1 / 25

COM 320: History of Film

COM 320: History of Film. French Impressionism 1918-1929. Defining Characteristics.

lewisv
Télécharger la présentation

COM 320: History of Film

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. COM 320: History of Film French Impressionism 1918-1929

  2. Defining Characteristics • Goal is to “convey sensations and emotional ‘impressions’ . . . conveying the personal vision of the artist . . . cinema shows us the souls of people and the essence of objects (photogenie) . . . Cinema is a synthesis of the other arts” (architecture, painting, sculpture, music, poetry, dance)

  3. Form & Style: Camera work most important(vs. Editing or Miseen scene)

  4. Form & Style: Camera work most important • Narrative structure—personal actions and psychology Abel Gance, Napoleon, 1927 Jean Epstein, Coeur fidele, 1923

  5. Form & Style: Camera work most important • Narrative structure—personal actions and psychology Germaine Dulac, The Smiling Madame Beudet, 1922

  6. Form & Style: Camera work most important • Narrative structure—personal actions and psychology • Photogenie – “that quality which distinguishes a film shot from the original object photographed”

  7. Photogenie--There are parallels in French Imp painting, e.g.: Frederick Carl Frieseke, Lady in a Garden, 1912

  8. Photogenie--There are parallels in French Imp painting, e.g.: Mary Cassatt, Lydia Leaning on Her Arms, 1879 Claude Monet, one of his Water Lilies series, c. 1915

  9. Form & Style: Camera work most important • Narrative structure—personal actions and psychology • Photogenie – “that quality which distinguishes a film shot from the original object photographed” • Optical devices often used to do this

  10. Form & Style: Camera work most important • Optical devices often used to do this Triptych from Abel Gance’s Napoleon

  11. Form & Style: Camera work most important • Optical devices often used to do this Abel Gance, Napoleon, 1927 Abel Gance, La Roue, 1922

  12. Form & Style: Camera work most important • Optical devices often used to do this Jean Epstein, Coeur fidele, 1923

  13. Form & Style: Camera work most important • Optical devices often used to do this • Double, triple, quadruple, etc., exposures were used throughout Abel Gance’s Napoleon….he reportedly used an early optical printer. Linwood Dunn in Hollywood with a later optical printer

  14. Form & Style: Camera work most important • Narrative structure—personal actions and psychology • Photogenie – “that quality which distinguishes a film shot from the original object photographed” • Optical devices often used to do this • “Visual rhythm” of fast cutting • Note examples from Abel Gance: The Charm of Dynamite

  15. Form & Style: Camera work most important • Narrative structure—personal actions and psychology • Photogenie – “that quality which distinguishes a film shot from the original object photographed” • Optical devices often used to do this • “Visual rhythm” of fast cutting • Location shooting Abel Gance, J’Accuse, 1919

  16. Background • In a commercial film context • French film in crisis after WWI • France swamped with German and U.S. films • Small French companies willing to experiment

  17. Other Film Types in that Nation at that Time • Genre films • Fantasy (e.g., Rene Clair) Rene Clair, Le Fantôme du Moulin Rouge, 1924

  18. Other Film Types in that Nation at that Time • Genre films • Fantasy (e.g., Rene Clair) • Comedy (e.g., Max Linder) Max Linder

  19. Importance of the Movement • Influential in style • Not very important in terms of $$ (box office)

  20. Important Practitioners • Abel Gance (1889-1981) Abel Gance, Napoleon, 1927

  21. Important Practitioners • Jean Epstein (1897-1953) Jean Epstein, Coeur fidele, 1923

  22. Important Practitioners • Germaine Dulac (1882-1942) Germaine Dulac, The Smiling Madame Beudet, 1922

  23. The Death of the Movement • The movement’s own success led to a diffusion of its techniques, and a lessening of its impact • French Impressionist filmmakers lost their independence with the introduction of sound ($$)

  24. Current Influences & Applications • Subjectivity, especially in “indie” films • e.g., films of Gus Van Sant (My Own Private Idaho, Milk)

  25. end

More Related