Photography and Cinema
sharon
(sharon)
#1
36
action in front of the rolling camera. For Bazin, the synthetic nature of
montage should be subordinate to the organic nature of the individual
shot. When the experimental filmmaker Hollis Frampton imagined the
‘infinite film’ it included both versions:
The infinite film contains an infinity of endless passages wherein no
frame resembles any other in the slightest degree, and a further
infinity of passages wherein successive frames are as nearly identical
as intelligence can make them.^18
Popular narrative film stays away from endless difference and endless
sameness.Itoccupiesasmallmid-groundof‘sentence-length’shots,neither
too short to be comprehensible nor too long to be tolerable.^19 By contrast,
the history of avant-garde cinema is a history of gravitation to those two
extremes. At one end there is the film built up from rapid cuts and at the
other the long single take. Significantly, at both ends we find versions of
photographic stillness. Montage sees the photograph as a partial fragment,
as we have seen. The long take sees the photograph as a unified whole.
Theshorterafilm’sshotthemorelikeaphotographitgets,untiloneends
up with a single frame. The longer the shot the more like a photograph it
gets too, the continuous ‘stare’ of the lens giving us a moving picture.^20
The advanced art and film of the inter-war avant-gardes were charac-
terized by their engagement with speed and montage. But by the 1950 s
speed had lost much of its artistic appeal and almost all its critical
potential, particularly in Europe. Beyond the sobering effects of the war,
modernity had developed a terrifying autonomy, not least at the level
of the image. The ‘society of the spectacle’, diagnosed by Guy Debord in
1967 but intimated much earlier, relied upon the breathless turnover of
popular culture with is ephemeral advertising, commodified news and
droning television. Speed and montage were degenerating from the
promise of mass mobilization into mass distraction. The accelerated
image world began to feel dehumanizing, repetitive and monotonous.
In this contextslowness, the deliberate refusal of speed, became central
in vanguard art and culture and we can see this change of pace both in
photography and film.