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Synecdoche, New York

(Charlie Kaufman, 2008) 

101 Films You Need to See Before Graduation
Jan 31 screening introduced by Erik Herrmann, Ohio State's Knowlton School and Outpost Office

An older woman and man are standing in an outdoor patio area looking up at something.

One of the boldest films of the 2000s, Synecdoche, New York mind-bendingly collapses reality, art, and architecture.

The adventurous directorial debut of writer Charlie Kaufman (Eternal Sunshine of the Spotless Mind, Adaptation, Being John Malkovich) follows a theater director (the great Philip Seymour Hoffman in one of his defining roles) struggling with work, health, and relationships while creating a life-size replica of New York inside a warehouse as part of a new play. When he assembles the cast and attempts to direct them within his created city, the actors and characters—and reality and fantasy—become increasingly difficult to distinguish from one another. A hard film to describe, Roger Ebert wrote that it is about “nothing less than human life and how it works...it encompasses every life and how it copes and fails.” (123 mins., DCP)

Synecdoche, New York was picked as one of the 101 Films You Need to See Before Graduation by faculty at Ohio State's Knowlton School of Architecture; the film’s vision of a recreated Manhattan is unforgettable. Erik Herrmann, associate professor of architecture at the Knowlton School and codirector of Outpost Office, joins us on January 31 to introduce the film.

IMAGE CAPTION
Synecdoche, New York; courtesy of Sony Pictures Classics.

"The best film of the decade."

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About the series

This year we are excited to welcome a new series of free matinees featuring films that everyone should see before they graduate—whether that is from Ohio State or from the school of film fandom! Working with faculty and listening to student feedback, we’re presenting an enticing and eclectic array of classics that will compliment and expand your appreciation of film history.  

FILM/VIDEO PROGRAMS MADE POSSIBLE BY
National Endowment for the Arts
Ohio Humanities

ADDITIONAL SUPPORT PROVIDED BY
Rohauer Collection Foundation

WEXNER CENTER PROGRAMS MADE POSSIBLE BY
Greater Columbus Arts Council
The Wexner Family
Institute of Museum and Library Services
Mellon Foundation
Every Page Foundation
Ohio Arts Council, with support from the National Endowment for the Arts
CampusParc
Nationwide Foundation
Lois S. and H. Roy Chope Fund of The Columbus Foundation
Ohio State’s Global Arts + Humanities Discovery Theme
The Columbus Foundation
Axium Packaging

ADDITIONAL SUPPORT PROVIDED BY
Ohio State Energy Partners
Ohio History Fund/Ohio History Connection
David Crane and Elizabeth Dang
Melissa Gilliam and William Grobman
Rebecca Perry Damsen and Ben Towle

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Synecdoche, New York