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Screening Modernism: European Art Cinema, 1950-1980 (Cinema and Modernity Series) PDF

441 Pages·2008·2.22 MB·English
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Screening Modernism Cinema and Modernity A Series Edited by Tom Gunning Screening Modernism: European Art Cinema, 1950–1980 andrás bálint kovács The University of Chicago Press CHICAGO AND LONDON András Bálint Kovács is professor of fi lm studies at Eotvos University in Budapest and the director of the Hungarian Institute in Paris. The University of Chicago Press, Chicago 60637 The University of Chicago Press, Ltd., London © 2007 by The University of Chicago All rights reserved. Published 2007 Printed in the United States of America 16 15 14 13 12 11 10 09 08 07 1 2 3 4 5 ISBN–13: 978–0–226–45163–3 (cloth) ISBN-13: 978–0–226–45165–7 (paper) ISBN–10: 0–226–45163–1 (cloth) ISBN-10: 0–226–45165–8 (paper) Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data Kovács, András Bálint. Screening modernism : European art cinema, 1950–1980 / András Bálint Kovács. p. cm. Includes bibliographical references and index. ISBN-13: 978-0-226-45163-3 (cloth : alk. paper) ISBN-10: 0-226-45163-1 (cloth : alk. paper) 1. Motion pictures— Europe—History. 2. Modernism (Aesthetics)—Europe I. Title. PN1993.5.E8K68 2007 791.43094'09045—dc22 2007013782 (cid:2)(cid:2) The paper used in this publication meets the minimum requirements of the American National Standard for Information Sciences—Permanence of Paper for Printed Library Materials, ANSI Z39.48–1992. to my father Contents Acknowledgments xi Introduction 1 Part One: What Is the Modern? 1 theorizing modernism 7 Modern 8 Modernism 11 Avant-Garde 14 Cinema and Modernism: The First Encounter 16 The Institution of the Art Film 20 Modernist Art Cinema and the Avant-Garde 27 theories of the classical/modern 2 distinction in the cinema 33 Style Analysts 34 Evolutionists 38 Modern Cinema and Deleuze 40 Modernism as an Unfi nished Project 44 Part Two: The Forms of Modernism 3 modern art cinema: style or movement? 51 4 narration in modern cinema 56 Classical versus Modernist Art Films 61 The Alienation of the Abstract Individual 65 c o n t e n t s Who Is “the Individual” in Modern Cinema? 67 The Role of Chance 70 Open-Ended Narrative 77 Narrative Trajectory Patterns: Linear, Circular, Spiral 78 5 genre in modern cinema 82 Melodrama and Modernism 84 Excursus: Sartre and the Philosophy of Nothingness 90 A Modern Melodrama: Antonioni’s Eclipse (1962) 96 Other Genres and Recurrent Plot Elements 99 Investigation 99 Wandering/Travel 102 The Mental Journey 103 Closed-Situation Drama 111 Satire/Genre Parody 114 viii The Film Essay 116 6 patterns of modern forms 120 Primary Formation: Continuity and Discontinuity 122 Radical Continuity 128 Imaginary Time in Last Year at Marienbad 130 Radical Discontinuity 131 The Fragmented Form according to Godard 132 Serial Form 136 7 styles modernism 140 Minimalist Styles 140 The Bresson Style 141 Abstract Subjectivity and the “Model” 146 Bresson and His Followers 148 Analytical Minimalism: The Antonioni Style 149 Psychic Landscape? 149 Continuity 153 Antonioni and His Followers 156 Expressive Minimalism 161 8 naturalist styles 168 Post-neorealism 169 Cinéma Vérité 170 The “New Wave” Style 172 9 ornamental styles 175 10 theatrical styles 192 11 modern cinema trends 203 The Family Tree of Modern Cinema 210 c o n t e n t s Part Three: Appearance and Propagation of Modernism (1949–1958) critical reflexivity or the birth 12 of the auteur 217 The Birth of the Auteur 218 Historical Forms of Refl exivity 224 The Emergence of Critical Refl exivity: Bergman’s Prison 227 Refl exivity and Abstraction: Modern Cinema and the Nouveau Roman 231 13 the return of the theatrical 238 Abstract Drama 241 14 the destabilization of the fabula 244 Voice-Over Narration 245 The Dissolution of Classical Narrative: Film Noir ix and Modernism 246 Fabula Alternatives: Hitchcock 248 Alternative Subjective Narration: Rashomon 251 an alternative to the classical form: 15 neorealism and modernism 253 The End of Neorealism 255 Modernism in Story of a Love Affair: Neorealism Meets Film Noir 256 Rossellini: The “Neorealist Miracle” 260 Part Four: The Short Story of Modern Cinema (1959–1975) 16 the romantic period, 1959–1961 275 Neorealism: The Reference 276 Eastern Europe: From Socialist Realism toward Neorealism 282 Heroism versus Modernism 284 Jerzy Kawalerowicz: The First Modern Polish Auteur 286 The Year 1959 290 Forms of Romantic Modernism 293 Genre and Narration in the Early Years 295 Sound and Image 298 Background and Foreground 300 From Hiroshima to Marienbad: Modernism and the Cinema of the Elite 303 The Production System of the “New Cinema” 306

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