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Saul Bass: Anatomy of Film Design PDF

493 Pages·2014·8.09 MB·English
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Saul Bass Saul B aS S anatomy of film DeSign Jan-Christopher horak Copyright © 2014 by The University Press of Kentucky Scholarly publisher for the Commonwealth, serving Bellarmine University, Berea College, Centre College of Kentucky, Eastern Kentucky University, The Filson Historical Society, Georgetown College, Kentucky Historical Society, Kentucky State University, Morehead State University, Murray State University, Northern Kentucky University, Transylvania University, University of Kentucky, University of Louisville, and Western Kentucky University. All rights reserved. Editorial and Sales Offices: The University Press of Kentucky 663 South Limestone Street, Lexington, Kentucky 40508-4008 www.kentuckypress.com Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data Horak, Jan-Christopher. Saul Bass : anatomy of film design / Jan-Christopher Horak. pages cm. — (Screen classics) Includes bibliographical references and index. Includes filmography. ISBN 978-0-8131-4718-5 (hardcover : alk. paper)— ISBN 978-0-8131-4720-8 (pdf)—ISBN 978-0-8131-4719-2 (epub) 1. Bass, Saul—Criticism and interpretation. I. Title. PN1998.3.B377H68 2014 741.6092—dc23 2014020826 This book is printed on acid-free paper meeting the requirements of the American National Standard for Permanence in Paper for Printed Library Materials. Manufactured in the United States of America. Member of the Association of American University Presses Contents Introduction: Qui êtes-vous, Saul Bass? 1 1. Designer and Filmmaker 33 2. Film Titles: Theory and Practice 71 3. Creating a Mood: Pars pro toto 129 4. Modernism’s Multiplicity of Views 191 5. The Urban Landscape 227 6. Journeys of Discovery: Seeing Is Knowledge 265 7. Civilization: Organizing Knowledge through Communication 305 Acknowledgments 357 Filmography 361 Notes 369 Selected Bibliography 421 Index 441 Illustrations follow page 225 introduction Qui êtes-vous, Saul Bass? The Forty-First Academy Awards ceremony took place on 14 April 1969 at the Dorothy Chandler Pavilion, on what used to be Bunker Hill in downtown Los Angeles. It was the first Oscar ceremony to be broadcast worldwide and the first held at that location. As usual, it was a star-stud- ded affair. Katharine Hepburn was nominated as best actress for the sec- ond year in a row, this time for The Lion in Winter, an award she would have to share with Barbra Streisand for Funny Girl—the only time there has been a tie in this category. Saul and Elaine Bass, too, were present at the awards ceremony, since the designer was nominated in the best docu- mentary short category for Why Man Creates (1968). The couple rode to the Chandler in a rented limousine together with USC graduate student and Bass advisee George Lucas, who had been an assistant on the produc- tion. Bass’s competitors were The House that Amanda Built (Fali Bilimo- ria), The Revolving Door (Lee R. Bobker), A Space to Grow (Thomas P. Kelly Jr.), and A Way out of the Wilderness (Dan E. Weisburd). Given his longtime work in the film industry, Bass was heavily favored to win. At the ceremony, Bass sat in an aisle seat at stage left, ten rows from the podium; Elaine was next to him in a light-colored chiffon dress. Actors Diahann Carroll and Tony Curtis read out the names of the nominees for best doc- umentary and best short documentary, respectively. When Tony Curtis called out Bass’s name as the winner, he bounced up to the stage, despite the wooden cane that preceded his every step. Curtis handed the Oscar to Bass, who was wearing a traditional tuxedo, in contrast to Curtis’s mod outfit. Bass took the Oscar in his right hand while balancing his weight with his left hand on the cane. He bent over the microphone and, in an uncharacteristic moment of brevity, said, “Thank you, thank you very much.” Then he quickly walked offstage.1 No thanks to his staff, no thanks to his wife, no thanks to the Academy. More important, Bass failed 1 Saul BaSS to mention Kaiser Aluminum and Chemical Corporation, the film’s spon- sor and original producer, causing mini-scandal to erupt at corporate headquarters. Did Bass just forget, due to nerves or under pressure to keep his acceptance speech short? We will probably never know. The over- sight may not have been accidental, however, given the huge fights with Kaiser over the film’s final structure, laboratory costs, and even the title. Bass hated the title because he thought it promised more than he could deliver.2 In hindsight, we can see that Bass deserved to win for what would be his greatest cinematic achievement, although his largely avant-garde work certainly challenged the Academy’s notions of genre. Indeed, the cate- gory “Best Documentary, Short Subjects” hardly describes Bass’s free- form essay, a hodgepodge of film notes that asks many more questions than it answers. And what makes it a documentary? The film includes sev- eral forms of animation and mostly staged sequences. In fact, it is a mod- ernist romp, at moments seemingly incoherent and yet also brilliant in its open-endedness; its fragmentation forces the viewer to engage in the con- struction of meaning, thus fulfilling the promise of every modernist work to make the audience an active participant. In addition to the Academy Award, Why Man Creates won numerous film festival and other awards, as well as being placed on the National Film Registry of the Library of Con- gress in 2002, designating it a national treasure.3 But the somewhat tortured production history of the film also points out the pitfalls of having a corporate sponsor for such a personal and highly idiosyncratic project. In Bass’s most cynical evaluation of the film, he admitted to a group of AT&T executives: “I think now—that the most creative thing about the film was that I found a rationalization that enabled me to convince the client, to allow me to make the film.”4 Even if the film was not a direct advertisement for Kaiser, the company covered all the production costs, and the corporate executives and Bass often had vastly different ideas about what kind of film they were financing. The designer usually argued that because sponsored films didn’t have to sell anything, they were preferable to commercials or industrial film productions, where the filmmaker was at the mercy of the client. But Bass wanted to have it both ways: complete freedom to produce artistic work, and complete financing by a corporate sponsor that would pay all the bills, including a substantial honorarium to support Bass’s office. Unlike most other avant- garde filmmakers, Bass was not willing to self-finance or to take on con- 2 introduction tract work to pay for his own personal films. After all, Bass had grown up in the Hollywood film industry, where no one invested their own money. Paradoxically, despite the insider status that an Academy Award seemingly represented, Bass remained an outsider in the movie industry, for several reasons. First, he was a graphic designer who had essentially created his own job description in a highly regulated system of film production. Sec- ond, his own aesthetic ambitions to bring high art to an often resistant Hollywood industry set him apart. Third, he sought the company of like- minded professionals, mostly producer-directors who had declared their independence from the classic Hollywood studio system. Seen from our perspective in the twenty-first century, Saul Bass seems to define an era. As a designer of studio publicity, movie posters, title sequences and montages, commercials, and corporate logos from the 1940s to the 1990s, Bass heavily influenced the look of both film advertis- ing and Hollywood films. Bass’s poster designs and his credit sequences for Hollywood feature films were extremely innovative in terms of their formal design, use of iconography, and narrative content. His graphic work resembled no one else’s in Hollywood, and his film credits changed forever how audiences looked at the opening minutes of a film. Simulta- neously, all his film-related work incorporated aesthetic concepts bor- rowed from modernist art, translating them into new commercial modes of address and thereby transforming film industry conventions that had remained relatively stagnant for decades. Bass’s designs influenced not only other studio publicity designers and filmmakers but also a whole gen- eration of young designers that he personally trained in his studio. Among those who started their careers with Saul Bass were Thurston Blodgett, Paul Bruhwiler, Vincent Carra, John Casados, Morton Dimondstein, Vahe Fattal, Augustine Garza, Joel Katz, Karen Lee, Henry Markowitz, Michael Mills, Dave Nagata, Ted Piegdon, Gay Reinecke, Clarence Sato, Arnold Schwartzman, Mamoru Shimokochi, G. Dean Smith, Jay Toffoli, Todd Walker, Don Weller, and Howard York. At a time when Hollywood’s Taylorized system of film production called for extreme specialization within the work flow, Saul Bass was, uniquely, a generalist. He burst onto the creative floors of the film pro- duction factory and argued for the importance of the designer in the pro- duction process. Because of his aesthetic influences and the particular moment of his arrival in a changing Hollywood, Bass was able to cross over into other fields of film production, from designing advertising and 3

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Iconic graphic designer and Academy Award--winning filmmaker Saul Bass (1920--1996) defined an innovative era in cinema. His title sequences for films such as Otto Preminger's The Man with the Golden Arm (1955) and Anatomy of a Murder (1959), Alfred Hitchcock's Vertigo (1958) and North by Northwest
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