Repo! Repo Manâs Plate Oâ Shrimp Logic
Miklos Kiss & Shant Bayramian
An inventive, pretzel-logicked (is that a word?), suitably anarchic blast from start to finish, a hit-and-run job that makes you want to (re-)watch the film it hijacks immediately.
Shannon Strucci
video essayist StrucciMovies
Street Cat Rescue:Â Lionel
Flatbush Cats
Every video by Flatbush Cats is its own touching, elegantly written and edited and edifying little story about a cat. Together they make up a channel that is both a tremendous educational resource and a series of charming vignettes about individual animals and their personalities. You know from the outset that Lionelâs video has an unhappy ending and that it will break your heart, but itâs worth watching anyway, and itâs a fantastic example of what makes this channel so unique and so worth celebrating.
Scout Tafoya
Video essayist, critic and filmmaker
There Are Not Thirty-Six Ways of Showing a Man Getting on a Horse
NicolĂĄs Zukerfeld ( watch trailer )
The video essay casually makes it to the festival circuit. Hypnotic and funny.
last night i dreamt that somebody loved me , The Tale of Eurydice and a letter to adolescence
Haaniyah Angus
My new favourite filmmaker. She doesnât make traditional video essays, so much as essays written in images. Heartbreakingly raw and emotionally open, even though sheâs put barriers between her and her audience (footage from other movies), the connection between them is deeper for its distance. She reaches across mediums with a report on her melancholy, which becomes universal when painted with faces.
A Revolt Without Images (Una revuelta sin imågenes)
Pilar Monsell ( watch trailer )
What Makes a Movie Line Memorable?
LuĂs Azevedo & Mark Forsythe (Little White Lies)
Crystalline editing from Luis. Just soft as snow.
Milad Tangshir
Iranian filmmaker based in Italy
The Rising of the Moon
James Slaymaker
Surviving Memories
Alessandro Luchetti and Manuela Lazic
Irina Trocan
Lecturer in Film Studies, freelance film critic
Shipwreck at the Threshold of Europe, Lesvos, Aegean Sea: 28 October 2015
While there are many moving films trying to sway the audience into empathy with the perils of migration, few provide such a watertight demonstration: using footage and data from various sources, this video essay/installation follows the play-by-play of an avoidable tragedy. A visually coherent, meticulous and fact-based plea to put human lives ahead of national interests and structure competent institutions accordingly.
The crackdown before Trumpâs photo op
Washington Post/Dalton Bennett, Sarah Cahlan, Aaron C. Davis & Joyce Sohyun Lee
Should We Still be Watching Gone with the Wind? Part 1 + Part 2
Cold Crash Pictures
YouTube-standard in form but amazingly communicative in content, this take on the racism of Gone with the Wind is the best chance for anyone on the internet to be heard by the other side. Sergeâs imagined viewer is initially respectful of Southern legacy, the monumentality of the 1939 film, skeptical towards accusations of racism and historical inaccuracy. Approaching the film through various videographic means, he builds a case by tackling counterarguments one by one.
Clean with Me (After Dark)
Gabrielle Stemmer ( watch trailer )
A nightmarish vision of what lies behind the shiny surfaces of Cleaning Motivation YouTube, this desktop documentary is borderline-voyeuristic (most likely in tune with how YouTube is meant to be used) and heart-on-its-sleeve empathetic toward the socially isolated women broadcasting themselves (along with the daughters they raise to take on their role). Social media is performative, which is a surprise to no one except the performers themselves.
Repeating Terror in Amat Escalanteâs Heli (2013)
Violence is always a tricky subject for videographic exploration â and this take on how the threat of bodily harm exudes from the screen outwards is guaranteed to make you uncomfortable, which is precisely the point.
Like Watching Paint Dry â Ăric Rohmerâs My Girlfriendâs Boyfriend
Putting a cinephile spin on a famed diss of Rohmerian cinematic style, this video uses digital wizardry for emphasising individual blocks of colour in an ostensibly plotless film to show where the story really is located: it is to be found in the slow completion of the colour scheme, inspired by a Nicolas de Staël painting that fleetingly appears on a wall as if to confirm an inside-joke of a climax. Like watching paint dry, indeed.
Manual for a Disassembly of Cinema (A Machine for Viewing, episode 3)
A theoretical excursion from cinematic projection to VR interactive gear via North Korean mass gymnastics with a âbroken human pixelâ, it makes you think of how seeing is altered when mediated by man rather than machine.
David Verdeure
Creator, collector and curator of video essays under the nom de video Filmscalpel
Swings Donât Swing
Leonhard MĂŒllner
The visual regimes of video games balance between realism and absurdity, between aesthetic refinement and ethic crudeness. Thereâs a wealth of great video essays and machinima about games. YouTuber eurothug4000 fascinatingly focused on virtual photography within games . But I chose this piece by Leonhard MĂŒllner which virtually visits childrenâs playgrounds in shooter games. Those playgrounds are used as innocent-looking backdrops to the violent mayhem. MĂŒllnerâs video uses the gamesâ mechanics against themselves to lay bare their visual cynicism. He enacts the revenge of innocence on gamified violence, not in the least through the elegant spatial arrangement of his piece.
I Canât Stop Watching Contagion
Lockdown life boosted the output of some video essayists and made others sour on the form, but it left nobody indifferent. Several pieces poked fun at our Zoomified existence or lamented our Skyped interactions. Rob Stone fabricated a touching video call between Ethan Hawke and Julie Delpy. The fact that his Before the End went viral proves our need for comforting connections â even if theyâre not our own.
Dan Olson watched Steven Soderberghâs Contagion on repeat. The radical form of his confessional video essay visualises how a film can mark us and how it can serve as âemotional inoculationâ.
Michigan Coronavirus Protestors Roots
The rhetorical strategies of the video essay can be applied to other subjects than film or television. In this US election year, I saw them being used for political purposes in a variety of ways. There were downright deceitful remixes (no, I wonât link one). There were revelatory side-by-side pieces . There were online experiments that made harrowing use of the absence of image and sound. But because politics (and 2020) can benefit from some levity, I chose a frivolous example for this poll. TikToker rebabeba used the desktop documentary format to get to the root of the problem .
Academic practitioners of the video essay served up some fascinating fare in 2020. It is especially great to see some practitioners confidently conduct formal experiments instead of sticking to tried and tested audiovisual strategies. Jill Walker Rettberg for instance enthusiastically embraced Snapchat technology in her video essay on the appâs biometrics .
Katie Birdâs video essay starts off conventionally with a mini-documentary on the early history of Steadicam and Panaglide. But her piece then builds on this historical research with a series of imaginative (and even speculative) visual experiments that make the most of the videographic form.
John Cleese + Anthony Braxton
Olivier Godin
Video essays and performance studies are a natural match. This piece for the Canadian website Zoom Out is another fine piece of evidence. Olivier Godin matches up the work of two performers: one an actor and the other a musician. Scenes from the legendary British sitcom Fawlty Towers are rescored using Anthony Braxtonâs free-jazz composition For Alto. The music emphasises Cleeseâs erratic physical comedy and brings out the unpredictable dynamism of his dialogue delivery. This counterintuitive combination prompts the viewer to consider Cleeseâs dialogue delivery as a musical improvisation â one with the unpredictable energy of Braxtonâs jazz.
Michael Witt
Professor of Cinema at the University of Roehampton, London
Characteristically sharp, inventive audiovisual film criticism from the great Mark Rappaport.
Illuminating audiovisual study of the history, uses and effects of the Steadicam and Panaglide.
Andrea Luka Zimmerman
Moving personal exploration of the terms of the filmâs title.
Golden Gate
William Brown
Insightful audiovisual investigation of the cinematic representation of the Golden Gate Bridge from a post-humanist perspective.
Thought-provoking poetic study of the relationship between successive image recording technologies and what they capture and omit.
Against the Day
Succinct reflection on the role of light in Philippe Grandrieuxâs Sombre (1998).
Further reading
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Writing an winning essay is no walk in the park. As part of my Chevening video series, I take you through how to write the Chevening essay on Studying in th...
In this video, I share creative ways of engaging with UK university rankings, department league tables and unique indices that would set your essay apart fro...
In this video, you will learn how to write the studying in the UK essay. #studyinuk #scholarships #chevening Outline of essay document : https://docs.googl...
There are three main stages to writing an essay: preparation, writing and revision. In just 4 minutes, this video will walk you through each stage of an acad...
A PDF providing further guidance on writing science essays for tutorials is available to download.. Short videos to support your essay writing skills. There are many other resources at Oxford that can help support your essay writing skills and if you are short on time, the Oxford Study Skills Centre has produced a number of short (2-minute) videos covering different aspects of essay writing ...
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YouTube video essays have generally bloated into hours-long vlogfests to maximize monetization algorithms, but here is a rigorously crafted tour de force that rewards rewatching for the many memeic details it contains. ... Obliged to placate a UK funding system structurally suspicious of academic and artistic enquiry, Screenworks, the journal ...
Top Tips for How to Write Your First University Essay. Research widely - Without overloading yourself with material, reading a variety of texts and exploring different perspectives (particularly the literary subjects) will equip you with enough information to produce a detailed and well-rounded essay.
According to Duff (2008, p.126), video learning shouldn't be passive. These are some guidelines relating to the specific use of video to promote active viewing and maximize learning: 1. SEGMENT- Allow your students to watch the video in short segments. 2. NOTES- Videos are ideal for developing note-taking skills.
Svanik Surve ( SUAVE, SUAVE cinema, svanik SUAVE) (nominated by Queline Meadows) Svanik Surve has been making video essays steadily for a few years now, but expanded his output in 2023 when he created two new YouTube channels. This year, his work explored Indian culture, international art cinema, and philosophy.
Maia, or Broey Deschanel on YouTube, says that she started seeing longer videos come up in her recommended tab during quarantine. She had already started making commentary videos in 2018 after watching creators like Lindsay Ellis, but she says that "around 2020 was when I feel like the video essay community started kind of proliferating, that long-form essays became more of a thing."
The 2022 video essay retrospective was compiled with the help of 44 voters (from 21 countries) for the 'Best of' or 'Emerging voices' sections. The contributors bring in their expertise as video essayists (several of whom earned nominations in the poll from their peers), film/art critics, film-studies academics (professors, researchers) and festival curators, collectively building a ...
Hey, fam! In this video, In this video, I share tips on how to save money with the rising costs of living in the UK as an international student. I hope this...
Introducing the British Council's How to Write an Argumentative Essay animated video series. This is the first of five simple and easy to follow videos that ...
Video essays are scholarly videos that invite researchers and class members to explore the audiovisual and multimedia language to make an academic argument. When applied to film research and pedagogy, the video essay is thus a recursive text. That is, the object of study, film, is mediated, or rather, performed, through the film medium.
As Olson points out, "In Search of Flat Earth" could have an alternative clickbait title of "The Twist at 37 Minutes Will Make You Believe We Live In Hell.". Over the years, Dan Olson of ...
In 2019, she wrote an ELLE essay on "30 Things I Learned Before Turning 30." Under the topic of "My biggest fear," Swift discussed how "the Manchester Arena bombing and the Vegas concert ...
Introductory Guide To Video Essays. Drawing on the inspiring work of pioneering educators and researchers engaging with this creative method, this guide aims to offer a research-led introduction for students, teachers and researchers approaching the video essay for the first time.
We're Proud to Be One-for-One. College Essay Guy believes that every student should have access to the tools and guidance necessary to create the best application possible. That's why we're a one-for-one company, which means that for every student who pays for support, we provide free support to a low-income student. Learn more.
It is a worldwide statistics. According to these 100 largest companies use 50% YouTube channels as social media tool. With the emergence of social media, it shifts business online as social media marketing has created its own niche in the business world. Great attention requires by companies to respond and penetrate in this web era more than ever.
đWatch my Essay Writing Masterclass: https://www.doctorshaene.com/essay-masterclassđHow to critically analyse evidence: https://youtu.be/XFNjjurJ0BIđWatch...
Ghostwatch, broadcast on the BBC in 1992, changed lives both in universe and in real life. Here's how.Written, Produced and Edited by Reuben Gorlov (@reubeng...
UK creator and pop-culture academic Grace Lee makes video essays examining themes and form in both horror and animated media; she has an affinity for the deeper, more unexpected thoughts evoked by ...
The Video Essay Podcast, created by Will DiGravio, has expanded its scope this year, co-curating The Black Lives Matter Video Essay Playlist (along with Cydnii Wilde Harris and Kevin B. Lee), launching the Notes on Videographic Criticism newsletter to further share news and promote interesting new work, and introducing experimental homework assignments to encourage creativity and new methods ...