Photography and Cinema
sharon
(sharon)
#1
37
Influential filmmakers such as Ingmar Bergman, Roberto Rossellini,
Robert Bresson, Yasujiro Ozu, Michelangelo Antonioni, Pier Paolo
Pasolini, Andrei Tarkovsky, Danièle Huillet and Jean-Marie Straub,
Stanley Kubrick, Chantal Akerman, Wim Wenders and latterly Terence
Davies, Hou Hsiaou-Hsien, Tsai Ming-Liang and Béla Tarr have exploited
the long take, the locked-off camera and the extended tracking shot. The
often glacial tempo of their films seeks a distance from the spectacle of
Hollywood and the cut and thrust of television. The fleeting was consid-
ered irredeemably frivolous and artistically beyond the pale. Instead,
cinema’s gaze would be extended to become so long and so penetrating
as to estrange what at first looked and felt familiar – a roadside, a face,
a building, a landscape, the sea. The embrace of the slow was also a sign
of increasing uncertainty about the recorded image in general. The long
look would describe the surface of the world, but doubt would creep into
the equation between seeing and knowing. As Wenders put it in 1971 :
‘When people think they’ve seen enough of something, but there’s more,
and no change of shot, then they react in a curiously livid way’.^21 The
existential entropy of post-war modern life was diagnosed by Antonioni’s
films of the early 1960 s, in which he developed an aesthetics of decelerat-
ed alienation. Here the almost-nothing of the image drained of narrative
urgency and quick cuts flirts with the audience’s everyday experience of
doubt about the world and its future.^22 At the same time the slowness of
the image on screen opened up a space for philosophical and aesthetic
reflectionwithinthe film.
Art film and experimental film of the 1960 s and ’ 70 s took a similar
approach, typified by Warhol’s movies and the enquiries of Structuralist
and Materialist filmmakers. Structuralist film tended to take a single
organizing idea from the grammar of cinema and interrogate it (e.g.,
shot / counter shot, the zoom, the tracking shot, the dissolve, split-screen,
dialogue patterns, gestures, sounds, narrative elements). Materialist film
tended to emphasize the mechanics of the apparatus and the act of view-
ing (camera, celluloid, projector, screen, the physiology of perception).
Michael Snow’sWavelength( 1967 ), a landmark in experimental film, is as
Structuralist as it is Materialist. The film appears to be an imperceptibly
slow 45 -minute zoom across a bare apartment space, ending on a still