Photography and Cinema

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Despite witnessing a murderer covering his traces, at no point does he

feel the urge to get it on film. He uses his camera’s long lens as a telescope,

swapping it for binoculars when things get really intense.

Rear Window‘feels’ photographic throughout, but for reasons that

are thoroughly cinematic. Hitchcock’s idea of pure cinema rested on the

classical theory of montage. He takes the formula of shot / counter shot

and turns it into a looped circuit of looking / action / reaction. A basic

pattern of short, near-still shots dominates the film as the photographer

observes the actions of the murderer and then reacts. The photographer’s

curiosity is merely Hitchcock’s means to a thoroughly cinematic end. If

proof were needed that photography was not really Hitchcock’s subject,

consider the bits of photographic activity that we do see inRear Window,

which are odd indeed. In the film’s opening pan we glimpse a framed

photo – taken from the middle of a racetrack – of two cars crashing.

A tyre is hurtling towards the camera, presumably destined to hospitalize

the photographer. In the same pan we see a crushed camera, then James

Stewart’s leg in plaster. A real photo of the crash would have been

impossible to make and this image is clearly a montage. It is a quick

expository device and its realism is not Hitchcock’s concern. Later, the

photojournalist consults a box of transparencies. They are the only

photos he has taken of the courtyard and they record no action at all.

He notices that plants in a flowerbed have grown shorter over a period of

days, leading him to presume a body has been buried there. (No account

is given of why he took such banal shots.) Then in the film’s denouement

the murderer spots the watching photographer and comes over to his

apartment to confront him. As he enters the photographer attempts to

slow his approach by firing flashbulbs at him repeatedly in the dark.

The strobes temporarily blind him, deferring the moment of confron-

tation. Again, no actual photograph is taken.

From this perspective we can also return to Antonioni’sBlow-up. This

film too features a photographer experiencing in extreme form a similar

social disconnection. It is also a film centred on a murder and it feels

particularly photographic. It would do so even without the extended

fashion shoots and darkroom scenes. In contrast to Hitchcock’s montage,

Antonioni’s long takes assume an almost photographic stare at the surface 115

102 Rear Window(Alfred Hitchcock, 1954),
frames.


over: 103Blow-up(Michelangelo Antonioni,
1966), frames.

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