Browse Exhibits (12 total)

Black Female Filmmakers of the L.A. Rebellion

Welcome to Black Female Filmmakers of the L.A. Rebellion: an interactive exhibit that explores Black female cinematic auteurship during the revolutionary L.A. Rebellion at UCLA. 

The L.A. Rebellion is a film movement that spanned across the 1960s to the 1980s in which Black film students at UCLA began formulating a Black filmic aesthetic that opposed the conventions of classical Hollywood cinema. The movement is marked by its highly radical nature, drawing from Third Cinema in its overt politicization whilst also experimenting with forms of expressing Black life. This exhibit focuses on the key Black female filmmakers involved in the L.A. Rebellion including Julie Dash, Jacqueline Frazier, Melvonna Bellenger, Alile Sharon Larkin, and Barbara McCullough—particularly interpreting and analyzing one short film from their respective bodies of work and situating them as entries into a versatile, radical tradition of Black filmic archival practice. 

Marlon Brando's Best Actor Oscar win for "The Godfather" | Sacheen Littlefeather

"For All Native People Everywhere": Sacheen Littlefeather's 1973 Refusal of the Oscar

An exhibit focused on the depiction and representation of Indigenous Americans in Hollywood; the central event it will discuss is Apache activist Sacheen Littlefeather's refusal of the Academy Award for Best Actor on behalf of Marlon Brando in 1973.