Sunday, 10 April 2016

Reference

Reference
  1. Bordwell, D. J. (1974). FRENCH IMPRESSIONIST CINEMA: FILM CULTURE, FILM THEORY, AND FILM STYLE (Order No. 7513726). Available from ProQuest Dissertations & Theses Global. (302676424). Retrieved from http://search.proquest.com/docview/302676424?accountid=50207
  2. DOZORETZ, W. H. (1982). GERMAINE DULAC: FILMMAKER, POLEMICIST, THEORETICIAN (FRANCE) (Order No. 8307822). Available from ProQuest Dissertations & Theses Global. (303072267). Retrieved from http://search.proquest.com/docview/303072267?accountid=50207
  3. Johnson, C. T. (2000). Symbolist transformation: The shift from stage to screen in france (Order No. 9994104). Available from ProQuest Dissertations & Theses Global. (304592909). Retrieved from http://search.proquest.com/docview/304592909?accountid=50207
  4. Blumer, R. H.. (1970). The Camera as Snowball: France 1918-1927. Cinema Journal9(2), 31–39. http://doi.org/10.2307/1225201
  5. CELESTIN, R.. (2009). Lost in Globalized Space? A Certain French Cinema Abroad. Yale French Studies, (115), 31–46. Retrieved from http://www.jstor.org/stable/25679753
  6. Abel, R.. (1985). On the Threshold of French Film Theory and Criticism, 1915-1919. Cinema Journal,25(1), 12–33. http://doi.org/10.2307/1224837
  7. Johnson, C. T. (2000). Symbolist transformation: the shift from stage to screen in France, 170-235.
  8. Jonathan.Rosenbaum. (2016, February 13). Meet Marcel L’Herbier. Retrieved from http://www.jonathanrosenbaum.net/2016/02/meet-marcel-lherbier/
  9. The editors of Encyclopædia Britannic (2016). Abel Glance. Retrieved from http://www.britannica.com/biography/Abel-Gance





Film Analysis

Synopsis

The film starts with Jalil waiting for his friends who were still in school settling with other stuff. He waited in a mamak stall for a long period of time and was looking around and nothing else to do. Then, his friend called and asked him to go to the night market. While finding his friends in the night market, he bumped into CL and fell in love instantly. The story ends with Jalil sudden heart felt and his feelings of love lingering that night.

Film Analysis

Several techniques from the French Impressionism movement were used in this film. After the sun setting scene, Jalil looks around and his minds begins to float away. Shots of the surrounding were shot and edited into slow-motion to bring out the feeling long waiting and time passing by very slowly. The slow-motion part was accompanied with effects of hollow space sound that can brings out the sense of spaced out and emptiness of his mind. These technique present the psychological state of Jalil when he feels boring and dreary. Everything comes to halt when his phone suddenly rang and this scene was edited abruptly to cut the day-dreaming of Jalil. Besides, the first fragment of the film has added yellowish colour to give impression of the warm evening.
Then, the second part covers the drunkenness of Jalil’s mind. He was feeling dizzy, frustrated and certainly tired as well. Point of view shots were included to portray his feelings. Close-up shots up with framing up to his neck were to show the crowd that was straggling and suffocating him. And then, he met the love his life. Everything goes into detail and this is where slow-motion comes in to place. Background sound was toned down while he pauses and watched her swallowed by the crowd. Jalil’s heart skipped a beat and was stunted by her beauty thus the slow-motion effect. And this film ends with a love song that continues until the final blackout. Also, a blue colour tone was used to depict coldness and night chills. 

Video Tribute 



The Impressionist

Director’s Story




 Marcel L'Herbier (23 April 1888 – 26 November 1979) had made movies for thirty-five years. (Johnson, 2000, p.213). He was a French filmmaker and had made more than 40 films. He was the founder and the first President of the Institut des hautes études cinématographiques(IDHEC) the most famous French film school in1943-1969. (
Jonathan,2016). He directed his.first film, Rose-France, a poetic film.using many.camera techniques. He had made 14 silent films and 30 sound films.




 Abel Gance (25 October 1889 – 10 November 1981) had made movies for sixty-two years. (Johnson, 2000, p.213). He was a French film director, produce, actor and writer. He is famous with three silent films which is J’accuse (1919), La Roue (1923) and the monumental Napoleon (1927). J’accuse is the most symbolist film. He began his theatrical acting career in 1907 when he was seventeen years old. After he started his own production house,Le Film d’Art Company, he was assigned as the artistic directior. His first sound film was La Fin du monde. His best known film was Napoleon (1927). He used superimposition, hand-coloured film and rapid cutting to emphasize the cinematic movement. He used three cameras to film this film. (The editors of Encyclopædia Britannic, 2016).






Louis Delluc (14 October 1890 – 22 March 1924). He was an Impressionist French film director. After 1909, he worked as a journalist and began writing to the prestigious weekly. (Johnson, 2000, p.172). In 1917, he began his career in film criticism. He put the most effort as film critic, scriptwriting and filmmaker. During 1917-1914, Delluc wrote eight scenarios, Fumee noire (1920), Fievre (1921), Le Chemin d’ Ernoa (1921) ,La Femme du nulle part (1922), Le Silence (1920), Le Tonnerre (1921) and L’ Inondation (1923). He directed all the films except La Fete Espacrnole (1919). (Johnson, 2000, p.173)



Germaine Dulac (17 November 1882 – 20 July 1942). She was a French filmmaker. She founded a film company before moving into Impressionist territory. La Souriante Madame Beudet (1922) was her famous Impressionist film. This film has references to Baudelaire and Debussy (symbolist artists). She began her career as a frama critic for the femeinist journal La Francause and La Fronde in 1909. She began her film career in 1914 when.her.friend offered a position in the film Caliqula. The next year, she founded a company,ELIA Films, with her husband. In 1919, she collaborated with.Delluc on La Fete espagnole. (Johnson 2000, p.175). She spend 13 years in her film career with 26 films. 

Characteristics

Characteristics found in French Impressionists’ films

            French Impressionism has used several techniques to display the emotional impressionism sense in film. French Impressionism gives emphasis on exploring psychological causes and often shows what the character is experiencing or thinking. This movement had definitely impacted Hollywood Cinema from several aspects.

            The Impressionists regarded cinema as a symbolic language and set about trying to build up its visual vocabulary. (Blumer, 1970, p.32). Their desire were to make films that were less tied to literal realities but using visual images to reveal and strip down to the external realities. They tried placing subjective feelings into screens. While normal narrative cinema tells the story of events, this cinema did the opposite. Abel Gance once said “Why are people making films which are about nothing but events, when they have at their disposal such a marvellous medium for psychological stories? They go on making films about people chasing each other, killing each other, or trying to commit suicide, but why not films which show feelings instead of just action?” Techniques were then discovered to expose the internal psychological state of characters. 

Based on the film form of French Impressionism, the basis of film should be the idea of the visual rhythm which is the core from the impressionists’ belief that emotions rather than stories (Bordwell & Thompson, 2010). Visual rhythm is an idea that the impressionists believes in which is by emphasizing the human emotion rather than the narrative of film. Rhythm can be formed within the attentive juxtaposition of the movements and the length of shots. But in classical Hollywood editing, shots are not dramatically juxtaposed together. For instance, a close-up shot would not appear right after a long shot. Rhythmic editing creates visual that allows audiences to flow with the character’s emotions. Rhythm was important for the impressionists as it is a way to emphasize the character’s reaction to a story rather than just portraying an action itself.

Again, French Impressionism is to display the psychological exploration or emotion of character on screen. Another way to convey a character’s subjectivity is through superimpositions that conveys a character’s thought of memories. Superimpositions is an editing technique that uses two different visual overlaying one another. An example can be seen in Abel Gance’s film La Roue (1923). In figure 1.1 the face of Norma is superimposed over the smoke from a locomotive, representing the fantasy of the engine driver, who is in love with her.


Figure 1.1 Superimposition shot in La Roue (1923)

Then, the impressionists uses quick editing to explore character’s mental state. Also in La Roue (1923), fast cut of different visuals were edited to show the nervousness of the people because of the train that was going to crash. In figure 1.2, 1.3 and 1.4 shows the different scene that were put together in fast cut.


Figure 1.2 The train going fast



Figure 1.3 Sisif on the train getting nervous


Figure 1.4 The view of the track showing the fast going train

 Besides that, French Impressionism illustrate character subjectivity, optical devices such as filters, out of focus lens and slow motion were used. A filter is placed over the lens to achieve a subjective effect and by blurring the lens imitates the feeling of a character. Also, point of view shot is best to show what a character is seeing and was a major technique used by the impressionists. This has influence some the work in modern day cinemas. In Chungking Express (Wong Kar-Wai, 1994), a scene where the police chases after the escaping criminal, visuals were blurred and camera movements were fast. In figure 1.5 shows the depiction of the chaos of the situation and the dizziness of the mind of the police.


Figure 1.5 Blurry visuals of the chase scene in Chungking Express (1994)

Apart from that, lighting is very significant as the illumination of a shot may create the composition in order to guide us towards certain objects and actions. French Impressionism can be shown by using lighting because it helps to bring out and strengthen the feeling of the film. According to Kristin Thompson and David Bordwell (2003, 96), filmmaker may place the filters over the lens to enhance the effect of the shot. Lastly, filmmakers will control over the actors’ behaviour and movement. According to David Bordwell and Kristin Thonmpson (2010, 138), mise-en-scene allows the actors to express their feelings and thoughts as well as create various kinetic patterns. The audience understand the story through the actors’ facial expression, gestures and movements. Therefore, the filmmakers will always control the actors’ actions and movements.
Sound editing can also be seen influencing the modern cinema. In Saving Private Ryan (Steven Spielberg, 1998), the background sound was edited to like Captain Miller was in an empty space and the surrounding sounds went almost silent. This depicts the psychological state of Captain Miller of being shocked and could not believe the reality. In figure 1.6, a soldier shouting at him and was not heard by Captain Miller. 

Figure 1.6 Soldier shouting at Captain Miller

            

History and Development

History and Development of French Impressionist Film

French Impressionist Cinema was popular in the year of 1918 to 1929. It was also known as the avant-garde or narrative avant-garde. The periodization of French Impressionism included the use of pictorialism, montage and then followed by the diffusion. During the World War I which occurred from the year 1914 to the year 1918, French film production declined incredibly. According to Bordwell, D. and Thompson, K. (2010), "World War I struck a serious blow to the French film industry. Personnel were conscripted, many film studios were shifted to wartime uses, and much export was halted” (p.464).  

The only two major firms that were left after the war were Pathé Fréres and Leon Gaumont. In 1915, as the vacant screens had to be occupied, American films started to enter France. By the end of 1917, Hollywood cinema had successfully owned the market with the production of Pearl White, Douglas Fairbanks, Chaplin and Ince films, De Mille's The Cheat, and William S. Hart. After the war, the French filmmakers decided to try new methods in order to regain the market, and most of them imitated the methods and genres of the Hollywood production.
During the year of 1918, a new generation of young filmmakers believed that cinema was an art of emotion. Therefore, between 1918 and 1929, they started to produce Impressionist films which focused on the intimate psychological narrative of the characters. The Impressionist techniques used in the films such as the psychological narrative, camera work and editing had successfully gain popularity since 1918. “In the mid-1920s, most filmmakers formed their own independent companies but remained within the mainstream commercial industry by renting studio facilities and releasing their films through established firms. The other alternative movement, Surrealism, lay largely outside the film industry. Allied with the Surrealist movement in other arts, these filmmakers relied on their own means and private patronage. France in the 1920s offers a striking instance of how different film movements may coexist at the same time and place” (Bordwell & Thompson, 2010, p.464).


Unfortunately, Impressionist movement was said to have halted by 1929 as the production costs were increasing and the interests of its filmmakers became more diverse. However, the Impressionist techniques in this film movement such as the psychological narrative, camera work and editing were still being used in some films after French Impressionism was said to be triggered off. “They still continued to operate, for example, in the work of Alfred Hitchcock and Maya Deren, in Hollywood montage sequences, and in certain American genres and styles (the horror film, film noir)” (Bordwell & Thompson, 2010, p.466). Even until today, when a filmmaker wants to show and emphasize what and how a character is feeling or experiencing psychologically, he or she may choose to use the Impressionist forms of camerawork and editing such as slow motion, superimpositions and distorted visuals.