Sunday, November 7, 2010
pure cinema
Old mate Clement Greenberg writes: "It quickly emerged that the unique and proper area of competence of each art coincided with all that was unique to the nature of its medium". Clement goes on for some time but basically what he's getting at is that each art practice is unique in one particular domain, i.e. the medium succeeds where no other medium can, and whats more it is the medium itself that defines this uniqueness. Clement states that paintings unique quality is that it is flat. I am somewhat perplexed by this claim as photography and film exist on a flat surface and can you not paint a sculpture and call it a painting? Can someone please help me with this? Nonetheless I am a little intrigued by the idea that each medium has a quality that is unique to itself. What could it be for film? The cut perhaps, that is quite unique and integral to the film medium. Could it be the multi layered culmination and integration of the visual image, music and narrative? This too is unique to film.
If we consider either of these characteristics as the defining factors, the idea of pure cinema seems idiotic, imagine 'the pure cut' or 'the pure montage'. It's downright silly. Can cinema be 'pure'? Is this an idea for wankers?
It seems to me that the idea of purity with relation to 'art' is all tied up with ideas of the spirit. The spirit is expressed through 'pure' artistic expression. Such expression is realised through a spontaneous outpouring of inspiration that is unhindered by the ego blah blah blah. If my little suspicion is correct I do wonder how film could ever hope to be 'pure' as it relies so heavily on planning, orgainisation and collaboration?
Wednesday, November 3, 2010
Nosferatu
Monday, October 4, 2010
Lucas' Mechanical image: D.W. Griffiths Supreme Achievement- "A Corner in W...
"The Boat" written and directed by Buster Keaton and Eddie Cline is a quintessential Buster Keaton Film, containing many familiar gags. Buster blunders, fumbles and wrestles with the mechanics of his created environment. Though we may sympathise with Busters' family he never comes across as a fool or idiot, but bounces from mishap to mishap with a charming wistfulness. Ingeneous and determined always, it is with Buster I found myself sympathising.
I am not sure weather it is all silent film, or good silent film, or just Buster Keaton films , but I find I am engaged with the medium in a way that is more akin to reading a book than watching a film. I don't feel like a passive viewer, I am relied upon to embellish elements of sound, narrative and even character. It's a good thing to be a more active viewer I think.
The technological limitations of the time seem to enhance the work rather than detract from it. The black and white, still, silent, long shots render the film with a certain romance. I don't think colour and sound would in any way enhance the work but rather give it a cartoon quality and indeed it would seem the 'Looney Tunes' cartoons owe a lot to Buster Keaton. The black and white, silent format gives the work a grace and sophistication that could perhaps be achieved no other way.