"Lights, Camera, Action. Marxism, Semiotics, Narratology."

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I have many thoughts on this piece, but I'll save them for a bit later. I only ask that you read the entire article and not just the incendiary quote above, before responding.

amateurist (amateurist), Thursday, 17 July 2003 19:53 (twenty-two years ago)

That article's way too long amateurist, are you kidding?

Tracer Hand (tracerhand), Thursday, 17 July 2003 20:03 (twenty-two years ago)

fuck this, I'm responding to the incendiary quote.

Horace Mann (Horace Mann), Thursday, 17 July 2003 20:06 (twenty-two years ago)

[kicks puppy]

Horace Mann (Horace Mann), Thursday, 17 July 2003 20:07 (twenty-two years ago)

film theory is a left-wing conspiracy!

s1utsky (slutsky), Thursday, 17 July 2003 20:08 (twenty-two years ago)

I'm halfway through the article right now & I'm finding the portrait of this Professor Wolfe character kinda condescending.

s1utsky (slutsky), Thursday, 17 July 2003 20:10 (twenty-two years ago)

I read from my daughter's study guide to Gary A. Randall, who has served as president of Orion Television, Spelling Television, and as the executive producer of the TV series "Any Day Now." "That's what your daughter's being taught?" he says. "That's just elitist psychobabble. It sounds like it was written by a professor of malapropism. That has absolutely no bearing on the real world. It sounds like an awfully myopic perspective of what film is really supposed to be about: touching hearts and minds and providing provocative thoughts

s1utsky (slutsky), Thursday, 17 July 2003 20:11 (twenty-two years ago)

I'm sympathetic to some of this guy's concerns (having gone through some film theory at school) but this shit about his daughter getting a C is pretty weak.

s1utsky (slutsky), Thursday, 17 July 2003 20:12 (twenty-two years ago)

Tracer it looks long but I finished it in about 10 minutes. Why I think people might be interested: it's a provocative essay about some of the perceived problems with academic film studies, from the perspective of an outsider (in this case, the author's daughter had taken a year of film theory at UCSB).

Ebert has several quotes and to me they represent the worst tendencies of the article: broadness, anti-intellectualism.

But I'm really interested to hear what some of you think. Particularly you, T.H.

(x-post)

See now Slutksy that ("oh no another complaint about the left-wing hegemony in cultural studies") was what I thought initially, but I think the article intimates some interesting things before moving on to something resembling character assassination.

(x-x-post)

amateurist (amateurist), Thursday, 17 July 2003 20:13 (twenty-two years ago)

I absolutely agree Amateurist: film theory's seeming alienation from the actual tangible elements of film have always bothered me & it's worthing calling out--but so much of this article is "I sat in on a film theory class for five minutes and several students looked bored!"

s1utsky (slutsky), Thursday, 17 July 2003 20:16 (twenty-two years ago)

Arts & Humanities: DAMMIT, we can't grasp a single thing these scientists and engineers and computer scientists and technocrats are talking about, but they understand EVERYTHING WE SAY. We have to put a stop to this. After all, it's universally recognized that there's no intrinsic difference in the value of literary criticism versus building bridges and designing telecommunications protocols. We can't just have anybody coming along and making all our hard work seem like a WASTE OF TIME. Let's obfuscate the bejeezus out of everything and then we can act fancy about it. Ha! There! I know something you DOO-ON'T, I know something you DOO-ON'T!!

Science & Engineering: What? I'm busy.

Millar (Millar), Thursday, 17 July 2003 20:20 (twenty-two years ago)

Film theory is for me, the most powerful way to illustrate complex ideas about meaning and culture. It is what I return to again and again for intense mental stimulation.

That said, I think the article is a pretty fair accounting. It celebrates Penley's life and gives a decent layman's intro to semiotics even as it questions the extremeness of the politics and the impenetrabilities of the language.

Also remember, this article is from the Los Angeles Times. Many of its readers are industry professionals and I think it's a valid question as to whether film theory has anything to do with the production of film. I'm not sure that Metz or Mulvey would have recommended their texts to be used in an almost trade-school like setting, which some of the best film production schools clearly are. UC Berkeley's school is more obvious in that there's barely any production instruction at all, and it's used mainly to illustrate theoretical points. In fact, the entire film department there has been absorbed into Rhetoric.

Spencer Chow (spencermfi), Thursday, 17 July 2003 20:25 (twenty-two years ago)

This article seems to be addressing, and confusedly conflating, a number of things.

First off, is the UCSB program structured poorly? Do students who expect an education in film production end up being forced to take loads of theory courses? Or was this author's daughter under a misapprehension?

Is a film curriculum that includes significant amounts of production, theory, *and* history desirable? Should students be forced to encounter some element of all three? Should these three things even be so readily distinguishable? (I think my answer to that last question is probably what I should be writing.)

Second, I think this article (and Ebert, whose odious quotes are really a slap in the face to people he's cited approvingly in the past, like David Bordwell) is confusing "film theory" with "film theory as it's practiced by a number of American academics in the present day." Thus he fails to distinguish (fails to even try) between a lot of good work being done in the field and the no-doubt-fearsome amount of doggerel being produced.

What bothers me is that these articles mostly serve to reinforce the prejudices of people who would label *all* theory, all academic study of film, a waste of time or worse. I know Millar is smarter than this, but his post still seems exemplary of this phenomenon.

amateurist (amateurist), Thursday, 17 July 2003 20:30 (twenty-two years ago)

why can't theory be political? what does he want, "objective" film theory or something? theory SHOULD be political. this guy name-drops all over the fucking place, lets us know how much he's been published, and give a dollar amount to his daughter's education. it's like he's building a carapace (look it up) of wealth and connections around himself because he feels threatened by these big words he doesn't know. though it has a very specialized vocabulary film studies isn't a hard science, it's the opposite, it's a field where you try and grasp mechanisms of seeing and identification that are by definition totally difficult to pin down accurately; it's no surprise that in the attempt to create a language around film there's a lot of grade-A crap, but jeezus, the world is BRIMMING with grade A crap, stop acting surprised already: the smart people figure out what to ignore and what to pay attention to

Tracer Hand (tracerhand), Thursday, 17 July 2003 20:32 (twenty-two years ago)

engineering is "a cruel hoax for students, essentially the academic equivalent of a New Age cult, in which a new language has been invented that only the adept can communicate in"

i want to talk about truss rods and load coefficients with the big boys

Tracer Hand (tracerhand), Thursday, 17 July 2003 20:35 (twenty-two years ago)

I know Millar is smarter than this, but his post still seems exemplary of this phenomenon.

exactly

Millar (Millar), Thursday, 17 July 2003 20:38 (twenty-two years ago)

I give the article a B/B-.

Spencer Chow (spencermfi), Thursday, 17 July 2003 20:39 (twenty-two years ago)

All I will say is what every single professional in any artistic field I've ever met has said about the subject:

"You don't learn through theory. You learn through absorbing your contemporaries and precursors, and you learn through doing (or failing)."

The great authors, artists, directors, musicians and such are in a dialogue with each other. Therefore, it would make far more sense to continue to absorb and see what theory and sense of style comes out of your own head and your own experiences and engagements, not someone else's ideas that you attempt to comprehend then attempt to appropriate.

Girolamo Savonarola, Thursday, 17 July 2003 20:40 (twenty-two years ago)

Tracer I think the author has the "politicization" (the very word implies a kind of pollution) of film theory with the particular nature of the axes many film theorists are grinding.

What I most object to, and I'm certain I won't be able to communicate this as clearly as I desire, is this common sense that film theory is something we take to immunize us against film's power, to protect us against its use as a vehicle for ideology. The often-complacent insistence that Hollywood film, or all film, is somehow a function and reinforcer of certain social-political facts (whose identification is indeed tied to a kind of Marcusian post-Marxism) and little else.

Much theory is aware of this problem but fails to address it in a consistent way. I think that certain reactions to this tendency (say Bordwell and Thompson) sometimes seem frightened of politics at all, which is unfortunate.

(x-post)

G.S. I'm not sure how your post relates to this article.

amateurist (amateurist), Thursday, 17 July 2003 20:44 (twenty-two years ago)

That first line should read:

Tracer I think the author confuses the "politicization"...

amateurist (amateurist), Thursday, 17 July 2003 20:45 (twenty-two years ago)

Whether one learns through theory is not the point. Theory is fun all by itself. Such an assertion usually cues a chorus of people saying "oh come on now you don't really enjoy that," which is rockism most foul. Theory isn't about the object of its scrutiny, it's its own thing. And I like it.

J0hn Darn1elle (J0hn Darn1elle), Thursday, 17 July 2003 20:50 (twenty-two years ago)

Girolamo's post refers to the tension between theory and production in schools which is the main concern of the article.

Unfortunately, Girolamo ignores the long history of productions which directly engage theory.

Spencer Chow (spencermfi), Thursday, 17 July 2003 20:55 (twenty-two years ago)

But John I don't think most people would accept the terms on which you're contending this article--theory is usually seen (and in my opinion most usefully seen) as a means of better understanding and appreciating the functioning of the object under scrutiny. Otherwise what's to keep theory from drifting off into scholasticism?

amateurist (amateurist), Thursday, 17 July 2003 20:59 (twenty-two years ago)

i. it is the tragedy of theory that it hasn't transformed the making of films
ii. it is the tragedy of theory that it HAS

is it either? (if yr struggling to see how it cd be ii., try "no [whoever], no tarantino")

mark s (mark s), Thursday, 17 July 2003 20:59 (twenty-two years ago)

Mark that's a cute question but there is no tragedy to be found anywhere.

amateurist (amateurist), Thursday, 17 July 2003 21:00 (twenty-two years ago)

$73k at a public university? That doesn't add up - resident tuition in CA is about $2000/semester from what I remember.

miloauckerman (miloauckerman), Thursday, 17 July 2003 21:01 (twenty-two years ago)

(Within film production that is, I'm not making a grand ontological statement.)

amateurist (amateurist), Thursday, 17 July 2003 21:01 (twenty-two years ago)

(x-post)

amateurist (amateurist), Thursday, 17 July 2003 21:01 (twenty-two years ago)

ok i wz oscaring it up for rhetorical oomph

mark s (mark s), Thursday, 17 July 2003 21:07 (twenty-two years ago)

Sorry Mark, I didn't mean to be rude but I think one of the problems I have with much contemporary film study is that it presumes an oppositional position, presumes that there was some point at which film failed or became tainted (even if that point is pushed as far back as 1913, per Noel Burch). I think different versions of this attitude are manifest both in the academy and in much of popular criticism.

amateurist (amateurist), Thursday, 17 July 2003 21:07 (twenty-two years ago)

John's right, sometimes film, music, novels etc are merely texts by which to apply theory as a student of theory sees fit.

Spencer Chow (spencermfi), Thursday, 17 July 2003 21:08 (twenty-two years ago)

But where does the theory come from? From the air? "Theory" to me is just a conceptual apparatus, a notion of how something functions which is arrived at through investigation of actual, er, things. (In this case films.) Perhaps it is interesting to sum in the manner of Magic cards: complex mathematical operations overlaid with a romantic-historical-fantastic superstructure. But I don't think that's a good basis from which to argue for its significance or usefulness in the academy.

amateurist (amateurist), Thursday, 17 July 2003 21:13 (twenty-two years ago)

anyway i said "is it either" bcz i think the answer is no, ie i agree w.you am

it's ppl talking at other ppl: sometimes it sparks, sometimes it doesn't

mark s (mark s), Thursday, 17 July 2003 21:14 (twenty-two years ago)

In other words: I can claim that the smallest unit of matter is the hairball, and I can play with that claim in all kinds of rhetorically compelling ways, but where does it lead?

Obviously claims about the workings of film aren't typically as "proveable" as scientific claims but that doesn't mean all is sophistry. There are proximate meanings arrived at through research and engagement which can be more valid than those dreamed up on a coffee break.

(x-post)

amateurist (amateurist), Thursday, 17 July 2003 21:16 (twenty-two years ago)

I have a particular problem with articles like this, of which there are many, for every academic field. The problem is something like this: for non-specialists, reading the articles is less an exercise in fact and more an exercise in decoding the author's attitude to figure out whether they're indulging in the Ugly-Me schtick (anti-intellectual knee-jerking against something they deem irrelevant simply because they're not yet equipped to engage with it) or actually making a valid point. Is the topic over-abstracted, airy, over-concerned with theory? The only people most qualified to answer that question are, by necessity, people who can handle the theory themselves, and they all have vested interests in the topic.

But there's always the decoding to be done, and this particular person goes for a lot of tricks that make it seem more like the Ugly-Me routine: when your "look at this abstract drivel" quoting involves pretending synecdoche is some sort of impenetrable jargon, you're clearly talking smack. (And while I've never studied anything remotely having to do with film, I know what "diegenic" means, and it seems like a very simple and useful concept to me.) This always seems to be the biggest decoding clue: when people repeatedly just look at theoretical texts and then quote the words as if completely bewildered, something is deeply wrong. (Who complains that they're paying for their kids to learn words they don't already know? Who looks at linguistics textbooks and says "What the hell is clausal syntax? This is what I'm paying tuition for?") And if all that doesn't do enough to mark out the writer as some one not at all in a position to make rational and fair-minded decisions about whether film theory has gone bad places, the incredibly stupid cult-like caricature of the classroom at the end certainly seals it.

nabisco (nabisco), Thursday, 17 July 2003 21:16 (twenty-two years ago)

(It is funny that "diegetic" is held up by this article as a cardinal example of abstruse newfangled jargon. It comes from Aristotle!)

amateurist (amateurist), Thursday, 17 July 2003 21:19 (twenty-two years ago)

the odd thing is, he seems to have a certain facility with the basics of film theory and how they interconnect (e.g. semiotics has something to do with language which informs identification which informs gender which informs politics etc). That's why I liked it.

Also Am, I disagree that theory is merely an apparatus. Fun theory texts are those which function as entertaining truth revealers, sometimes only missing an obvious narrative arc to distinguish them from novels.

Spencer Chow (spencermfi), Thursday, 17 July 2003 21:22 (twenty-two years ago)

theory is usually seen (and in my opinion most usefully seen) as a means of better understanding and appreciating the functioning of the object under scrutiny.

"theory" is admittedly an unfortunate choice of words for what theory really is. It's dancing with the object of its scrutiny. It's not proscriptive, it's descriptive, and when approached in that way, it's loads of fun for some of us. Articles like the above-linked are so reactionary and anti-fun: "Nobody really reads this stuff! It has no bearing on reality!" & I'm like, "Fuck you, I enjoy reading it, if you don't, don't read it"

(not meaning the "fuck you" to land on anybody in this thread btw)

J0hn Darn1elle (J0hn Darn1elle), Thursday, 17 July 2003 21:23 (twenty-two years ago)

yeah, nabisco, that last scene betrays itself as anti-liberal-education on a general level. i think he'd prefer that everyone interested in film sign up for "New York Film Academy" or another one of those 1-size-fits-all vocational schools, where you learn the same "tricks" of plot and lighting that make most of our mainstream movies so hideously boring and bad these days

take a look at that new ewan mcgregor movie to see how far we've fallen

the last thing we need is more screenwriters and directors &tc who do things "correctly", we're choking with them

Tracer Hand (tracerhand), Thursday, 17 July 2003 21:26 (twenty-two years ago)

I'm interested to hear you flesh out that last comment, T.H. What do you mean by "correctly"?

amateurist (amateurist), Thursday, 17 July 2003 21:28 (twenty-two years ago)

I wish we were! Some DPs don't even bother keeping the subject in focus if it's not a close-up!

(xpost)

s1utsky (slutsky), Thursday, 17 July 2003 21:29 (twenty-two years ago)

focus is for fascists

mark s (mark s), Thursday, 17 July 2003 21:30 (twenty-two years ago)

From an interview with Michael Bay:

NA: I had a very ultra-orthodox film studies teacher...

MB: Like how?

NA: Well, to begin with, she was very snobbish. And she ragged on how cinematic codes and rules are being broken, and the usual blah-blah-blah given to film students. She also praised "Citizen Kane" day and night and said the usual stuff about it being the greatest movie of all time, etc. And how the movies have lost their true purpose, become too commercial. You know, all the stuff taught to film students here in New England.

MB: What you need to tell her from a very big director is that there are no rules in film. And any film teacher that teaches rules is wrong. "Citizen Kane," when it came out, it was very mocked film. People did not like it. It was very unrespected. It was thought of at the time as very uncool. But he wasn't the inventor of all that stuff. All that stuff had been done in other movies. through silent movies, through musicals, yadda-yadda-yadda. But it was the first movie to really put all those things together into a movie. If she would've taught Orsen Wells, he would've laughed at her.

amateurist (amateurist), Thursday, 17 July 2003 21:30 (twenty-two years ago)

T.H.-Michael Bay mindmeld?!

amateurist (amateurist), Thursday, 17 July 2003 21:31 (twenty-two years ago)

From a movie by Michael Bay:

We ride together, we die together. Bad boys for life.

s1utsky (slutsky), Thursday, 17 July 2003 21:33 (twenty-two years ago)

http://ia.imdb.com/media/imdb/01/I/84/87/43m.jpg

L to R: Lacan, Deleuze

amateurist (amateurist), Thursday, 17 July 2003 21:35 (twenty-two years ago)

Deleuze: "I'm getting too old for this shit."

s1utsky (slutsky), Thursday, 17 July 2003 21:41 (twenty-two years ago)

joke successfully recycled!

s1utsky (slutsky), Thursday, 17 July 2003 21:41 (twenty-two years ago)

OK, back on point:

amateurist (amateurist), Thursday, 17 July 2003 21:43 (twenty-two years ago)

also the gloss over semiotics of the modernist school and of the, ahem, pomo, school seems particularly daft.

Sterling Clover (s_clover), Friday, 18 July 2003 12:34 (twenty-two years ago)

By "gloss" do you mean he misrepresents these wings of cultural studies? Or he omits certain wings?

I actually think his summary of these modes is surprisingly fair given the contempt exhibited for them by many of the people quoted in the article, and given that they are punctuated by protestations on the order of "my brain hurts."

amateurist (amateurist), Friday, 18 July 2003 14:11 (twenty-two years ago)

The most high-profile examples of film theory being a direct inspiration for a commercial American film are Suture and Far from Heaven (both star Dennis Haysbert!). But of course the whole auterist canon--Hawks, Hitchcock, etc.--has exerted an enormous influence, in which it's hard to imagine any contemporary director being ignorant. (Even those that prefer Spielberg, Zemeckis, and co. are essentially just at one remove from this model of taste.) I'm not sure Hollywood suffers from a dearth of movie consciousness...perhaps it's even a surfeit. But now I'm sounding like Nitzsche.

amateurist (amateurist), Friday, 18 July 2003 14:15 (twenty-two years ago)

You might want to add the films of Stephanie Rothman--The Velvet Vampire, The Working Girls--to that list, but she was working at the margins of commercial film production (closest analogue: Koji Wakamatsu in Japan).

amateurist (amateurist), Friday, 18 July 2003 14:20 (twenty-two years ago)

I think Kenan missed the tone of my use of "proper"...

Spencer Chow (spencermfi), Friday, 18 July 2003 16:16 (twenty-two years ago)

http://www.elsewhere.org/cgi-bin/postmodern/

Chris P (Chris P), Friday, 18 July 2003 16:42 (twenty-two years ago)

I have fooled several rhetoric PHD candidates with that site! They wrote back, "I'm not sure I understood where the author was going with that"!

Spencer Chow (spencermfi), Friday, 18 July 2003 16:48 (twenty-two years ago)

I would just like to point out that both jess and I were, at one point in our lives, film students. Thanks to film theory study, his favorite film--as noted--is M.V.P. and my only method for doing any film criticism is pronouncing things "Best/Worst movie I've ever seen! OMG!"

Ally (mlescaut), Friday, 18 July 2003 17:23 (twenty-two years ago)

Deuce Bigelow: Male Gigolo is the movie I think about when I read theory.

Spencer Chow (spencermfi), Friday, 18 July 2003 17:30 (twenty-two years ago)

I can't even think about watching anything remotely actually theoretically good ever again. I'm like, "What? 400 Blows? Turn that shit off and put back on my Serving Sara!!"

Ally (mlescaut), Friday, 18 July 2003 17:49 (twenty-two years ago)

That's funny Ally. I wasn't a film student and I'm pretty content with theory, or at least some kinds of theory. I also don't have this sense that certain classic films have been forced on me.

amateurist (amateurist), Friday, 18 July 2003 18:13 (twenty-two years ago)

I think this says more about the educational system than it does about the actual tenents of theoretical discourse because I've had the same problem with every subject I've enjoyed a lot and then decided to make into my major (see also: journalism, political science, linguistics)

Ally (mlescaut), Friday, 18 July 2003 18:24 (twenty-two years ago)

ally's is a good point: i studied maths and philosophies of logic and science as a student, so critical theory is still all like a holiday to me (my main issue with it is bad writing, not — necessarily — bad thinking)

mark s (mark s), Friday, 18 July 2003 21:32 (twenty-two years ago)

ams by gloss i just meant that there's a big ol' rupture between levi-strauss and lacan, for instance. and to just group them as semioticians misses all that. I mean this article feels like it was written about crude radical film theory circa '65 or something, rather than anything remotely modern. also the lecture on benjamin at the end seemed fine if on a bit played topic (but hell thats what lectures in school are for) and only made absurd by the descriptions and the funny punctuation.

Sterling Clover (s_clover), Saturday, 19 July 2003 04:39 (twenty-two years ago)

But Sterling the article isn't intended to address debates w/in that branch of film studies--it's questioning the relevance of that mode of discourse for film study at all. Levi-Strauss and Lacan--neither of them film scholars mind--don't seem terribly relevant to this article's purpose, such as it can be divined.

amateurist (amateurist), Saturday, 19 July 2003 04:49 (twenty-two years ago)

The article attacks the gen. idea of "semiotics" and film as decoding symbol systems of etc... but Lacan rejected scads of that and Levi-Strauss as you'll recall was the godfather of "structuralism" so natch the whole "post-structuralist" movement which DOMINATES film crit infact takes its name from a REJECTION of him. So if the article wants to oppose levi-strauss' mode of thought it needs to explain why its opposition is difft. than say that of zizek. Also why don't we get hit-pieces on english departments? Coz anti-intellectualism flies better in the film world while its still daft to be seen championing harlequin romances. Also its totally dishonest to equate the rather politically mild liberal hoo-hah of most rhetoric/semotics/film-crit (however r-radical the theoretical proposals are) with reds under the bed, and any real engagement with the debates divisions etc. that seperate a levi-strauss from a benjamin from a gramsci from a chairman mao from a derrida should have made that clear right away.

Sterling Clover (s_clover), Saturday, 19 July 2003 04:57 (twenty-two years ago)

Also I look at the title for this thread and think about the single from Mr. Cheeks.

Sterling Clover (s_clover), Saturday, 19 July 2003 04:58 (twenty-two years ago)

The actual content of Branigan's lecture on Benjamin wasn't relayed in that article, only the author's conviction that Branigan was a blowhard who was putting his students to sleep. I don't see how you could decide it was a "bit played" on the evidence.

Insofar as it seems like a critique of theory ca. 1965, well, at that point in time much of this was new--hence the term New Criticism--and by now it is entrenched to the point where it can dominate an entire film or English department. It's that dominance, I think, that the article objects to as much as the content of the criticism itself, so it seems reasonably relevant to 2003. In 1965 it wouldn't have made sense to rail against the hegemony of what was then a kind of insurgency!

(x-post)

Yes Sterling the article does gloss over the differences between film theorists--its citation of Thompson and Bordwell as being emblematic of a postmodernist trend in film study is the first major gaffe--but I still that all the theorists you mention, at least as far as their impact on film studies is concerned, share some common traits (even if they are only superficial ones, like using dense language, frequent neologisms, and importing concepts shakily across disciplines) and it is those commonalities to which I think the article is tacitly addressing itself.

The Reds thing I agree is out of date, and can partly be chalked up to Kevin Brownlow (who supplies the quote) being an old guy who is probably still fighting certain Cold War-era battles in his head. But even if it's no longer orthodox Marxism or even Marcuse-informed post-Marxism or whathaveyou, there is an undeniable political slant to much of contemporary criticism. Me, personally, I don't object to the *fact* of a politicized discourse but the particular nature of much of this particular politicized discourse. The author of the article in question is being a little ambiguous on that subject--it's unclear whether he shares the opinions of some of the people quoted.

amateurist (amateurist), Saturday, 19 July 2003 05:03 (twenty-two years ago)

i went through a crisis of concious a while ago cause i couldnt understand a hal foster review in partisan review (hes an art critic, theory heavy, impt)

what i came to was that there are two ways of looking at art and by extension film is that their are two ways of looking- extending on millars analogy-there are those who move arround every day, who are glad that it gets them from home to work to entertainments but never really think about what the implications of their choose of transportation.

then their is someone who loves this mode of transport (this can take many forms--ie the mechanic, or the city planner who loves trains, or the train spotter, or those who fret about aesthics.)

the two dont often meet, and the two dont often talk--(las an industry town but the same way detroit was, they make the movies, they dont really think about it and film theory is for those who trainspot or urban plan or like to tinker on cars)

also i hate auter theory.

anthony easton (anthony), Saturday, 19 July 2003 05:14 (twenty-two years ago)

the content of a bit of the benjamin lecture was there -- enuf for me to interpolate the points since they're standard benjamin-fare. they're simple points too -- generally the degree to which the camera concels social as well as physical relations. generally he's trying to get his students to realize that the camera can lie and the enormous gulf between reality and representation. also this whole "they are trying to teach a set of ideas = they are intolerant" line is the worst reactionary horowitzian bullshit and it makes me want to hurl. ideas clash, asshole, and if yr. ideas are so damn good then fight for them, just like the current crowd fought for THEIRS. don't just stand in the corner and moan about "academic facism" coz they don't like yr. ideas. I mean this article has no systemic or even subtle answer as to what is missing to transform theory only a general opposition to it in PRiNCIPLE (i.e. to politicization or discussion of politicization at all) nor does film-theory DOMINATE insofar as 14-units is still pretty piss-shit esp. for a school like ucsb on the QUARTER system (14 credits = 1 weak quarter = < 1/12 of yr. college education as a film major!) Some fucking dominance.

Anyway looking back I see you critiquing the article and defending it from other critiques but I still don't know what yr. trying to SALVAGE from it -- unf. it seems that even if film theory is ripe for an overhaul the article doesn't suggest any particular mechanism for one.

Sterling Clover (s_clover), Saturday, 19 July 2003 05:27 (twenty-two years ago)

I've myself experienced a film education (or fragments of one) along the sort of humanist/Bazinian lines that the article seems to recommend. I am enormously grateful for it, for it taught me to appreciate style. And in introduced (or reintroduced) me to a host of filmmakers and films that are generally marginal to the sort of film study called out in this essay: people like Ford, Mizoguchi, Borzage. This education had its limitations, certainly, in its orthodox auterism (i.e. the unit of study was The Director and His Vision of Life, which sort of sidelined the studio system, genre, acting, etc.) and its vague chauvanism (me to professor: "You should check out some recent Iranian films, they're very interesting." professor: "Oh, you mean they're sociologically interesting?"). But it's still the best part of my limited formal film education and I don't think the aforemention limitations are really addressed fruitfully by the vast majority of high theory/New Criticism-informed film study.

The model of film studies with which I'm most sympathetic is probably neoformalism--a better term for which would be "historical poetics," which is informed by a theory of how films function but is also grounded in very close analysis of the materials of a film's construction as well as the historical/cultural context in which films are made. This mode has its own limitations to be sure, which other people are probably more sensitive to than myself.

As stated above, Sterling, my big problem with this article is it confuses "film theory" with "film theory as it is practied by a number of American scholars today, including some at UCSB" and doesn't seem to allow for any middle ground between an "appreciation" approach and something more theory-laden, nor does it hint at the fruitful overlap between these two things.

amateurist (amateurist), Saturday, 19 July 2003 05:42 (twenty-two years ago)

Apologies for all the typos. It's late and I'm doing French homework with one half of my brain while checking ILE with the other.

amateurist (amateurist), Saturday, 19 July 2003 05:46 (twenty-two years ago)

I had a funny experience in my film theory classes. I was taking them as electives and was totally into them. Like John says way up above, I couldn't think of anything more fun than watching movies and then sitting around and talking and arguing about them through different prisms -- and the prisms themselves, the theories, were fascinating. But some portion of the students in the classes were actual film majors who were required to take a certain number of theory classes. And in every class, there'd be at least one guy who'd raise his hand and say, "You know, I really just want to make movies. I'm not learning anything useful here."

I thought this was kind of funny, but the significance of it didn't hit home until I was taking theory classes in my own major -- journalism -- and, again, loving them and completely getting off on the whole media&society thing, and some of my classmates, people I worked on the college paper with, raised their hands and said the exact same thing: "You know, I really just want to be a reporter..." And it completely pissed me off. It just struck me like, you want to go out and be part of this thing, this whole complicated system, which is powerful and interesting but also potentially dangerous, but you don't understand how it works or what it does and you don't even want to understand it? It seemed irresponsible to me.

I mean, of course theoretical language can get dense and lose itself in the woods. And of course there's bullshit and personal agendas and fusty politics(the kid talking about communist revolution isn't alarming, but he is kind of embarassing). But if critical thinking were better taught and encouraged in schools, society, etc., it would be easier for everyone to tell the bullshit from the insight. As noted above, we teach philosophy but we don't teach how to do it, passive reception rather than inquiry. I think the article is well intended and even raises some valid issues, but it's too easy for this kind of thing to turn into blanket condemnation of the whole idea of intellectual inquiry.

JesseFox (JesseFox), Saturday, 19 July 2003 06:07 (twenty-two years ago)

(and yeah, the "my daughter's no C student!" shtick is pretty sad. Dude...your daughter's a C student.)

JesseFox (JesseFox), Saturday, 19 July 2003 06:13 (twenty-two years ago)

Sterling's last few posts are top. Jesse's too.

amateurist, you lost me with the last post. "Vague chauvanism" and "orthodox auteurism," two shortcomings of classic film criticism and instruction that you mention, are in fact very precisely (TOO precisely?) addressed by a whole smorgasbord of post-structuralist critiques. So you really have something to turn to, there. What I'd like to hear is what you think these pomo freak-a-doodles can get out of turning to a Bazinian/humanist tradition of film thought (must confess I don't exactly know what this means!)

re auteurism: egomaniacal control freaks WILL be auteurs, whether their comrades-in-art want it or not. For "egomaniacal control freaks" I was going to list examples, starting with Kubrick, but that's a gimme. I was going to say Cassavetes, too, since he's often held up as a lone visionary rebel, famous for roughing up Peter Falk just to get him "in the mood". He may have been a visionary, a classic example of someone who created a new and instantly recognizable genre for himself. But it wasn't just for himself, it was for others who wanted it, if they wanted it, because his style was built on a certain kind of process, not on whatever daydreams he felt like hammering into perpetuity a la Kubrick (or Matthew Barney). What kind of process?

I differ from the working method advocated by Stanislavski and followed by the Actors Studio, which involves group discussion of the characters. For me each role must be an individual's conception as well as an individual creation. If each role is the result of communal study by director and ensemble, everything will dovetail; it will all be nice and neat and smooth; but the conflict of the characters won't be truthful. The actors don't discuss their interpretations sitting around in a group. The general theme of the work, of course, must be studied by the whole group, so that we share the same overall conception; but each actor must come at his own interpretation of his role, without the sort of group study and mutual criticism which one associates with Method work.
I wonder if Sébastian is around any more, we were going back and forth once about why I think the actor and director need to be at odds, and he wondered why I insisted on "competition" on the set. I don't see it as competition, I just think everybody has their own job to do, and if everybody really pays attention to the job they're doing they won't have time to do anyone else's. Naturally if you have a different conception of what works you're going to have to work it out; it doesn't need to be confrontational, but people are people and sometimes it can get that way. On a really bad day you could find yourself roughing up Columbo.

Dogme also famously has a process. It's a different process than Cassavetes's, with different results, but if Dogme movies are recognizable as Dogme movies (and many of them are) it's not because of a stylistic unity amongst themselves but for the particular kind of buzz generated by the machinery that produced them.

Tracer Hand (tracerhand), Saturday, 19 July 2003 06:42 (twenty-two years ago)

That last sentence sort of banal - I want to say that auteurism, or top-down generalship of mood, tone, hold-your-head-just-like-that-please, (and in the editing room later, cut on the beat, cue reaction shot, ad nauseum), though it may not totally short-circuit what everbody else has to offer, massages it into a unity that I daresay exists only in political speeches and has no place in a real cinema for and of human beings

of course you may not be interested in a cinema for and of human beings, Kubrick and Spielberg to thread, please!!

Tracer Hand (tracerhand), Saturday, 19 July 2003 06:55 (twenty-two years ago)

I understand the many arguments against auterism, and they're all relevant and legitimate up to a point. But that point is right around where you have to admit that there is such a thing as a David Lynch movie or a Michael Bay movie, and these things are identifiable and have consistent patterns and there are reasons for those patterns. And sure, the actual guy attached to the name "David Lynch" or "Michael Bay" might only be part of those patterns, but the name serves as a handy stand-in for the whole combined megillah of partnerships and economic structures and artistic vision and so on. F'rinstance, watch two David Lynch movies, one shot by Frederic Elmes and one not; and then watch two Frederic Elmes movies, one directed by David Lynch and one not. You'll be able to spot commonalities in the Elmes movies, but nothing like the commonalities in the Lynch movies. Which (x-post) doesn't necessarily have to mean top-down generalship -- just that whatever the director's approach is, it will have a significant influence on the outcome.

JesseFox (JesseFox), Saturday, 19 July 2003 07:10 (twenty-two years ago)

i think the thing that pisses me off most about the auter is simple, ie film is a collective medium, and to consider it the work of one singluar vision seems absurd.
(ie a lynch movie is only a lynch movie because certain writers or cinematographers (ie peter deming)

anthony easton (anthony), Saturday, 19 July 2003 07:15 (twenty-two years ago)

Right, sure, true. But just because it's collective doesn't mean it's a partnership of equals. I mean, both of these statements are true:

-- Blue Velvet is a David Lynch movie and Night on Earth is a Jim Jarmusch movie

--Blue Velvet and Night on Earth are both Frederic Elmes movies

But are they equally true? You might argue yes. I might argue no.

JesseFox (JesseFox), Saturday, 19 July 2003 07:42 (twenty-two years ago)

i havent seen night on earth.

anthony easton (anthony), Saturday, 19 July 2003 08:09 (twenty-two years ago)

"significant influence on the outcome" agreed, but since their influence on the outcome isn't based on process but on personal whims and private obsessions it doesn't live beyond them, it's not transferable, it's not even close to the same level of contribution to the field. Somebody will have a scene with a midget in it and someone (irritatingly) goes "ooh such a David Lynch moment!" To actually imitate Lynch or Jarmusch might not only be impossible but people might look at you askance: "look at him, trying to live in someone else's skin, trying to copy someone else's style." But to imitate Cassavetes or Dogme doesn't carry the same suspicion, since imitation in this case means following a similar process of filmmaking, and it can lead to all kinds of fruitful results.

Tracer Hand (tracerhand), Saturday, 19 July 2003 15:51 (twenty-two years ago)

my theory is that if you're really paying attention to your actors it's impossible to be an auteur, it's impossible to Get What You Want i.e. when actors reply to an interview question "how was it working with [x]" and they say "well he REALLY knew what he wanted", shorthand for he was all up in my grill and forced me to do things a certain way; i think neither Jarmusch nor Lynch pay attention to their actors nearly enough (EXCEPT for "Stranger Than Paradise" where surprise surprise an arbitrary working process that was generous to the actors (each scene is one long take on the camera) resulted in something not only totally unduplicatable but something you can imagine other stories being applied to; somebody could riff on that method and process and create another film just as gripping)

Tracer Hand (tracerhand), Saturday, 19 July 2003 16:07 (twenty-two years ago)

But can't whims and private obsessions=process? I mean, I see what you're saying about dogme...but it seems to me the similarities between dogme films are more superficial than the similarities between Jim Jarmusch films. Jarmusch's whims and obsessions take the form of the process Jarmusch uses to make films. It's a process just as much as dogme, but since it's also completely bound up with who Jim Jarmusch is, is not as easily codified or duplicated. But why is duplicatability important? I'm not sure I get that.

Lynch and Jarmusch do both tend to play with types rather than characters, but that's because they're interested in what those types mean and represent -- semiotics (oh god, no!). On the other hand, Lynch got a fucking amazing performance from Naomi Watt, and I don't think that was by accident. And Johnny Depp in Dead Man is one of my favorite pieces of acting, even if it's not conventional character development. Oh, and christ, The Straight Story is all about the actor, and it's a nice piece of work.

JesseFox (JesseFox), Saturday, 19 July 2003 16:29 (twenty-two years ago)

i studied maths and philosophies of logic and science as a student, so critical theory is still all like a holiday to me

I'm a "liberal arts" major so anything printed on paper is basically a big pain in the ass for me. Does anybody offer a gradute program in Lego Spacecraft?

Millar (Millar), Saturday, 19 July 2003 16:36 (twenty-two years ago)

there was one at keele in the 80s but when they finished building it they all got inside and departed for another dimension

they said they'd come back for the second wave but they never did :(

mark s (mark s), Saturday, 19 July 2003 16:49 (twenty-two years ago)

For some reason I find this discussion particularly boring. Perhaps because I've been on set for 12 hours a day for the last month.

Theory is fine. I had to go through it. But people who talk in theoretic circles are often the ones who are trying to figure out what I'm doing by instinct, and explain it back to me in a way that I don't care about.

Jimmymod (really. my computer melted), Sunday, 20 July 2003 02:15 (twenty-two years ago)

good for you

s1utsky (slutsky), Sunday, 20 July 2003 03:10 (twenty-two years ago)

two points: first jm you need theory to convince a director why what yr. doing cinamatographywise is wise and also to learn what you don't yet have by instinct.

second: semoitics has a funny adjunct in that it creates itself. if there weren't phallic symbols before freud, there sure are now! i.e. the popularization of "decoding" of film & c. has made possible the ENTRENCHMENT of the symbol systems ostensibly "decoded".

Sterling Clover (s_clover), Sunday, 20 July 2003 07:27 (twenty-two years ago)

LMAO at point one.

Girolamo Savonarola, Sunday, 20 July 2003 15:50 (twenty-two years ago)

one year passes...
Can I get a simple definition of "suture"?

Leeeter van den Hoogenband (Leee), Sunday, 14 November 2004 03:02 (twenty-one years ago)

Ah, it's based on Lacan, which *projectile vomits*.

Leeeter van den Hoogenband (Leee), Sunday, 14 November 2004 03:08 (twenty-one years ago)

From Kaja Silverman's The Subject of Semiotics

"Suture is the name given to the procedures by means of which cinematic texts confer subjectivity upon their viewers."

Spencer Chow (spencermfi), Sunday, 14 November 2004 03:22 (twenty-one years ago)

In other words, it's the way movies place the viewer in a subjective position within the fiction. The reason it's interesting is how movies, through that subjective position, inform and reinforce ideology, identity, gender etc etc.

Spencer Chow (spencermfi), Sunday, 14 November 2004 03:30 (twenty-one years ago)

Thanks Spencer! Esp. for not resorting to Lacanian language.

Leeeter van den Hoogenband (Leee), Sunday, 14 November 2004 03:36 (twenty-one years ago)

Haha - I thought I'd spare you! (he is of course essential if you want to go deeper)

Spencer Chow (spencermfi), Sunday, 14 November 2004 03:48 (twenty-one years ago)

And boy do I not want to!

Leeeter van den Hoogenband (Leee), Sunday, 14 November 2004 03:55 (twenty-one years ago)

Deeper! Deeper! Deeper!

http://www.autographworld.com/catalog/newimages/lovelace1.jpg

Are you a Lacanian, or a Lacanican't?

Remy (x Jeremy), Sunday, 14 November 2004 04:59 (twenty-one years ago)

(Tell me about linguistic slippage, and I'll show you a hooter!)

Remy (x Jeremy), Sunday, 14 November 2004 05:00 (twenty-one years ago)

Sorry Mark, I didn't mean to be rude but I think one of the problems I have with much contemporary film study is that it presumes an oppositional position, presumes that there was some point at which film failed or became tainted....

and...someone gave a lecture on this very topic last week. and...i failed to attend.

amateur!!st, Sunday, 14 November 2004 07:29 (twenty-one years ago)

one year passes...
this article is no longer online

terry lennox. (gareth), Tuesday, 21 February 2006 16:11 (twenty years ago)


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