1 / 19

Through theater to cinema

Sergi Eisenstein. Through theater to cinema. Early 1920s The Soviet cinema Two of its features Primo : photo-fragments of nature are recorded Secundo : these fragments are combined in various ways The shot (or frame) and montage.

avi
Télécharger la présentation

Through theater to cinema

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Sergi Eisenstein Through theater to cinema

  2. Early 1920s • The Soviet cinema • Two of its features • Primo: photo-fragments of nature are recorded • Secundo: these fragments are combined in various ways • The shot (or frame) and montage

  3. Photography: system of reproduction to fix real events and elements of actuality • Abstract formalism, with remnants of reality • Class-determined tendency • An arbitrary cinematographic relation to the object placed

  4. The frame is much less independently workable than the word or the sound • Considering as material for the purpose of composition, the shot is more resistant than granite • Montage becomes the mightiest means for a really important creative remolding of nature

  5. The minimum “distortable” fragment of nature is the shot; ingenuity in its combinations is montage • Not opposed to nor can they replace • The problem of story • Cinema principles

  6. His film career is said to have begun with his production of Ostrovsky’s play, Enough Simplicity in Every Sage, at the Proletcult Theatre (Moscow, March 1923). • Not true: based solely on the fact that this production contained a short comic film • True: based on the character of the production • The first sign of a cinema tendency: one showing events with the least distortion

  7. Beginning 3 years earlier • The Mexican (from Jack London’s story) • The play’s climax is the prize-fight • Take place backstage • The bull-fight in Carmen • First move: propose that the fight be brought into view

  8. Working in the Stanislavskysystem • In turn was used as a means to affect the audience • In the fight scene the audience was excited directly • Employed realistic, even textural means - real fighting

  9. His realization that he had struck new ore, an actual-materialistic element in theater • The tendency developed • From illusionary acting movement • Acrobatics • A gesture expands into gymnastics • rage is expressed through a somersault • exaltation through a salto-mortale • lyricism on “the mast of death.”

  10. “real doing” & “pictorial imagination” • Tretiakov’s Gas Masks (1923-24) • “on the shelf” • October is pure “typage” • The overwhelming passions • The production of The Sage: the stage was shaped like a circus arena • The dialogue thus colliding, creating new meanings and sometimes wordplays

  11. “Cutting” increased in tempo • Never became comical for comedy’s sake, but stuck to its theme, sharpened by its scenic embodiment • A piece of film • How neutral it remains • Wise and wicked art of reediting the work of others • Esther Schub, the Vassiliyev brothers, reworking ingeniously the films imported after the revolution

  12. One montage tour de force of this sort, executed by Boitler • Danton • 2 tiny cuts reversed the entire significance of this scene • An “aroma” of montage in the new “left” cinema

  13. Flaubert gave us one of the finest examples of cross-montage of dialogues • Madame Bovary • The young man was explaining to the young women that these irresistible attractions find their cause in some previous state of experience • Whose climax is reached through a continuation of this cross-cutting & word-play • “Chase tempos”

  14. Meyerhold had not yet worked out • The actors on roller skates carried themselves about: the stage, “piece of city” • The intersection of man and milieu • The cubists • The “urbanistic” paintings of Picasso were of less importance here than the need to express the dynamics of the city – glimpses of facades, hands, legs, pillars, heads, domes • Special cubism of Gogol

  15. Close-ups cut into views of a city • A film element that tried to fit itself into the stubborn stage • Double & multiple exposure – “superimposing” images of man onto images of buildings • “infantile malady of leftism” existing in these first steps of cinema

  16. Potemkin • Not by trickery or double-exposure or mechanical intersection • But by the general structure of the composition • In the theater, the impossibility of the mise-en-scѐne • Sculptural details seen through the frame of the cadre, or shot, transitions from shot to shot, appeared to be the logical way out for the threatened hypertrophy of the mise-en-scѐne • Born the concept of mise-en-cadre • As the mise-en-scѐne is an interrelation of people in action, so the mise-en-cadre is the pictorial composition of mutually dependent cadres (shots) in a montage sequence

  17. Theater accessories in the midst of real factory plastics appeared ridiculous • Strike [1924-25] reflected our production of Gas Masks • Insist on an understanding of the mass as hero • No screen had ever before reflected an image of collective action • Deviation: natural & necessary • Screen be first penetrated by the general image, the collective united & propelled by one wish, “individuality within the collective”

  18. 1924 “Down with the story & the plot!” • The story “an attack of individualism,” returns in a fresh form, to its proper place • Lies the historical importance of the third half-decade of Soviet cinematography (1930-35) • The “story” film & the embroynes of the “plotless” film are calming down • Filmic diction, technique of the frame, theory of montage • Have another credit: traditions & methodology of literature • The cinema embodies the philosophy & ideology of the victorious proletariat

  19. The new quality of literature • Forward to the synthesis of all the best done by our silent cinematography, towards today along the lines of story & Marxist-Leninist ideological analysis • The phase of socialist realism • Typage: the Commedia dell’arte • In audience conditioning

More Related