Photography and Cinema

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are evil, but soon finds that he is unable to judge with certainty. The saint

turns out to be a demon doing the devil’s work. It is a fantastic story that

carries within it a reflexive meditation on the differing accounts of time

and mortality at work in the moving and still image. The wild premise

ought to make it an exception in Rossellini’s otherwise soberly realist

œuvre. Even so, cinematic realism is based on a strong faith and rever-

ence for the photographic image as a trace or ‘death mask’ of the subject

before the camera.The Machine for Killing Bad Peopleadheres closely

to this tenet, if only to exaggerate it, rather than put it to work in a

realist aesthetic.^5

Cinema tends to dwell on the photograph as a mute and intransigent

object from the past. Not surprisingly, the types of photograph to which

cinema is attracted are those that already emphasize these qualities on

some level. Police, forensic, news and family-album pictures are the

most obviously ‘cinegenic’. Not all film genres understand photographs

in this way, but it is obvious which ones do: films noir, detective movies,

melodramas, mysteries and histories. If one-fifth of all films noir feature

photographs, it is because so many of the traits of the genre have an

obviously photographic potential (the troublesome and haunting past,

the totemic status of evidence, betrayal, blackmail and so forth).^6 When

photographs have featured in more recent cinema, more often than not

the films are ‘neo-noirs’. Think of the fake childhood photographs given

to the ‘replicant’ cyborgs as tokens of a past they never really had inBlade

Runner(Ridley Scott, 1982 ); or the Polaroid evidence accrued by the hero

inMemento(Christopher Nolan, 2000 ), the idyllic family snaps at the

heart ofOne Hour Photo(Mark Romanek, 2002 ) or the hired killer who

is also a Weegee-like photographer recording his deeds inThe Road to

Perdition(Sam Mendes, 2002 ).

When the policeman in Fritz Lang’sM( 1931 ) holds up to the massed

crowd a studio portrait of a recently murdered young girl, the image

does more than present her likeness. It implies her innocence and igno-

rance of her death. Twenty-five years later, Lang reversed the idea.Beyond

a Reasonable Doubt( 1956 ) shows us how easily crime scene photos can

be faked and that the hero has been framed. Lang’s films demonstrate

the two competing claims made on behalf of the filmed photograph: 97
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