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This article is within the scope of WikiProject Films. This project is a central gathering of editors working to build comprehensive and detailed articles for film topics on Wikipedia. If you would like to participate, you can edit the article attached to this page, or visit the project page, where you can join the project and/or contribute to the discussion. |
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Editing Guidelines |
Please remember these guidelines when editing a film article:
- If a non-film article already exists with the name of the film that you are trying to create an article for, disambiguate and use (film) in the title: Film Title (film)
- When writing an article about a particular film, the general format should be a concise lead section, followed by a plot summary of no more than 900 words, production details, a cast list, a reception section, and references.
- Create an Infobox that tells all pertinent information about the film.
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Article upgrading needed: You can help! |
WP:IA |
Stub to Start-Class Upgrading Instructions for Films
- Note that instructions for articles on other types of film topics within the scope of WikiProject Films are currently under development.
To contribute in upgrading this stub article to Start class, the following requirements must be met:
- Significant intro (list the title, alternate titles, year released, director, actors starring in the film, summary of headings, etc.)
- Film infobox ({{infobox film}})
- Picture: Consult WikiProject Free Images for freely released images from a film shoot, opening, or other relevant free image. Non-free and unlicensed images are to be avoided if at all possible, but if used should include a detailed fair use rationale. (An image is not required for start class if unavailable.)
- Plot summary
- Include cast and crew information.
- At least two other developed sections of information (production, reception (including box office figures), awards and honors, themes, differences from novel or TV show, soundtrack, sequels, DVD release, etc.)
- Categories (by year, country, language, and genre(s))
Helpful links: WP:BETTER, WP:LEAD, WP:REF, WP:WAF
Once this article has fulfilled these requirements, the film can be reassessed to Start class and this template will be removed automatically.
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This article needs an image (preferably free) related to the subject, such as a picture of the set or a film poster. A possibility for American films from before 1964 would be a screenshot from the trailer, as these are now in the public domain. Please make sure fair use is properly observed, or the image will be removed. See WP:Films MOS for image guidelines and assistance in uploading. |
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A plot summary needs to be added to this film article, or the current one needs to be expanded. |
I really wanted to know what the deal with this movie was so I emailed Douglas Hofstatder. He said:
I have no idea where people get their ideas or why they post them on the Web when they are extremely confused. Here are the facts. In 1983, Piet Hoenderdos came from Amsterdam to Boston to film a series of in-depth interviews with me (I was on sabbatical at MIT at the time, and at the beginning and end of the film, one can see some footage of me playing the piano on the 7th floor of the AI Lab). The next year Piet filmed Dan Dennett and some other people in an enactment of Dan's philosophical fantasy "Where Am I?" (published in our jointly edited book "The Mind's I"),and he also filmed an enactment of a short story called "The Soul of the Mark III Beast" by Terrel Miedaner (also in "The Mind's I"), and also the short story "The Seventh Sally" by Stanislaw Lem (also in "The Mind's I"). All these pieces were then interleaved with chunks of the interview with me, and the whole thing was unified with a kind of story-telling glue into a movie entitled "Victim of the Brain", which was shown on Dutch television a few times in the mid- or late eighties.
[Jan. 31, 2006]
zed 20:44, 2 February 2006 (UTC)