194 Moving Images: Making Movies, Understanding Media
starring a famous French swimmer which starts by demonstrating swimming
technique and ends as a poetic evocation of the human body in water. Before
his tragically early death, Vigo made the notable narrative fi lms Zéro de
Conduite (1933) and L’ A t a l a n t e (1934), which are infused with the lyrical
and groundbreaking spirit of the non-narrative cinema.
New techniques of faster editing and linking shots through a variety of
patterns soon became part of Hollywood practice. In what became known
as a montage sequence, a series of images could express an idea or feeling
in a non-narrative manner but still add to the storytelling of the entire fi lm.
Early Soviet fi lmmakers such as Lev Kuleshov, Vsevolod Pudovkin, and Sergei
Eisenstein created montage sequences that featured provocative juxtapositions
of shots described as “collision” or “linkage.” Montage is also used to augment
narrative by condensing time and relating key information, as in A Farewell
to Arms from 1931 (directed by Frank Borzage). When the main character
engages in battle and is wounded, there is a sustained sequence of shots that
depicts the disjointed violence of a terrible defeat but does not focus on events
that proceed in a cause-and-eff ect manner from shot to shot. It is a series of
images linked by the overall experience of war—a non-narrative sequence
used to advance the narrative of the fi lm.
In the 2009 movie X-Men Origins: Wolverine, the history of Wolverine
and his brother Sabertooth is shown through a montage that spans their
participation in wars over the course of a century. Th e uses of motion and
exposure eff ects heighten the stylized compression of time. Montage types
of editing are used consistently in commercials and Internet applications to
express ideas and impressions through associative cuts and visual impact.
Th ese types of cutting, both narrative and non-narrative, oft en work well
with musical passages in motion pictures and are seen in a wide variety of
fi ction fi lms and in many music videos today.
Figure 5-26 The lyrical,
distinctly personal
perspective of Carlo Delle
Piane’s character takes
form through the editing
of director Ermanno Olmi’s
section of Tickets. (Courtesy
Fandango/Medusa Produzione/
Photofest)
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