Tampilkan postingan dengan label early and silent cinema. Tampilkan semua postingan
Tampilkan postingan dengan label early and silent cinema. Tampilkan semua postingan

Women Film Pioneers Project at Columbia University

Diposting oleh good reading on Kamis, 10 Oktober 2013

Website header and masthead at the incredible Women Film Pioneers Project website

This project began as a search for silent cinema “women film pioneers” who challenged the idea of established great male “pioneers of cinema.” Since researchers found more women than anyone expected to find, one principle came to organize the project: What we  assume never existed is what we invariably find. [About 'Women Film Pioneers Project']
Film Studies For Free is heading away from its computer for a few days but had to rush to publish the essential news of an incredible new website resource: the Women Film Pioneers Project.

WFPP is a new free online database published by Columbia University Libraries’ Center for Digital Research and Scholarship. The database includes more than 150 career profiles of women who worked during the silent film era as directors, co-directors, scenario writers, camera operators, title writers, editors, costume designers, exhibitors, animal trainers, studio accountants, film company owners, and theatre managers.

A monumental, open access piece of important film historical research and publishing, this first phase of the project places together the Americas, the U.S. in the North and Latin America in the South. The next phases will open up the study of women in other national silent era cinemas: Australia, Austria, Belgium, Canada, China, Czech Republic and Slovakia, Denmark, Egypt, Finland, France, Germany, Hungary,  India, Ireland, Italy, Korea, Japan, the Netherlands, Norway, Philippines, Poland, Portugal, Spain, Sweden, Switzerland, Tunisia, Turkey,  The United Kingdom, the Union of Soviet Socialist Republics, and Yugoslavia.

Clearly this is an archival resource that will also grow as more people know about it and can contribute missing information to it, but the editors have done a truly fantastic job in establishing this resource and populating it with such high quality and significant material already.

Congratulations and many thanks go to the WFPP team led by the brilliant film historian Jane Gaines, whose related book on early cinema, Fictioning Histories: Women Film Pioneers was published by University of Illinois Press in 2009. The project launch will take place at MoMA this Saturday, part of the film exhibition To Save and Project: The 11th MoMA International Festival of Film Preservation.
More aboutWomen Film Pioneers Project at Columbia University

Two new eBooks: On Stillness and Motion Film, and on Contemporary Indonesian Film

Diposting oleh good reading on Kamis, 31 Januari 2013

Screenshot of a freeze frame from the opening credit sequence of Die Ehe der Maria Braun/The Marriage of Maria Braun (Rainer Werner Fassbinder, 1979)
Even before the credits, the opening of the film brings us the scene of a newly married couple and a registry official leaving a German registry office during an air raid. We watch as the excited couple throw themselves to the ground, imploring the official to sign the marriage certificate right there. A sheet of paper floats upward, borne on the gust of wind caused by exploding bombs, and then, in the middle of the visual field, there is a sudden standstill in the form of a freeze-frame, while the soundtrack continues to herald the horror of the approaching artillery. This is followed by the film title in red letters that fill the entire visual field, word after word, as if it were a page in a book. At the end, Fassbinders name appears alone on a white backdrop.
    With this standstill, the floating sheet of paper is simultaneously captured and displaced by the film. Due to the non-sync between image and sound, of visual interruption and auditive flow, we are confronted from the very start with two various temporal modi: the time of the film narrative (the postwar years) and the time of the making of the film (the 1970s). At issue here is Fassbinders time-place: when the author tells stories and histories, they are always primarily in the present tense. [Christa Blümlinger, writing on the sequence in which the above freeze frame appears, in 'The Figure of Visual Standstill in R.W. Fassbinder’s Films', in Eivind Røssaak (ed.), Between Stillness and Motion Film, Photography, Algorithms (Amsterdam: Amsterdam University Press, 2011)
There's nothing Film Studies For Free likes more than a good open access ebook. So you can imagine how delighted it is to bring its readers news of not one but two such English language, digital artifacts, from different Dutch publishers to boot!
The contents are listed below, and both books have been added to FSFF's permanent, and continuously updated listing of more than 100 free ebooks in film and moving image studies.

Dank u wel, the Netherlands (and the below authors, editors and publishers!): FSFF salutes you for your pioneering, open access ebook achievements!

Eivind Røssaak (ed.), Between Stillness and Motion Film, Photography, Algorithms (Amsterdam: Amsterdam University Press, 2011)

Contents
The Still/Moving Field: An Introduction - Eivind Røssaak

Philosophies of Motion
The Play between Still and Moving Images: Nineteenth-Century “Philosophical Toys” and Their Discourse - Tom Gunning
Digital Technics Beyond the “Last Machine”: Thinking Digital
Media with Hollis Frampton - Mark B.N. Hansen

The Use of Freeze and Slide Motion
The Figure of Visual Standstill in R.W. Fassbinder’s Films - Christa Blümlinger
The Temporalities of the Narrative Slide Motion Film - Liv Hausken

The Cinematic Turn in the Arts
Stop/Motion - Thomas Elsaesser
After “Photography’s Expanded Field” - George Baker
On On Otto: Moving Images and the New Collectivity - Ina Blom

The Algorithmic Turn
Mutable Temporality In and Beyond the Music Video:
An Aesthetic of Post-Production - Arild Fetveit
Algorithmic Culture: Beyond the Photo/Film Divide  - Eivind Røssaak

Archives in Between
“The Archives of the Planet” and Montage: The Movement of the Crowd and “the Rhythm of Life” - Trond Lundemo

Katinka van Heeren, Contemporary Indonesian Film; Spirits of Reform and ghosts from the past (Leiden: KITLV Press, 2012)
Contents
Preface
Introduction
part 1 film mediation practices
1 new order and surface

Production: The attempt to produce Provokator the New Order way 26 Distribution and exhibition: Trade and charade in cinemas and film formats
Exhibition and consumption: Film festivals as forums for national imaginations and representations
Conclusion
2 reformasi and underground
Reformation in film production: Kuldesak and film independen
Distribution and exhibition of new media formats: ‘Local’ Beth versus ‘transnational’ Jelangkung
Alternative sites of film consumption: Additional identifications and modes of resistance Conclusion
part 2 discourse practices
3 histories, heroes, and monumental frameworks

Film history: New Order patronage of film perjuangan and film pembangunan
Film and historiography: Promotion and representations of New Order history
‘Film in the framework of’: G30S/PKI and Hapsak
Conclusion
More aboutTwo new eBooks: On Stillness and Motion Film, and on Contemporary Indonesian Film

“How Motion Pictures Became the Movies”: A Video Lecture by David Bordwell

Diposting oleh good reading on Sabtu, 12 Januari 2013

Not the actual Vimeo embed! For that you MUST visit David Bordwell's website...
Today something new has been added [to the Observations on Film Art website]. I’ve decided to retire some of the lectures I take on the road, and I’ll put them up as video lectures. They’re sort of Net substitutes for my show-and-tells about aspects of film that interest me. The first is called “How Motion Pictures Became the Movies,” and it’s devoted to what is for me the crucial period 1908-1920. It quickly surveys what was going on in cinema over those years before zeroing in on the key stylistic developments we’ve often written about here: the emergence of continuity editing and the brief but brilliant exploration of tableau staging.
     The lecture isn’t a record of me pacing around talking. Rather, it’s a PowerPoint presentation that runs as a video, with my scratchy voice-over. I didn’t write a text, but rather talked it through as if I were presenting it live. It nakedly exposes my mannerisms and bad habits, but I hope they don’t get in the way of your enjoyment. [David Bordwell, ''What next? A video lecture, I suppose. Well, actually, yeah….", Observations on Film, January 12, 2013]

The above is, hopefully, self-explanatory. In other words you should head straight over to David Bordwell's website (also see here) to be reminded, if you really needed to be, of just what a valuable resource it is, and just what a global treasure he is (and, of course, Kristin Thompson, too!].

Film Studies For Free can't wait for more of these. Thank you, David!
More about“How Motion Pictures Became the Movies”: A Video Lecture by David Bordwell

For Documentary: Remembering Dai Vaughan, film editor, critic, and theorist

Diposting oleh good reading on Selasa, 24 Juli 2012



In a film I was cutting about a mercurial character, much given to hesitation and digression, rarely finishing a sentence before starting another, I came into severe conflict with the director over the extent to which the speech patterns, in voice-over, should be tidied up for the sake of clarity. The director’s position, I think, was that this was not a vérité exercise, that we were composing a portrait with filmic materials, that no one portrait could be inherently more valid than another, and that to grant priority to the accidentals of the rushes was perverse. My own position — more difficult to define, for I was certainly not arguing for total nonintervention – was that we were progressively discarding those very elements which made the subject an engaging, quirky, and likeable personality. Toward the end of the schedule, however, the subject visited the cutting room. I became aware that what I had perceived as “mercurial” carried with it something darker, more unmanageable, almost entropic; and I began to see in the director’s compulsion to curb this personality a fear of disorganisation, of loss of control, of the dissolution of that filmic coherence which director and editor alike are inevitably seeking. Leaving aside the question whether, in this instance, the director had not confused a threat to his authorial control with a threat to the inner logic of the text, we are left with the fact that the personality to which I felt responsibility, and which I hoped to reconstruct in the film, was not that of the subject as directly encountered but that which I had inferred from a reading of rushes. And this, moreover, cannot be dismissed as error or misfortune: for it replicates precisely, and quite properly, the situation of a viewer faced with the completed work.
… My most revealing reaction, when meeting people who have appeared in films I have cut, is to be shocked that they should say and do things which did not occur in the rushes. The filmmaker says to the subjects as perceived by the viewer: “The limits of my language are the limits of your world".

… I have sometimes found myself forced to leave a cinema, not because anything particularly unpleasant was being shown, but because the very activity of animating images which I was not also free to stop, the feeling of meanings into a text which had the physical magnitude to overwhelm me with them, the shriek of feedback as I locked into a tight short circuit with activities which raced ahead of me, had become intolerable.
The horror of documentary can lie in our being required to conceptualise (or — if there is such a word, perceptualise) the world in a certain way and being, at least for the duration of the film, powerless to intervene in it.
[Excerpt 1 and Excerpt 2 above both from Dai Vaughan, “Notes on the Ascent of a Fictitious Mountain” in the collection For Documentary: Twelve Essays (Berkeley: University of California Press, 1999)]

Just before taking its annual break, Film Studies For Free heard of the death of Dai Vaughan (1933-2012), film editor, maker, critic, scholar, and poet extraordinaire -- surely one of the most original voices on and in cinema and television, as the above quotations abundantly reveal.

The sad news was delivered by Richard MacDonald and Martin Stollery, two film scholars who had interviewed Vaughan at length. They very kindly offered to assemble a collection of his writing, filmography, versions of their interview, together with remarkable tributes by his colleagues and friends, and other links for publication here at FSFF.

They hope the below collection will offer a valuable way into Vaughan's oeuvre for the uninitiated as well as honouring his memory. And it surely will.

FSFF warmly thanks Richard and Martin, and all the other esteemed contributors, for their truly wonderful work to honour a most memorable man.


'For Documentary: Remembering Dai Vaughan'

By Richard MacDonald and Martin Stollery


As a young film critic Dai Vaughan wrote in a letter to his friend and fellow film school alumnus, the playwright Arnold Wesker, ‘our cultural tastes are an expression – almost the most public expression – of our fundamental values’. (Arnold Wesker, ‘Let Battle Commence’ [1958], The Encore Reader, 1965, p. 99).

Over the course of a remarkable career that embraced filmmaking, poetry, fiction and writing on film, consciously translating the insights gained from one practice into another, Dai would restate and refine this guiding conviction. He held that the formal strategies an artist deploys and the critic’s response to them are occasions where we exercise individual judgement and in doing so seek to define the moral, ethical and political values we hold in common with others. One of the simplest yet most arresting statements of this belief was the quote attributed to the playwright Ernst Toller that Dai chose as the epigram for his outstanding work of criticism and film history, Portrait of an Invisible Man: ‘what we call form is love.’

For Documentary, the title of his 1999 collection of essays, is also a bold public expression of a personal commitment. As John Corner remarks in one of the tributes collected below, Dai’s ‘primary engagement was always with the imaginative reach of documentary endeavour’, and his sometimes ‘challenging invitations to philosophical reflection’ were of a different order to the polemical advocacy of predecessors such as John Grierson and Paul Rotha. Dai shared with them, however, an authority derived from being a talented film maker, a widely respected documentary editor deeply engaged in thinking about and beyond his own practice. Dai situated the essays that made up For Documentary in his specific milieu of television documentary at a time in which an ideal of television as a broadcast medium that addressed a socially diverse public was momentarily glimpsed in bold programme making that permitted viewers to approach the material on their own terms. Mike Dibb’s tribute reflects upon the experience of working with Dai in this context.

Dai first made his mark as a film critic in 1960 with strikingly original essays on Robert Flaherty and Dziga Vertov respectively: the former a comprehensive re-evaluation of a canonical documentary figure, the latter a study on a filmmaker without obvious precedent in British film criticism. Every significant film maker and writer possessed of a sense of film history invents their own traditions; Dai was no exception. One mark of the subtlety of his thinking is that he would have readily accepted that his understanding of these traditions was partly formed out of his own personal responses to films that he valued.

Dai’s insights into documentary ranged across large swathes of its history, from wartime films directed by Jennings to anthropological film making. In part this was because he was a transitional figure, keenly aware of past achievements yet establishing himself as an editor during the 1960s and 1970s, when observational film making constituted documentary’s cutting edge.

He wrote in 1998:
My loyalties lay with those traditions that had grown out of the use of 35mm: the work of Joris Ivens, George Franju, Alain Resnais, or – more specifically, here at home – Humphrey Jennings. These were traditions reliant upon raising the everyday image to quasi-symbolic status through the use of juxtaposition, both of image with image and of image with sound, to create a rich web of connotation and nuance.
But he went on to elucidate the common ground between this tradition of documentary and later observational practice: ‘an insistence on the priority of the given: an insistence that meaning should be generated directly from the organisation of the visual and auditory material rather than this material being subordinated to something prior or extrinsic…’ [For Documentary, pp. xiv-xv].

Dai’s writing on fictional films likewise manifests a breadth of interest and acuity of judgement. His 1995 BFI film classic, for example, was on Odd Man Out, and one of his last publications was an imaginative appraisal of the work of Jean-Pierre Melville. The bibliography included in this tribute, prepared by Dai himself, shows how he brought his discerning intelligence to bear on a wide range of films. For his sheer perceptiveness as a critic, his sensitivity to film form and the richness and texture of his prose, he deserves to be ranked alongside other outstanding figures of his generation, such as Robin Wood and V F Perkins, although his tastes and fundamental values were different to theirs.

Like these critics Dai contributed to the renewal of British film criticism in the early 60s when he launched the magazine Definition with friends from the London School of Film Technique. More recently Dai was a regular and distinguished contributor to Vertigo, a magazine at the cutting edge of film writing in the 90s and 2000s. Dai’s reviews and extended essays for Vertigo include searching and original meditations on filmic narration that explore the instabilities of identity, the difficulties of knowing and being in the world, in such films as Jeux Interdit (“On Being Paulette”) and Citizen Kane (“On BeingThompson").

Dai also left us a book that is held in high esteem by its admirers yet is still not as widely known as it should be: Portrait of an Invisible Man: The Working Life of Stewart McAllister, Film Editor (1983). This innovative approach to creative biography would feature more prominently within film studies’ eternal return to the issue of authorship if these debates fully acknowledged the centrality of collaboration within film production. It is celebrated below by Geoffrey Nowell-Smith, Ed Buscombe, and Patrick Russell.

We were delighted when Dai agreed to our request to carry out the first career survey interview with him in late 2010. At the end of the interview he gently berated us for not exploring links between his writing on film and his creative writing, citing Moritur (1995) as a novel concerned with film editing ethics. Dai wrote in this novel:
Does it cross our minds, when we’re watching someone interviewed on television, that this person’s recollections are as full of moth-holes as our own? Of course not. And the reason it doesn’t is that the interview has been cut together for coherence. But coherence implies meaning. And whose meaning is it to be? [pp. 150-1]

This is a good example of Dai’s ability to vividly encapsulate some of the practical and theoretical challenges of documentary, from both a film maker’s and a viewer’s perspective. We hope he would approve of us citing this as a pertinent frame for our interview with him, which is included here both in an edited, published version, and in a longer, virtually unedited version. Both exemplify the eloquence and precision with which Dai spoke as well as wrote.

The reflection on interviews is made by Moritur’s protagonist, documentary film editor Astrid Morrow, as she works on her text for the (sadly fictional) annual Stewart McAllister Memorial Lecture; she eventually rejects it as ‘both tendentious and uninteresting’ (p.151). Likewise, Dai’s writing reads as the work of a constantly questioning intelligence, pushing against the weight of dogma and easy formulations, traversing fiction, poetry, and long and short forms of critical reflection in a quest to respond with sufficient complexity and openness to questions that interested him. Partly because he operated outside the discipline of film studies, bypassing academic convention, he made a significant, distinctive contribution to some of its preoccupations. This deserves to be remembered and extended.

Richard MacDonald and Martin Stollery,
July 2012



Dai Vaughan Interview With Richard MacDonald and Martin Stollery for Journal of British Cinema and Television, 8.3, 2011



The above interview was first published in the Journal of British Cinema and Television, 8.3, 2011.
It is reproduced here with grateful acknowledgement to Julian Petley and Edinburgh University Press.


'A Tribute to Dai Vaughan' by John Corner

Dai Vaughan first became known to me through his highly original and fascinating short study Television Documentary Usage, published in 1976 by the British Film Institute as number 6 in their Television Monograph sequence of booklets. What struck me about this extended essay was the range and ambition of its speculation about documentary forms together with the relaxed, reflective tone of the writing (a combination which, in its way of engaging the reader in often dense deliberation as a kind of as co-discussant, might be compared with Barthes). I had just started to teach documentary at undergraduate level, and this kind of approach was decidedly different from the modes of confidently precise theoretical pronouncement being made about documentary from within the academy at the time. Rather than any polemical position-taking around ‘realism’ and ‘ideology’ there was, instead, a rich exploration of documentary’s distinctive and wonderful referential aesthetics and a positive interest in its future possibilities. That ‘Usage’ in the title was interesting too, with its echoes of Fowler’s classic work on grammar and its promise of a rigorous examination of the way in which meaning is generated on the basis of syntactical practice.

Dai’s abiding interest in complexity and ambiguity, his celebration of those uncertainties of documentary accounts which always escape verbal containment, was evident in this early piece of work. So was his fascination with the possibilities of observational approaches, and the problematic status of the knowledge that their particularistic, highly localised, ways of portraying the world conveyed. He contrasted these possibilities with the rhetoric of confident, generalised truth that television documentary often deployed, sometimes by resorting to forms of cliché and a denial of the image, or a ‘disciplining’ of it, in favour of the word. He described these dominant tendencies as modes of ‘mannerism’ which had become constricting. His preferences here, although primarily formal, were also social and political – like many others at the time and since, he saw observational work as giving the viewer more of a role in the making of sense and significance. This perspective possibly under-rated the contribution of documentary to the broader project of journalism, which almost of necessity required tighter discursive controls and propositional ‘closure’. But then his primary engagement was always with the imaginative reach of documentary endeavour.

I used Television Documentary Usage in my teaching, mostly to the benefit of my classes, although some of Dai’s more challenging invitations to philosophical reflection required a fair bit of glossing. When, a few years later, I started to put together a collection on documentary for Edward Arnold (Documentary and the Mass Media, 1986), Dai was one of the first people I asked to contribute a chapter. By then he had published Portrait of an Invisible Man, that masterly study of Stewart McAllister in which his perceptiveness as a textual critic was joined both by his professional sympathies as a documentary editor and a fine approach to constructing a history from archives, using regular quotations to give the past directness and immediacy. He wrote back promptly to my request saying that he was interested in doing something but wondered whether what he could offer would be specific enough for the volume, noting ‘it might appear not to be ‘about’ documentary at all, but would be always stalking it from the periphery’. He was, he said, aware of the limits of ‘documentary as a neatly defined curricular subject’ and believed that some ‘nudging against the thresholds’ was in order. Needless to say, I wasn’t at all put off by this comment and what he finally sent through, ‘Notes on the Ascent of a Fictitious Mountain’, was characteristic Dai, from the title onwards. Set out, in philosophical treatise style, as a series of numbered observations, separate but connected, it worked through a sequence of paradoxes surrounding documentary. Typically, he started the chapter abruptly with an anecdote drawn from his own film-making experience, going straight into the detail of a particular incident without any preliminaries.

His capacity to tack between the specific and the general and between his experience as an editor and his conceptual inquisitiveness as a thinker was without parallel. Sometimes, he ‘stalked from the periphery’ but he was always able to position himself right at the centre of issues concerning intention, practice, form and meaning. For those looking for neat guidelines on how to categorise documentary and how to analyse it, this kind of writing – with its whole-hearted embracing of contradiction and its regular reworking of enigma and conundrum from different angles– was likely to disappoint. But for those wanting their perspectives on documentary opened-up and their presumptions (indeed, all presumptions) vigorously challenged, his approach was a tonic.

Others are in a better position than I am to testify to his qualities as a conversationalist, although I met and talked with him over drinks on a number of occasions. When he came up from London to give a lecture to my students at Liverpool, the freshness and enthusiasm of his account, directly requesting their views at many points in his delivery, came across as a surprise to most of them. They were quite used to professionally neat accounts of current research by visiting academics and also to occasional visits by people in the media industry talking about issues as perceived from within, but the energy and sparkle with which Dai tackled his topic (involving shifting editing practices and the impact of the zoom lens) was something rather new.

The study of documentary, particularly in Britain, has benefited hugely from his passionate interest in ‘theory’ as well as ‘practice’ and it is to be hoped that his distinctively reflective writings, always keenly pursuing the many puzzles that the form throws up, will continue to be read and valued. The themes that he wrote about have now produced a much more extensive academic literature but the manner of his question-raising and the often penetrating character of some of his answers, drawing on his experience both as maker and as viewer, will be very hard to equal.

Professor John Corner
Institute of Communications Studies. University of Leeds
July 2012


'Working with Dai Vaughan' by Mike Dibb


Dai Vaughan was unlike any other film editor I've worked with. The films we made together were mostly about ideas; each one very different in subject-matter and approach. They ranged from a wonderfully idiosyncratic film with Ralph Steadman about Leonardo to several in collaboration with the writer John Berger. I never arrived in the cutting room with a pre-ordained structure or editing plan. The pleasure was always to set out with Dai on a journey of discovery and to arrive at that shared moment when form and content came together. Which in the end it always did. This doesn’t mean that the collaborative process was always an easy ride. Dai was not like that. In fact ‘flexible intransigence’ is a phrase I once used to describe his negotiating style! For one thing, when the rushes of a film arrived in Dai’s cutting room, they somehow ceased to be yours and became his. As a director you were entering Dai’s space, where he perched on his distinctive wooden stool, eschewing obvious comfort and leaning towards the screen with intense concentration. He was not interested in excuses and rationalisations about why something looked the way it did, or theoretical ideas about what a shot was supposed to signify. What mattered to Dai was what he saw on the screen and what it meant (or didn’t) to him...and, most importantly, what he could do with it. Indeed I remember once inviting Dai to come on location. He declined the offer. I think this was because he didn’t want the rigour with which he looked at a sequence in the cutting room to be confused with circumstantial memories of what happened during the filming. That way he might have run the risk of becoming sentimental about what he was viewing - instead of being ruthlessly objective, in the nicest - well not always! - possible way.

Dai didn’t want directors peering over his shoulder. We would spend a lot of time looking at everything that had been filmed. After which he wanted to be left on his own, to find his own way through the material presented to him, to work out his own synthesis of speech and movement, image and meaning, sound and sense. As a result, I approached each viewing of a newly cut sequence full of expectation, and sometimes anxiety. On those (thankfully rare) occasions when we disagreed about what he’d done, I had to be prepared for what could be a charged and tense silence, followed by a tricky few days as we searched for a creative compromise that would satisfy us both. Mostly, however, I came away surprised and delighted by unexpected juxtapositions and connections, which only Dai would have found.

I now look back to all the films we made together with enormous pleasure. Each still feels fresh, and when from time to time I watch one of them again I never want to change a single cut.

Mike Dibb,
Documentary Filmmaker
July 2012


'A Tribute to Dai Vaughan' by Geoffrey Nowell-Smith


Portrait of an Invisible Man
is a multi-faceted book, at once a biography, a work of film theory, and a meditation on destiny, which in Stewart McAllister’s case was a destiny to remain invisible, an eccentric artistic genius (the word is not too strong) who had opted to work as an anonymous craftsman. The cover of the book is eloquently silent. When Dai’s manuscript came in, BFI Publishing was just introducing a new standard cover design – glossy black with white lettering and a small space for a portrait shaped picture near the top. Dai gave us a photo of Stewart McAllister holding up a strip of 35mm film, with that essential tool of the editor’s trade, a chinagraph pencil, poised between his lips. We wanted to use the whole photo but Dai said no. No face, no pencil, just the strip of film and a hand holding it. Likewise there were to be no pictures in the book illustrating McAllister’s work. Juxtaposed frame stills, he insisted, tell you nothing about film editing. He did, however, allow the portrait to be shown in full just next to the title page: the invisible man made briefly visible to the reader’s passing glance, unshaven and with, in Dai’s own words, “a sagging jacket, tight tie and the curled up collar which in those days of ironing housewives unmistakably indicated the bachelor”. So although much was revealed in the book about McAllister, his craft, the nature of film editing, the wrongness of much “auteur” criticism, and many other things besides, the book remained basically true to its title. There is, of course, no photo of the author on the back cover.

Professor Geoffrey Nowell-Smith,
Honorary Professorial Fellow, Queen Mary University of London
July 2012


'A Tribute to Dai Vaughan' by Ed Buscombe

I can’t say I ever knew Dai Vaughan well. He had many different existences: writer about films, poet, novelist, film-maker, and possibly others that I was not even aware of. I remember him as a man whose words were softly spoken but chosen with care, unfailingly courteous but with inner convictions. He had written an excellent volume in the BFI’s TV Monographs series, entitled Television Documentary Usage. When we talked about further projects in the area of documentary, he mentioned his interest in Stewart McAllister, editor of Humphrey Jennings’s most celebrated films but of whom, I had to confess, I had never heard. But as Dai outlined what he wanted to write, it became apparent that this would be a fascinating book, both in its insights into the British documentary movement, and also in its account of the subtleties of the relationship between an editor and a director. Dai’s work promised to throw new light on the so-called ‘auteur theory’, being a case-study which by no means undermined Jennings’s claims to authorship, while giving full credit to McAllister for his contribution.

Dai brought to his subject his own experience as a film editor, on which he had reflected deeply. Working with him was a pleasure. His writing was quite dense but so precise it did not need much editing, except that Geoffrey Nowell-Smith remembers juggling different typographical devices to accommodate all the varying kinds of quotations that Dai required. I thought the book was splendid, but it never got the recognition it deserved. I think Portrait of an Invisible Man remains one of the best books ever written about British cinema, as well as one of the most illuminating about the practice of film-making.

Ed Buscombe,
Formerly Head of Publishing, British Film Institute
July 2012


'A Tribute to Dai Vaughan' by Patrick Russell

I first read the elegant prose of Portrait... in just one or two rapt sittings ten or more years ago and have returned to it with continuing pleasure and growing admiration several times since. The book is a masterpiece in perhaps the precisest sense of the word: content that has found its perfection in form. Appropriately enough, one of its very objectives (and greatest achievements) is to penetrate and explicate the mysterious synthesis of form, content and circumstance in the production of the film viewer's experience. Vaughan's arguments for McAllister's contribution to 'Jennings', and the contribution of editing generally to the meaning of documentary have continuing merits, while his approach to constructing and expressing those arguments has implications for all serious writers on film. Far too many predicate their work on two false choices: that between empirical research and what academics unprettily term 'textual' interpretation; and that between rigorous analysis and warm appreciation. The best understanding is likely to be the result of doing all four exceptionally well and thus synthesising these supposed antitheses. The skill required, however, is destined to elude most of us and Portrait of an Invisible Man likely to remain an inspirational exception. 

Patrick Russell,
BFI Senior Curator (Non-Fiction)
July 2012

Additional links to Dai Vaughan’s writing, interviews with and writing on him


Dai Vaughan Bibliography 



Dai Vaughan Filmography
 Dai Vaughan Interview with Richard MacDonald and Martin Stollery Full Transcript MS
More aboutFor Documentary: Remembering Dai Vaughan, film editor, critic, and theorist

New SCREENING THE PAST: Special Issue on KNOCKNAGOW (1918)

Diposting oleh good reading on Minggu, 06 Mei 2012

Silent film based on 1873 novel of the same name by Charles J. Kickham. Production company: Film Company of Ireland. Director: Fred O'Donovan. Screenplay: Ellen Sullivan. Released in Ireland, the United States, and Britain in 1918. This film is in the public domain.

Film Studies For Free happily tips its readers the wink that there's a new special issue up of the high quality open access film studies journal Screening the Past

Issue 33 is devoted to the study of one of Ireland's first feature films, Knocknagow, an incredibly popular historical drama set during the land-clearances of the 1840s. Six articles by specialists examine this cinematic landmark in relation to Irish history, politics, sport, literature, and cinema in Ireland and the United States.

Appendices include a plot summary, contemporary press reviews and publicity materials, and a copy of the screenplay.

The issue contains a link to the film itself (embedded above), which was shot on location in Tipperary in summer 1917.

More aboutNew SCREENING THE PAST: Special Issue on KNOCKNAGOW (1918)

On Railways and the Movies

Diposting oleh good reading on Jumat, 04 Mei 2012

The Railway Children (Lionel Jeffries, 1970) was a film I ardently watched countless times on television as a child, and, I have to confess, I have seen and loved it countless times since. I had certainly seen it long before I saw  L'Arrivée d'un Train en Gare de la Ciotat (Lumière Bros., 1895). I noticed the resemblance between the two films only when watching Jeffries' film again recently. But when I explored this, I was struck by the extent of their resonance, and by the uncanniness of the later film's pastiche of the earlier one: Bernard Cribbins' Perks revivifies, down to his moustache, the La Ciotat station porter; an identical luggage trolley lurks in the background; the beshawled woman looks like she stepped off the earlier train, except that she's in Technicolor.
     I began to figure, to fantasize, that the uncanniness of The Railway Children's penultimate sequence was not only set off by its graphic and musical evocation of the uncertainty of young Bobbie (Jenny Agutter) about quite why she was standing by the rail track, but also by its palpable haunting by the Lumière's originary scene, with its powerful, ghostly, urtext of a, much more bustling, railway platform just after the arrival of cinema.
 For me, of course, it will also always be the other way round: that The Railway Children, and this film's own afterwardsness, haunt L'Arrivée d'un Train en Gare...
[From the introduction to "Uncanny Arrival at a Railway Station" by Catherine Grant

In the 'folklore’ of cinema history there is one anecdote which seems to be perennially fascinating to layman and historian alike. It might be summarised as follows: an audience in the early days of the cinema is seated in a hall when a film of an approaching train is projected on the screen. The spectators are anxious, fearful -    some of them even panic and run.
     This fearful or panicky reaction has been called 'the train effect’. It is such a common anecdote, cited by so many writers both at the time and later, that it has also been called `the founding myth of cinema’ or the cinema’s 'myth of origin. [Stephen Bottomore, 'The Panicking Audience?: early cinema and the "train effect’", Historical Journal of Film, Radio and Television, Vol. 19, No. 2, 1999
]

Rather than mistaking the image for reality, the spectator is astonished by its transformation through the new illusion of projected motion. Far from credulity, it is the incredible nature of the illusion that renders the viewer speechless. What is displayed before the audience is less the impending speed of the train than the force of the cinematic apparatus. [Tom Gunning, ‘An Aesthetic of Astonishment: Early Film and the (In)Credulous Spectator [1989]’, in Linda Williams, ed. (1994) Viewing Positions: Ways of Seeing Film. 114–133.]

Cinema as we know it, as an institution, as an entertainment based on the mass spectatorship of projected moving images, was born in '95, in the Golden Age of railway travel. As the prehistory and beginnings of cinema strongly suggest, film finds an apt metaphor in railroad. The train can be seen as providing the prototypical experience of looking at a framed, moving image, and as the mechanical double of the cinematic apparatus. Both are means of transporting a passenger to a totally different place, both are highly charged vehicles of narrative events, stories, intersections of strangers, both are based on a fundamental paradox: simultaneous motion and stillness. These are two great machines of vision that give rise to similar modes of perception, and are geared to shaping the leisure time of a mass society. [Lynne Kirby, 'Male Hysteria and Early Cinema', originally in Camera Obscura May 1988 6(2 17)]

Following on from Wolfgang Schivelbusch's now seminal account of the nineteenth-century railroad and the institution of "panoramic perception" as being emblematic of modernity, critics like Lynne Kirby and Mary Ann Doane have already explored the historic connections between film and the train's profound re-configuration of vision, with its mechanical separation of the viewer's body from the actual physical space of a 'virtual' 'perception. [Saige Walton, '[Review of] Jeffrey Ruoff (ed), Virtual voyages: Cinema and travel. Duke University Press, Durham and London, 2006', Screening the Past, 20, 2006]

Above, Film Studies For Free gifts to you another of its author's experiments with real-time video comparison (also a further exploration of cinematic pastiche).

This tiny videographic donation accompanies the links, below, to Omar Ahmed's truly wonderful, much more comprehensive and informative video essay series on trains in Indian cinema.

And below those links are others to further, openly accessible online scholarship that touches on the topic of railways -- a very cinematic apparatus indeed -- in the movies.

Bon voyage!

    More aboutOn Railways and the Movies

    New Issue of SENSES OF CINEMA

    Diposting oleh good reading on Selasa, 20 Maret 2012


     Film Studies For Free brings you the ever happy tidings of the new issue of Senses of Cinema.

    It's a fascinating collection of work, and very wide-ranging: from part one of an interview with, and an article by, Jean-Louis Comolli, film theorist and Cahiers du cinéma editor in possibly its most political period (1966-1978) through Murray Pomerance on Hitchcock to a number of articles on the Oscar-laden French film The Artist (Michel Hazanavicius, 2011).

    Links to all the great contents are given below.



    Senses of Cinema, Issue 62 Contents

    Editorial

    Feature Articles
    Great Directors
    Festival Reports
    Book Reviews
    Cteq Annotations
    More aboutNew Issue of SENSES OF CINEMA

    The Veridical Artist: Jean Epstein Studies

    Diposting oleh good reading on Sabtu, 17 Maret 2012

    "With the notion of photogénie was born the idea of cinema art."
    [Jean Epstein, quoted in Ian Christie, "French Avant-Garde Film in the Twenties," in Film as Film (London: Arts Council of Great Britain, 1979), 38

      Sequences from La Chute de la maison Usher/The Fall of the House of Usher (Jean Epstein, 1928)

     
    Sequence from Le Tempestaire/The Storm Tamer (Jean Epstein, 1947) 
    In the early twentieth century scientists recognized cinematic slow motion, along with its opposite, time-lapse photography, as providing major tools for observation and demonstration. Enabling through cinema the extension and compression of the flow of time respectively, these techniques revealed aspects of the world that human vision could not otherwise see, and yet they did not distort the world into an aesthetic image. Rather they opened up a new visual dimension. Epstein’s manipulation of time in cinema revealed a different rhythm to the universe, a ballet of matter. Thus, the intuition of Roderick Usher, the protagonist of Poe’s story, that matter itself may have a sentient and animate dimension was visualized in Epstein film’s La Chute de la maison Usher through the use of slow motion. The constant vibration of the material world, whether the flowing of fabric caught in the breeze or the cascade of dust falling from a suddenly struck bell does not simply provide a visual metaphor for the haunted house of Usher. Rather, they capture a universal vibration shared by the soul of things and the structures of the psyche, invoking the senses of both vision and sound (and even touch) placed before us on the screen. In his penultimate masterpiece from 1947, Le Tempestaire, Epstein not only used slow motion to display the currents of ocean surf as he had in his earlier silent films made in Brittany, but innovatively introduced the timbre and resonance of slowed down recorded sound, enfolding us as auditors not simply in defamiliarized sonority, but allowing us to dwell within an extended soundscape filled with the uncanny echoes of nature. [Tom Gunning, 'Preface', to Jean Epstein: Critical Essays and New Translations, edited by Sarah Keller and Jason N. Paul (Amsterdam: Amsterdam University Press, 2012)]
    As Jean Epstein went on to say, the camera is the veridical artist. But the role of this veridical artist can be understood in two ways, as can the relation between its artistic power and its veridicality. On the one hand, the camera is the artist, because it produces a kind of writing, and more precisely because it has an impersonal power in it—the light—which writes. The sensory milieu, then, is one in which light and movement constitute a new writing. Yet, on the other hand, it is a veridical artist insofar as it does not write anything, insofar as all it yields is a document, pieces of information, just as machines yields them to men who work on machines and are instrumentalized by them, to men who must learn from them a new way of being but also domesticate them for their own use. [Jacques Rancière, 'What Medium Can Mean', Translated by Steven Corcoran, Parrhesia, 11, 2011: 35-43]
    Epstein, at the beginning of his career, claimed that cinema has nothing to do with logic or any other kind of intellectual reasoning. He relegated films to the realm of the so-called emotional reflex, fundamentally irrational in its premises. At the same time, however, he elaborated his own notion of photogénie as an almost mystical increase in the meaning of a cinematic image. A photogenic image, according to him, is not simply one transformed by the camera lens, but it is also purified and abstracted. Thus, a photogenic image belongs to the world of the intellect as well as the world of physical phenomena:
    This is why the cinema is psychic. It offers us a quintessence, a product twice distilled. My eye presents me with an idea of a form; the film stock also contains an idea of a form, an idea established independently of my awareness, an idea without awareness, a latent, secret but marvelous idea; and from the screen I get an idea, my eye’s idea extracted from the camera; in other words, so flexible is this algebra, an idea that is the square root of an idea.
    This abstracting of an image allows Epstein to explore the subject of cinematic logic that will come to occupy a dominant place in his later film theorizing [...]. In his books starting from 1946 (L’intelligence d’une machine), Epstein claims that cinema is not beyond logic but develops its own logic, whose laws are still obscure and mysterious. Epstein calls this logic ‘la pensée méchanique’ – mechanical thought. This thought is not human, but is produced by the cinematic machine itself. [...] According to Epstein, cinema produces thinking because it generates forms of time and space. [Mikhail Iampolski, 'The Logic of an Illusion Notes on the Genealogy of Intellectual Cinema', in Allen, Richard, Malcolm Turvey (eds), Camera Obscura, Camera Lucida: Essays in Honor of Annette Michelson (Amsterdam University Press, 2004), pp. 44-45]
    Filmmaker and theoretician Jean Epstein profoundly influenced film practice, criticism and reception in France during the 1920s and well beyond. His work not only forms the crux of the debates of his time, but also remains key to understanding later developments in film practice and theory. Epstein's film criticism is among the most wide-ranging, provocative and poetic writing about cinema and his often breathtaking films offer insights into cinema and the experience of modernity.
          This collection - the first comprehensive study in English of Epstein's far-reaching influence - arrives as several of the concerns most central to Epstein's work are being reexamined, including theories of perception, realism, and the relationship between cinema and other arts. The volume also includes new translations from every major theoretical work Epstein published, presenting the widest possible historical and contextual range of Epstein's work, from his beginnings as a biology student and literary critic to his late film projects and posthumously published writings. [Blurb for Jean Epstein: Critical Essays and New Translations, edited by Sarah Keller and Jason N. Paul (Amsterdam: Amsterdam University Press, 2012)]
    Film Studies For Free today celebrates the publication of a wonderful, and hugely important, new book on a wonderful, and hugely important, old figure in film history: Jean Epstein: Critical Essays and New Translations edited by Sarah Keller and Jason N. Paul.

    Epstein has been a very neglected figure in anglophone film scholarship. Unduly so, as Tom Gunning writes (in his preface to Keller and Paul's collection),
    To my mind Jean Epstein is not only the most original and the most poetic silent filmmaker in France, surpassing impressive figures like Abel Gance, Jacques Feyder, Marcel L’Herbier and even Louis Feuillade; I also consider him one of the finest film theorists of the silent era, worthy to be placed alongside the Soviet theorists (Eisenstein, Vertov and Kuleshov) and the equal of the extraordinary German-language cinema theorist, Béla Balázs. [Gunning, 'Preface'; hyperlinks added by FSFF]

    The book, available for purchase in print, has also been made openly accessible online thanks to its publisher Amsterdam University Press's laudable partnership with the online OAPEN library (Open Access Publishing in European Networks). The volume is part of the AUP series Film Theory in Media History, published in cooperation with the Permanent Seminar for the History of Film Theories (read FSFF's post on the Permanent Seminar), and edited by Prof. Dr. Vinzenz Hediger (Frankfurt), Dr. Trond Lundemo (Stockholm), and Prof. Dr. Oliver Fahle (Bochum).

    This series
    explores the epistemological and theoretical foundations of the study of film through texts by classical authors as well as anthologies and monographs on key issues and developments in film theory. Adopting a historical perspective, but with a firm eye to the further development of the field, the series provides a platform for ground-breaking new research into film theory and media history and features high-profile editorial projects that offer resources for teaching and scholarship. Combining the book form with open access online publishing the series reaches the broadest possible audience of scholars, students, and other readers with a passion for film and theory.

    FSFF is very excited by the prospect of subsequent open access publications in this series. Below, it has reproduced the table of remarkable contents of the AUP volume. As it always likes to add scholarly value in its entries, below the table of contents, there are direct links to further wonderful Open Access resources on Epstein.


    Jean Epstein: Critical Essays and New Translations, edited by Sarah Keller and Jason N. Paul (Amsterdam: Amsterdam University Press, 2012)

    Table of Contents
    • 'Preface' by Tom Gunning
    • 'Introduction' by Sarah Keller
    Essays
    • 'Epstein’s Photogénie as Corporeal Vision: Inner Sensation, Queer Embodiment, and Ethics' by Christophe Wall-Romana
    • 'Novelty and Poiesis in the Early Writings of Jean Epstein' by Stuart Liebman
    • 'The Cinema of the Kaleidoscope' by Katie Kirtland
    • 'Distance Is [Im]material: Epstein Versus Etna' by Jennifer Wild
    • '“The Supremacy of the Mathematical Poem”: Jean Epstein’s Conceptions of Rhythm' by Laurent Guido
    • 'The “Microscope of Time”: Slow Motion in Jean Epstein’s Writings' by Ludovic Cortade
    • 'A Different Nature' by Rachel Moore
    • 'Cinema Seen from the Seas: Epstein and the Oceanic' by James Schneider 'A Temporal Perspective: Jean Epstein’s Writings on Technology and Subjectivity' by Trond Lundemo
    • 'Ultra-Modern: Jean Epstein, or Cinema “Serving the Forces of Transgression and Revolt”' by Nicole Brenez
    • 'Thoughts on Photogénie Plastique' by Érik Bullot
    Translations
    • 'Introduction: Epstein’s Writings'
    • La Poésie d’aujourd’hui, un nouvel état d’intelligence (1921); Introduction / Sarah Keller; Cinema and Modern Literature
    • Bonjour Cinéma (1921) Introduction / Sarah Keller; Continuous Screenings
    • La Lyrosophie (1922) Introduction / Katie Kirtland Excerpts from La Lyrosophie
    • Le Cinématographe vu de l’Etna (1926) Introduction / Stuart Liebman; The Cinema Seen from Etna; On Certain Characteristics of Photogénie; Langue d’Or; The Photogenic Element; For a New Avant-Garde; Amour de Charlot; Amour de Sessue;
    • L’Intelligence d’une machine (1946) Introduction / Trond Lundemo Excerpts from L’Intelligence d’une machine; Le Cinéma du diable (1947) Introduction / Ludovic Cortade Indictment To a Second Reality, a Second Reason
    Later Works
    • Introduction to Esprit de cinéma and Alcool et Cinéma / Christophe Wall-Romana
      Esprit de cinéma; The Logic of Images; Rapidity and Fatigue of the Homo spectatoris; Ciné-analysis, or Poetry in an Industrial Quantity; Dramaturgy in Space; Dramaturgy in Time; Visual Fabric; Pure Cinema and Sound Film; Seeing and Hearing Thought; The Counterpoint of Sound; The Close-up of Sound; The Delirium of a Machine
    Late Articles
    • The Slow Motion of Sound; The Fluid World of the Screen; Alcool et cinéma; Logic of Fluidity; Logic of Variable Time
    • 'Afterword: Reclaiming Jean Epstein' by Richard Abel
      Filmography; Select Bibliography; Notes on Contributors; Index of Names; Index of Films and Major Writings by Jean Epstein; Index of Films

    Further Open Access Epstein Studies
    More aboutThe Veridical Artist: Jean Epstein Studies