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tom gunning -desire to be on display/exhibit -"inciting visual pleasure, supplying pleasure through exciting spectacle - a unique event that is interesting in itself" -an exhibitionist film may have scenes/shots that have nothing to do with narrative, but are there purely for the exhibitionist quality ("un chien andalou") -thrilling, like an amusement park ride -films showing (not telling), focusing on visual effects over story (james cameron, etc) |
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tom gunning -excitement of not knowing what to expect -about the experience of viewing the film projection over the film itself -(early cinema) the interest in projection equipment and visual effects -visually interacting with the audience (even when actor looks at audience breaking 4th wall) -ex. last frame of "Great Train Robbery" |
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Bazin -pertains to realism -cinematic technique in which a scene is recorded in one shot absent of cuts or editing which usually lasts significantly longer than the clips within a sequence or montage -for bazin, showing respect to how time and space exist in reality, unlike the experimental editing and montage -long shots allow for more interpretation over the forced message of fast editing/montage -ex. long take before freeze frame in "400 blows" |
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arnheim -REDUCTION of depth of field in film (due to technological disadvantages) makes film closer to an art form since it takes away from presenting a "realistic" image -how much of the scene in a shot is in focus -shallow vs deep depth of field (respectively, small focus vs everything in focus) -reliant on: aperture size, distance from lens, focal length -ex. "I won't let you down" (ok go) mv --> everything in focus |
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balazs/epstein -formative film theory -epstein--> close ups are the "soul of the cinema", pointing to what is to be visualized/emphasized -balazs --> close ups are inherent to the film medium "sectional pictures" |
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bazin vs arnheim -bazin: film should be as objective as possible by means of mechanical reproduction to come closer to reality -realistic = artistic -long takes bring viewer closer to reality -arnheim (AGAINST realism): films can't appropriately replicate realism due to restrictions (limitations, reduction, absence, projection, etc) which actually makes it a unique art form |
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formulated by SARRIS, debunked by KAEL, defended by WOLLEN -director exhibits "certain recurrent characteristics of style, serving as his signature" over a number of films -3 premises: technique, personal style, interior meaning |
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sarris -the following and praise of films regardless of its content simply due to the name of the "auteur" behind the film |
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sarris, (debunked by kale) -second premise: recurrent characteristics of a director "shining" through despite being restricted to "modifications" and visual treatment, especially during Fordist classical Hollywood -Kael --> flawed because it could point to the fact that if we notice that "signature" each time, the director may just not know how to do anything else |
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Metz / Altman -a film's sound that has no visible source on the screen -sound itself = aural cue -Metz says sound is never "off" since it's either audible or not; source can be off screen -Altman: off screen sound gives the illusion that the frame that the cinema is contained within is part of a complete 3D universe (rather than just the 2D image of what's presented on the screen) |
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Metz -voice of a character is heard but he/she is not in the frame -DIFFERENT from non-diegetic voices (narrator, commentary, etc) -VOICE is different from SOUND |
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gorbman -REFERENTIAL: signifiying beginning, end, etc of a film -CONNOTATIVE: offering a specific message or POV about a scene or a character -4 functions of nondiegetic music: historical context, geographic space, emotional tenor of a scene, distanced/ironic commentary -principles in classical hollywood scoring: invisibility, inaudibility, emotion, narrative cuing, continuity/discontinuity -ex. Ethan's theme "The Searchers" |
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gorbman -music/sound can be used to tie together disconnected aspects of film -can be used as bridges between scenes/shots/montage, transitions, connect temporal ellipses, etc -establishes FLOW |
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Freud / mulvey -little boy fearing own castration from realizing mom has no penis -mom has a phallus though w/o a penis instilling fear of castration, yet he can't desire mom having a penis since she's a female which he's supposed to be attracted to, but he can't be attracted to a penis (cuz thats gay apparently) -fetish masks both genitalia and makes a safe zone for gratification -ex. Mudson's cane in "Gilda" |
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mulvey -viewer can identify with certain characters from camera viewpoints -experience of relating to and sympathizing with a character or perspective -films can be "relatable" by having a protagonist or a character that audience members can physically/mentally identify with |
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mulvey -the way male characters and audience can engage in looking at/objectifying women -woman as image, man as bearer of look -role of woman as sexual object to be looked at that men will desire -woman as: erotic object for characters and for spectator -film makes woman enjoy the gaze and love to sexualized/objectified so the blame is shifted away from the male gazer -"GILDA" gilda introduction |
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stam/shohat -simplified/standardized conception/image invested with special meaning and held in common by members of a group -it's a distortion that raises questions about "SOCIAL PLAUSIBILITY, MIMETIC ACCURACY, and NEGATIVE/POSITIVE IMAGES" -limiting characters to a stereotype ruins chance of filmmaker to capture "realism" |
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dyer -sensationally creating 2 racial categories: White and Other -whiteness as everything and nothing -construction of white as socially normative -discussion of blackness always in comparison/opposition to whiteness -disucssion of whiteness always as "normal" |
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stam/shohat -act of portraying a realistic film world that represents reality, but it's not real -spectator's willing suspension of disbelief so that they can believe the representation of the world on film as an accurate representation of real life -ex. minstrel show in "Bamboozled" --> realistic artistic representations of what happens in real life |
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fauer -inherent contradiction and falsehood surrounding the concept of audience participation within musical films -induces demystification and remythification -self-reflexive |
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dyer / fauer -profit-based performance for an audience with sole purpose of providing pleasure -entertainment as utopian mechanism -entertinament as a form of escape/wishful fulfillments from the inadequacies of society (within profilmic world) -numbers in musical films may appear to be "spontaneous" -fauer: entertainment provides a means for an audience to experience cinema mythologically (breaking down barriers between art and life) |
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fauer / affron -"reflecting" upon itself to BREAK something/ideology/to make a point -calls attention to their own fictitious illusion, making audience aware of what happens "backstage" -highlights film-within-a-film to put on display everything the audience wouldn't see from a regular performance -not to be confused with self-reflectivity (which highlights verismilitude) -affron: produces detachment, creates distance |
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cavell / kracauer -cavell: myth of singularity --> a single gesture/mannerism as representational/symbolic of an actor (ex. sylvester stallone's slur) -film actors must "relinquish" surplus movements and stylizations because they're limited to what's shown in the frame |
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manovich -most films are of the "super-genre" because they share the same characteristic of having a narrative form -they largely consist of unmodified photographic recordings of real events that took place in real, physical space -> RELYING ON RECORDINGS OF REALTIY AS THEIR BASIS -in this way, films are INDEXICAL -digital film loses indexical relationship to reality |
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prince -when you see something and believe it's real, whether or not it actually is (because of how realistic it "looks") -prince: cinema shouldn't be thought of as indexical anymore but more about moving image representation -creates a trust between film and audience as audience can believe what is in the film is real ex. life of pi |
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prince -portrayal of an image that cannot have been capture without alteration -stuff in a film that looks completely real (with help of CGI) but can't possibly have been referentially real -CGI things' existence within a moving photographic image is not possible, therefore pushes the film into a realm of fiction |
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1930s-1960s --> CLASSICAL FILM THEORY -1950S-1960S --> AUTEUR THEORY -1970S - 1990S --> GENRE/APPARATAL THEORY -1980S - PRESENT --> SOUND THEORY -1970S - PRESENT --> POLITICAL CRITICISM |
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ARNHEIM - CRITICISM VS THEORY |
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CLASSICAL FILM THEORY (FORMATIVE) -distanced criticism -sound + image = BAD |
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ARNHEIM 1) stop thinking of critic as a comic figure 2) foreground film's moral/political/economic aspect |
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rules of film criticism/theory |
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ARNHEIM 1) synchronous sound is not artful (too realistic) 2) profit-based filmmaking is manufactured to increase sales 3) films don't express individual ideas (it's a team effort) *** film critic's goal is to determine is film is art |
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HOBERMAN - CRITICSM VS THEORY |
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-immersive criticism --> how can a critic be outside the system they're trying to critique? |
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PRE-CLASSICAL FILM THEORY -early cinema -cinema of attractions -modernism -exhibitionism |
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PRE-CLASSICAL FILM THEORY -psychology of the spectator --> cinema resembling mind/through process -aesthetics, mechanical imitation, mental interpretation, thought effect, space reality, photoplay |
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schools of classical film theory |
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FORMATIVE (earlier): expressionist, what's inherent to medium of film, favors editing, the cut, etc -ARNHEIM, BALAZS, EPSTEIN REALIST (later): camera reality, judging film medium based on how closely it portrays reality, favors the long take -BAZIN |
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ARNHEIM - CLASSICAL THEORY |
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FORMATIVE -during sound conversion --> disliked synch sound --> too close to reality therefore not art -film has many restrictions in portraying reality, making it an ART form: -projection (of solids on a plane/screen) -reduction (of depth) -delimitation (constancies of size/depth) -absence (of space/time continuum) |
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CLASSICAL FILM THEORY - FORMATIVE -the close-up as the "soul of the cinema" --> points to what is to be visualized/emphasized -clarevoyance of cinema, photogenic, spirit of appearance |
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CLASSICAL FILM THEORY - REALISM -film should be made to be as close to reality as possible -film is more artistic the close it is to reality -favors long take (for it can allow for personal interpretation of scene/film and brings viewer closer to reality) -"400 Blows" |
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CLASSICAL FILM THEORY - FORMATIVE -favors the close-up -camera allows audience to see what is CAPTURED, including close-ups which allow viewers a deeper look at certain things that don't often get attention -close-ups allow for dramatic emphasis |
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1930s-1960s (beginning of synch sound) -silent era concerns: art of cinema (arnheim/epstein) with synch sound -sound era concerns: spectatorship -PRE-classical theory --> FORMATIVE (film as a medium) -CLASSICAL theory --> ONTOLOGY vs. REALISM (inherent to film medium vs. film as reality) |
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1950s-1960s -re-appropriated from French critics during French New Wave -Sarris theorized, Kael hated, Wollen defends |
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AUTEUR THEORY - FOR -personality of director squeezing through in a pattern over many films -1st Premise: TECHNIQUE -2nd premise: PERSONAL STYLE -3rd premise: INTERIOR MEANING -benchmark for "auteurism" |
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AUTEUR THEORY - AGAINST -each premise by Sarris is flawed -premise 1: technical standards can be recreated -premise 2: pattern over films means director can't do anything else (default) -premise 3: writer-directors are immediately out because theres no supposed tension of trying to shine though the script |
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AUTEUR THEORY - FOR -semiotician -auteurism is an instrument for director and viewer to connect via SIGNS/CODES -decryptment of signs (viewer finds codes) -decipherment of signs (viewer finds out what those codes mean) |
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1980S-PRESENT -synch sound --> "the Jazz Singer" (1930) -sound as an exhibitionist concept -METZ (phenomenology/off-screen sound and voice/perceptual objects) -GORBMAN (narrative cuing, nondiegetic music, scoring) -BALAZS (phenomenology) -ALTMAN (semiotics, 2d/3d) |
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SOUND THEORY -sound as "secondary" to visual, but it's not -phenomenology - spectatorship (based on human perception and how we physically interact with the world around us) -film as embodied spectator and utilizes perceptual objects -ex. sounds as aural objects -sound should be analyzed based on how strong/weak it is to visual realm |
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SOUND THEORY -functions of the film score (nondiegetic music/narrative cueing) -principles in classical hollywood scoring |
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4 functions of the film score |
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GORBMAN 1) establish historical context 2) geographical space 3) make ironic/distanced commentary 4) shape emotional tenor the scene |
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principles of classical hollywood scoring |
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GORBMAN -invisibility -inaudibility -narrative cuing -(dis)continuity -signifier of emotion |
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SOUND THEORY -phenomenology |
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SOUND THEORY -semiotics -off-screen sound gives illusion that the frame that the cinema is contained within is part of complete universe (rather than just a 2d image on a screen) |
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***can be applied to almost all the theories -primarily GENRE/APPARATAL THEORY and POLITICAL CRITICISM (~1970s - 1990s/present) -FREUD (fetishism, repression, etc) -MULVEY bases argument from Freud -MODLESKI goes off of both freud and mulvey |
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FEMINIST FILM THEORY -fetishism -repression --> affect as a symptom -psychical reality: fetish protects man against threat of castration and homosexuality |
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FEMINIST FILM THEORY -woman as erotic spectacle and castration threat -scopic desire, identification, choreography of looks 1) woman = signifier of male other 2) hollywood filmmaking made to satisfy male desire with imagery of women 3) freudian scopophilia: pleausre seeking by looking without being seen (ex. "Gilda": Mudson looking through window blinds) 4) spectator able to lose himself in filmic fantasy 5) image of woman = symbolic castration |
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FEMINIST FILM THEORY -what about the female spectator? -identifies with both passive female object (by gender) and active male object (as audience member subject to gaze position by camera) -females' close relationship with mothers prevents sexual relationship with men (therefore mother figures are made into mean mother-in-law figures in film) |
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POLITICAL CRITICISM (1970S - PRESENT) -can also be applied to AUTEUR THEORY (spike lee), GENRE/APPARATAL THEORY (race/cultural difference) -DYER (whiteness/white representation, racial binaries) STAM/SHOHAT (stereotyping, mimesis, representation/self, polyvocality) |
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RACE/STEREOTYPING/POLITICAL CRITICISM THEORY -whiteness as "normal" in filmic representation -dependent on other groups for whiteness to come out as "whiteness" -whiteness as everything and nothing -racial binarism |
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RACE/STEREOTYPING/POLITICAL CRITICISM -stereotyping -mimesis -representation // self-representation (via stereotypes) -polyvocality --> stepping away from "authenticity" and towards giving a voice |
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***CLASSICAL FILM THEORY (1930s - 1960s) // POLITICAL CRITICISM (1970s-Present) -DYER (political criticism): entertinament, tendencies of musical film -FAUER: (political criticism) myth of spontaneity/performance/integration/audience, self reflexivity/reflectivity -KRACAUER: (classical) difference between stage and film actor -CAVELL: (classical) myth of singularity, gesture, typecasting -AFFRON: (classical) fiction effect/reality effect, self reflexivity |
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DYER - ACTING/PERFORMANCE |
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POLITICAL CRITICISM THEORY -What is entertainment? + utopian aspect -tendencies of musical films |
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3 broad tendencies of musical films |
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DYER 1) narrative & "number" are clearly separated OR 2) "numbers" are integrated into narrative by thinly veiled tricks, but the division between "escapist/utopian" show and the "problem filled/dystopian" world is clear OR 3) no distinctions between narrative and "numbers" (implication of world as utopian) |
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POLITICAL CRITICISM/ACTING/PERFORMANCE -"myth": entertainment is shown as having a greater value than it actually does -myth of spontaneity -myth of integration -myth of audience -self reflexivity vs. self reflectivity |
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CLASSICAL THEORY/ ART/PERFORMANCE -stage actor: mental image (rest up to audience), interaction with live audience, over-acting -film actor: emphasis on being, casualness, physique -functions: "object among objects", body fusing with environment -3 types: professional actor, celebrity, non-actor |
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CLASSICAL THEORY / ART / PERFORMANCE -stereotypes are not roles, but parts -gesture/typecasting |
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ACTING/PERFORMANCE/CLASSICAL THEORY -fiction effect --> film as aware of performer performing (self reflexive) -opposed to reality effect |
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now? -SEMIOTICS!!! -symbol: taught things with no actual connection (ex. language) -icon: referential connection (ex. a picture) -index: literally the thing -problems for film theory because digital cinema no longer needs referents but are still viewed as real -PRINCE: perceptual realism. referential connection --> moving away from indexical understanding and to a moving-image-representation -MANOVICH: super genre, back to old-school filmmaking |
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DIGITAL CINEMA -perceptual realism --> we believe something to be real and think it's real even if its not; away from indexical understanding -referential fiction --> stuff in a film that look completely real (CGI) but can't be real; it's referentially NOT REAL (fiction) |
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DIGITAL CINEMA -super genre: live action films in which the recorded component is the main piece -digital cinema: recorded footage is just a piece of the puzzle that needs to be illustrated/edited/digitzed/painted/etc over to create final piece |
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