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Agenda

Agenda. Film History: Alternatives to Hollywood Storytelling Soviet Cinema in the 1920s Intro to Man with a Movie Camera 4:40: Man with a Movie Camera (1929) Dir. By Dziga Vertov. Approaches to Film History. Aesthetic Technological Economic Social/Historical Also:

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Agenda

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  1. Agenda • Film History: • Alternatives to Hollywood Storytelling • Soviet Cinema in the 1920s • Intro to Man with a Movie Camera • 4:40: Man with a Movie Camera (1929) • Dir. By DzigaVertov

  2. Approaches to Film History • Aesthetic • Technological • Economic • Social/Historical Also: • Film Movements • Nationalism

  3. Alternatives to (Hollywood) Narratives • 1. Documentary: “Documentary film is more concerned with the recording of reality, the education of viewers, or the presentation of political or social analyses” (LaM 71) • 2. Experimental Film: “pushes the boundaries of what most people think movies are—or should be” (LaM76) • 3. Modernist Film and Modernist Aesthetics

  4. European Cinema in the 1920s • German Expressionism, French Impressionism, Soviet Montage • Formal experimentation and innovation • Emergence of the Avant-Garde: Films begin to achieve status of “art”

  5. Modernity Rise of the nation Urbanization New technologies Rapid growth of scientific knowledge Rise of mass media Changes in family structure Challenges to religious authority Growth of consumer capitalism, emergence of a leisure class, etc. Modernism “A major shift in cultural attitudes that arose largely as a response to modern life—the late phases of the industrial revolution, especially the new modes of transportation and communication that were swiftly transforming people’s lives” - (Bordwell and Thompson, Film History, 68-70). How people’s philosophies and worldviews shifted, and especially the ways their representations of the world (in their art) changed. Modernism and Modernity

  6. Characteristics of Modernist Art • Increasing abstraction • Emphasis of form over content • Emphasis on the new, rejection of tradition • Fragmentation (of narrative and image) • Nonlinear temporality, disruption of cause and effect • Investigation of subjectivity and the subconscious

  7. Experimental Film • Maya Deren: “A radio is not a louder voice, an airplane is not a faster car, and the motion picture should not be thought of as a faster painting or a more real play . . . • . . . All of these forms are qualitatively different from those which preceded them. If cinema is to take its place beside the others as a full-fledged art form, it must cease merely to record realities that owe nothing of their actual existence to the film instrument.”

  8. Early Documentary • First Documentary: • Nanook of the North (1922), dir. by Robert Flaherty • “City Symphonies” • Manhatta (1921), Berlin (1927) • Influences on Early Documentary • Anthropology • Public Education • Science of Propaganda

  9. Soviet Cinema in the 1920s • 1917: Bolshevik Revolution • 1920s: Golden Age of Soviet Cinema • Lenin: “For us, the most important of all the arts is the cinema” (1922) • Constructivism: Art as labor; a modernism of social utility • Eisenstein: Battleship Potemkin (1925) • Vertov: Man with a Movie Camera (1929) • 1930s: Stalin’s “great purge”; ascendancy of socialist realism

  10. “Our eyes see very little and very badly – so people dreamed up the microscope to let them see invisible phenomena; they invented the telescope…now they have perfected the cinecamera to penetrate more deeply into he visible world, to explore and record visual phenomena so that what is happening now, which will have to be taken account of in the future, is not forgotten.” – DzigaVertov • “The film drama is the Opium of the people…down with Bourgeois fairy-tale scenarios…long live life as it is!” – DzigaVertov • from: http://sensesofcinema.com/2003/great-directors/vertov/

  11. Critical Responses to Man with a Movie Camera • Sergei Eisenstein: “unmotivated camera mischief.” • John Grierson: “Man with a Movie Camera is not a film, but a snapshot album“ • Roger Ebert: “What Vertov did was elevate . . . avant-garde freedom to a level encompassing his entire film. That is why the film seems fresh today; 80 years later, it is fresh.” • From: http://www.nytimes.com/2011/04/10/movies/dziga-vertov-films-at-museum-of-modern-art.html • http://www.rogerebert.com/reviews/great-movie-man-with-a-movie-camera-1929

  12. Questions about Man with a Movie Camera • What does the film tell you about life in the Soviet Union in the 1920s? • Does this film have a narrative? • Think about Individuals and crowds. How does Vertov direct our emotions toward people in this film? • Why does Vertov show us his filmmaking process at various points in the film? • How does the editing affect your interpretation of the film?

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