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European Cinema. 1920s. Soviet Union. Czar deposed in 1917 Vladimir Lenin implemented Marxism and Collective Action By 1918, Lenin had sent out the “Red Train,” which showed Dziga Vertov’s (1896-1954) film The October in various stations along USSR’s western front.
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European Cinema 1920s
Soviet Union • Czar deposed in 1917 • Vladimir Lenin implemented Marxism and Collective Action • By 1918, Lenin had sent out the “Red Train,” which showed DzigaVertov’s (1896-1954) film The October in various stations along USSR’s western front. • Man with a Movie Camera (1929): http://youtu.be/8Fd_T4l2qaQ
Lev Kuleshov (1899-1970) • Believed the essence of cinema was editing (not the script or photographing of actors) • “Took shots of Red Square and the American White House, individual closeups of two men and a closeup of two hands shaking and cut them all together to create a continuous effect, an impression that all action takes place at the same time, in the same place.” • Influenced by D.W. Griffith’s Intolerance • VsevelodPudovkin (1893-1953) agreed. Mother: http://youtu.be/aZy3qO3bdy8 • http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=bzhh6yezQpQ&feature=share&list=PL510F043EC6922DC4
Sergei Eisenstein (1898-1948) • Stage director dabbling in revolutionary theatre, an engineer, from a comfortable middle-class Jewish family. • Overriding principle was that of kineticism—of jagged intense movement within the frame and in the cutting of shots. Movement was all. The only true sin was a static shot. Focus again on editing. • Potemkin (1926) Odessa step scene: http://youtu.be/Ps-v-kZzfec • Scene parodied in films such as Brian DePalma’sThe Untouchables (1987).
Eisenstein’s Decline • 1930s a time of frustration: • 6 months in Hollywood led to 2 screenplays which Parmount declined to make. • An independent production in Mexico turned disastrous when its backer, Upton Sinclair, withdrew support after Eisenstein exceeded absurdly small budget • At home Joseph Stalin deemed him untrustworthy.
German Filmmakers • Germany’s 3 leading filmmakers eventually emigrated to the U.S. • Ernst Lubitsch: Concealed his seriousness behind a slyly comic exterior. • F. W. Murnau • Fritz Lang: Most effectively captured the pscyhological mood of the era: “Germany entered a period of unrest and confusion, a period of hysteric despair and unbridled vice full of the excesses of an inflation-ridden country…. Money lost its value very rapidly. The workers received their money not weekly but daily and even so… their wives could hardly buy a couple of rolls or half a pound of potatoes for a day’s work” (63).
German Expressionism • A theory of art that emphasized a given artist’s emotional, intensely personal reactions. • In contrast to the traditional view that artists faithfully reproduced the natural appearance of the object or person being painted, sculpted, or written about. • In film (preferably in studies with claustrophobic feel) • a heavy use of light and dark contrasts • Exaggeration • Tilted angles • A dreamlike atmosphere • A distorting of the external world to reveal a psychological state. • Evocation of “stimmung,” an intense atmospheric mood.
The Epic vs. The Intimate • Epics: Ernst Lubitsch’s Madame Dubarry and Fritz Lang’s Siegfried • Intimate films=Kammerspiel • Films of psychology rather than action • Strict unities of time, place, and action • Best written by Carl Mayer (impressionistic poems for Murnau, Robert Wiene, and Walter Ruttman) • Between the two poles was The Cabinet of Dr. Caligari undiluted expressionism • Madman’s fantasies filmed with starkly artificial sets of cardboard backdrops or painted cubist shadows “drawings come to life” • Expressionism exerted an enormous influence on American film noir of the 1940s.
Fritz Lang • Most earnest: began career with novelettish thrillers like The Spiders (1919). • Evolved into more folkoric movies with Siegfried (1924) and Kriemhild’s Revenge(1924) • a Gotterdamerung (ring cycle) • Bracketed with Wagner and reissued under Hitler • Music hated by Lang • Used techniques such as double exposure. • Used melodrama and sensation to deal with moral themes (inspired Alfred Hitchcock)
Metropolis • An elaborate vision of the world of the future • Most expensive movie made in Germany • Universally deplored for silly story • Written by Lang’s wife Thea von Harbau • Greatness in its design • Geometric use of shapes as well as masses of people • Bravura scale and set pieces, such as the coldly beautiful robot Maria.
F. W. Murnau (1888-1931) • Most influential German Director. • Former soldier like Lang but more poet than architect • First major success was Nosferatu (1922)—adaptation of Bram Stoker’s Dracula. • Integrated the patently unreal vampire with realistic settings • Ability to obliterate the line between real and unreal
The Last Laugh (1924) • Written by Carl Mayer (1894-1944) • Silent movie without titles except for conclusion • Emotionally complex—doorman demoted to lavatory attendant and crumbles • Story of differing social spheres and human pride • Moving camera which tracked, panned, and moved without tripods. • Emil Jannings plays the old man with great talent • Contains only 300 shots (vs. 540 in Nosferatu): used long takes. • Influenced Hollywood filmmakers to use expressive camera movements.
G. W. Pabst (1887-1967) • Realistic, plot-oriented stories • Slices of life like The Joyless Street (1925) • Juxtaposed street-wise profiteers and the destitute middle class and drew on journalistic style of films like A Corner in Wheat. • Pandora’s Box (1929) most famously with Louis Banks • Diary of a Lost Girl (1929) and Three Penny Opera (1931) led to Pabst’s decline.
Leni Riefenstahl (1902-2003) • Success as a dancer gave way to film acting when she attracted the attention of film director Arnold Fanck, subsequently starring in some of his mountaineering pictures. • With Fanck as her mentor, Riefenstahl began directing films. • The Blue Light (1932): http://youtu.be/6zGvQlyifHQ
French Cinema of the 20s • Influenced by experimentation in the arts: • Dadaism emphasized the illogical or absurd, using buffoonery and other provocative behavior to shock and disrupt a complacent society. • Despised Realism as a “superficial style.” • Reacting to the violent, disillusioning debacle of WWI with irony, cynicism, and anarchic nihilism—Politics were morally outrageous, authority a joke, so only sardonic laughter possible, not tradition and convention.
From Dadism to Surrealism • Characteristics: • Slightly more positive manifestation of the worldview of life as absurd. • Aggressive form of cultural terrorism. • Aimed to broaden and transform life by attacking the logical, objectivist view of reality. • Dreams, the instinctive, the subconscious seen as superior. Examples include Luis Bunuel, Salvador Dali, and Pablo Picasso, primarily centered in Paris.
Post WWI French Film Industry • Devastated by the war • By 1919, French films decreased from 50-15 % • Either allied to or in reaction against the tenets of the avant-garde surrealists • Jean Vigo= • Surrealist who used slow motion and disjunctive compositions that isolated characters from conventional surroundings. • As an anarchist, presented authority figures as grotesques. Zero for Conduct (1933) influenced New Wave: http://youtu.be/YUkW1LBuQcg
Rene Clair (1898-1981) • Lighter tone of surrealism: farces brushed with the absurd and social comment. • Inducted into AcademieFrancaise in end (reentering the Establishment). • Left France for England in 1936 and to US during WWII. • Under the Roofs of Paris(1930),Le Million(1931), etc. • Heavily patterned—an object is passed from hand to hand, and each person in the chain is defined by what he or she does with the article: http://youtu.be/vUS56JGKNUE
Abel Gance (1889-1981) • Often reviled because of extravagance, 19th C romantic sensibility, and wildly expressive avant-garde techniques (hand held camera, staccato editing) • Style may transcend the period with technical excellence in development of “Polyvision,” the precursor to Cinerama and Imax. • Napoleon (1927): http://youtu.be/cMlnRP3qOYE
Luis Bunuel (1900-1983) • Widely regarded as the greatest of the surrealists. • A dashing young Spaniard lured into film by Fritz Lang’s work. • Work stood apart because of rigorous psychological harshness fueled by his frustrations as a renegade Catholic and interest in ideas and the sensual. • Teamed up with fellow Spaniard Salvador Dali for Andalusian Dog (1928), an amalgamation of dreams and images with no rational explanation—influenced by Freud: http://youtu.be/BIKYF07Y4kA • Land without Bread (1932) kicked him out of Franco’s Spain: http://youtu.be/G5h_zzWiI1Q