Surrealist cinema
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Surrealist Manifesto |
Surrealist cinema is a modernist approach to film theory, criticism, and production with origins in Paris in the 1920s. Related to Dada cinema, Surrealist cinema is characterised by juxtapositions, the rejection of dramatic psychology, and a frequent use of shocking imagery. The first Surrealist film was The Seashell and the Clergyman from 1928, directed by Germaine Dulac from a screenplay by Antonin Artaud. Other films include Un Chien Andalou and L'Age d'Or by Luis Buñuel and Salvador Dalí; Buñuel went on to direct many more films, with varying degrees of Surrealist influence.
Theory
In his 2006 book Surrealism and Cinema, Michael Richardson argues that surrealist works cannot be defined by style or form, but rather as results of the practice of surrealism. Richardson writes: "Surrealists are not concerned with conjuring up some magic world that can be defined as 'surreal'. Their interest is almost exclusively in exploring the conjunctions, the points of contact, between different realms of existence. Surrealism is always about departures rather than arrivals."[1] Rather than a fixed aesthetic, Richardson defines surrealism as "a shifting point of magnetism around which the collective activity of the surrealists revolves."[1]
Surrealism draws upon irrational imagery and the subconscious mind. Surrealists should not, however, be mistaken as whimsical or incapable of logical thought;[2] rather, most Surrealists promote themselves as revolutionaries.[2]
History
Surrealism was the first literary and artistic movement to become seriously associated with cinema,[3] though it has also been a movement largely neglected by film critics and historians.[4]
The foundations of the movement coincided with the birth of motion pictures, and the Surrealists who participated in the movement were among the first generation to have grown up with film as a part of daily life.[3]
Breton himself, even before the launching of the movement, possessed an avid interest in film: while serving in the First World War, he was stationed in Nantes and, during his spare time, would frequent the movie houses with a superior named Jacques Vaché.[2][5] According to Breton, he and Vaché ignored movie titles and times, preferring to drop in at any given moment and view the films without any foreknowledge.[2][5] When they grew bored, they left and visited the next theater.[2] Breton's movie-going habits supplied him with a stream of images with no constructed order about them. He could juxtapose the images of one film with those of another, and from the experience craft his own interpretation.[2]
Referring to his experiences with Vaché, he once remarked, "I think what we [valued] most in it, to the point of taking no interest in anything else, was its power to disorient."[2] Breton believed that film could help one abstract himself from "real life" whenever he felt like it.[2]
Serials, which often contained cliffhanger effects and hints of "other worldliness," were attractive to early Surrealists.[3] Examples include Houdini's daredevil deeds and the escapades of Musidora and Pearl White in detective stories.[3] What endeared Surrealists most to the genre was its ability to evoke and sustain a sense of mystery and suspense in viewers.[3]
The Surrealists saw in film a medium which nullified reality's boundaries.[6] Film critic René Gardies wrote in 1968, "Now the cinema is, quite naturally, the privileged instrument for derealising (sic) the world. Its technical resources... allied with its photo-magic, provide the alchemical tools for transforming reality."[5]
Surrealist artists were interested in cinema as a medium for expression.[4] As cinema continued to develop in the 1920s, many Surrealists saw in it an opportunity to portray the ridiculous as rational.[4][7] Cinema provided more convincing illusions than its closest rival, theatre,[4] and the tendency for Surrealists to express themselves through film was a sign of their confidence in the adaptability of cinema to Surrealism's goals and requirements.[2] They were the first to take seriously the resemblance between film's imaginary images and those of dreams and the unconscious.[5][7] Luis Buñuel said, "The film seems to be the involuntary imitation of the dream."[5]
Surrealist filmmakers sought to re-define human awareness of reality by illustrating that the "real" was little more than what was perceived as real; that reality was subject to no limits beyond those mankind imposed upon it.[2] Breton once compared the experience of Surrealist literature to "the point at which the waking state joins sleep."[2] His analogy helps to explain the advantage of cinema over books in facilitating the kind of release Surrealists sought from their daily pressures.[2] The modernity of film was appealing to as well.[5]
Critics have debated whether "Surrealist film" constitutes a distinct genre. Recognition of a cinematographic genre involves the ability to cite many works which share thematic, formal, and stylistic traits.[8] To refer to Surrealism as a genre is to imply that there is repetition of elements and a recognizable, "generic formula" which describes their makeup.[6] Several critics have argued that, due to Surrealism's use of the irrational and on non-sequitur, it is impossible for Surrealist films to constitute a genre.[8]
While there are numerous films which are true expressions of the movement, many other films which have been classified as Surrealist simply contain Surrealist fragments. Rather than "Surrealist film" the more accurate term for such works may be "Surrealism in film."[8]
Surrealist films and filmmakers
Films of the original movement
- Entr'acte: a 22-minute, silent French film, written by René Clair and Francis Picabia, and directed by Clair, released December 4, 1924.[7]
- The Seashell and the Clergyman: a 31-minute, silent film, written by Antonin Artaud, and directed by Germaine Dulac, released in February 1928.
- L'Étoile de Mer: a 15-minute silent French film written and directed by Man Ray, released in 1928.
- Un Chien Andalou: a 16-minute, silent French film, written by Salvador Dalí and Luis Buñuel, and directed by Buñuel, released in 1929.[7]
- Les Mystères du Château de Dé: a 27 minute silent French film written and directed by Man Ray, released in 1929.
- L'Age d'Or: a 60-minute French film with sound, written by Dalí and Buñuel, and directed by Buñuel, released in 1930.[7]
- The Blood of a Poet: a 50-minute, silent French film, directed and written by Jean Cocteau, released in 1931.
Later films
Joseph Cornell produced surrealist films in the United States in the later 1930s (such as Rose Hobart in 1936). Antonin Artaud, Philippe Soupault, and Robert Desnos wrote screenplays for later films. Salvador Dalí designed a dream sequence for Alfred Hitchcock's film Spellbound (1945).
In 1946, Dalí and Walt Disney began work on a film called Destino; the project was finally finished in 2003.[9]
Works of American filmmaker and television director David Lynch such as Eraserhead (1979), Blue Velvet (1986), Twin Peaks (1990–91), Lost Highway (1997), Mulholland Drive (2001), or Inland Empire (2006), among others, have been considered to be surrealist,[10][11] as have the films of Spanish writer, screenwriter, playwright, film director and a member of Andre Breton's "Surrealist Group" Fernando Arrabal (I Will Walk Like a Crazy Horse), Chillian writer and director Alejandro Jodorowsky (Fando y Lis, El Topo, The Holy Mountain (1973 film), Santa Sangre),British director Dave Borthwick (The Secret Adventures of Tom Thumb), American director Stephen Sayadian (notably Dr. Caligari (film)), Greek director Nikos Nikolaidis (Evrydiki BA 2O37, The Wretches Are Still Singing, Sweet Gang, Morning Patrol, Singapore Sling, See You in Hell, My Darling, The Loser Takes It All. and The Zero Years), Czechoslovak director Jaromil Jireš (e.g. Valerie and Her Week of Wonders), and French directors Patrick Bokanowski (e.g. The Angel) and Jacques Rivette (e.g. Le Pont du Nord).
See also
- New French Extremity
- Non-narrative film
- Theatre of Cruelty
- Filmography of surrealism. in the Forum of poetic Cultures
References
- 1 2 Richardson, Michael (2006). Surrealism and Cinema. Oxford: Berg Publishers. p. 3.
- 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 Matthews, J. H. Surrealism in Film. University of Michigan Press, 1971.
- 1 2 3 4 5 Kovacs, Steven. From Enchantment to Rage: The Story of Surrealist Cinema. London: Farleigh Dickenson UP, 1980.
- 1 2 3 4 Matthews, J. H. "Preface." Surrealism and Film. Fayetteville: University of Michigan Press, 1970. p. vii-ix.
- 1 2 3 4 5 6 Short, Robert. The Age of Gold: Surrealist Cinema. Creation Books, 2003.
- 1 2 Gould, Michael. Surrealism and the Cinema: (Open-Eyed Screening). Cranbury: A.S. Barnes, 1976.
- 1 2 3 4 5 Williams, Linda. Figures of Desire: A Theory and Analysis of Surrealist Film. Urbana: University of Illinois Press, 1981.
- 1 2 3 Moine, Raphaelle; Taminiaux, Pierre (2006). "Surrealist Cinema to Surrealism in Cinema: Does a Surrealist Genre Exist in Film?". Yale French Studies 109: 98–114.
- ↑ Eggener, Keith L. "'An Amusing Lack of Logic': Surrealism and Popular Entertainment." American Art. 7.4 (1993): 30-45.
- ↑ Connelly, Thomas (March 2011). "Twin Peaks: Surrealism, Fandom, Usenet and X-ray Television" (PDF). Culture Critique (Claremont, California: Claremont Graduate University) 2 (1): Preface, 1–28. Retrieved 16 November 2012.
- ↑ Ebert, Roger (June 2001). "Mulholland Drive". Chicago Sun-Times. Retrieved 16 November 2012.