>Only the cinema has the possibility of truly fighting against time, thanks to montage. This microbe which is time, the cinema can come right to the end of it. But it was more advanced on this path before the sound cinema. Most likely because man is greater than language, greater than his words. I believe more in man than in his language.
"Cinema will have one century, that's all." - Chris Marker
Bentley Davis
cinema is a meme word
Jaxson Torres
>Only the cinema has the possibility of truly fighting against time, thanks to montage. This microbe which is time, the cinema can come right to the end of it
Has he never heard of a summary?
Nathan Bailey
Didn't even get that lol
Evan King
It's this same inema spammer all the time.
Owen Harris
yeah, cinema "got" the 20s thru 70s, peaking in 1969 before dying in 1981
Dylan James
Too many memes OP!
Full of dankness.
Jose Martin
>What is important is to be able to speak one’s own language, the language of cinema. It is often said that the cinema is a synthesis of the other arts, but I think this is wrong. For me, it dates from the tower of Babel, from before the division into different languages. For technical reasons, it appeared after the other arts, but, by nature, it precedes them. I try to make a pure cinema, which owes nothing to the other arts.
BTFO T F O
Nolan Myers
underageb&
Easton Williams
This is a pretty good thread OP
Never seen Veeky Forums this rustled
Luis Evans
and cinema can't capture the stream of consciousness it's a tie
Wyatt Foster
DELETE THIS YOU FUCKING FAGGOT!
Nathan Gomez
Plenty of good cinema since then. Just a few examples:
Time Bandits (1981) Fanny and Alexander (1982) Au revoir les enfants (1984) Vagabond (1985) The Mission (1986) Thérèse (1986) The Sacrifice (1986) Babbette's Feast (1987) The Killer (1989) Francesco (1989) Hard Boiled (1992) The Life and Passion of Jesus Christ (1993) Three Colors (1993-1994) Pulp Fiction (1994) Rushmore (1998) The Prince of Egypt (1998) Padre Pio: Miracle Man (2000) In The Mood for Love (2000) The Royal Tenenbaums (2001) The Devil's Backbone (2001) Fat Girl (2001) The Passion of the Christ (2004) Secret Sunshine (2007) Everlasting Moments (2008) Fish Tank (2009) Antichrist (2009) Certified Copy (2010) Tiny Furniture (2010) The Tree of Life (2011) La Havre (2011)
what is "truly" fighting against time and why does it matter in art? painting fights against time, even literature does.
Logan Smith
>Mel Gibsons gore Jesus >The Life and Passion of Jesus Christ (1993) What is this? >Wes Anderson films >The Prince of Egypt >Malick's most pompeus film
But thank you for including Gilliam, Fanny and Alexander, The Sacrifice, Three Colours, In the Mood for Love and Le Havre on this list tip-top-tier cinema
Jace Walker
...
Levi Morgan
You reckon I can find this online? Been itching to see it for a while now and I fear it's only on KaraGarga and the likes
Camden Ross
the microbe of montage isn't time, it's light. the end of which cinema can come to is light, which is essentially plebeian. Imagine if literature was about ink.
Well Stan Brakhage, Mekas and Robert Todd managed to do so convincingly, at least in my opinion, and I'm sure there are plenty more that manage to do so as well. I was at a indie fest (as in, people with
Juan Green
>Only literature has the possibility of truly fighting against reality, thanks to language. This microbe which is language, literature can come right to the end of it. Literature is most advanced on this path than cinema. Most likely because man is language and becomes greater through his words, not through his images. If one wishes to define and deny reality, one can only do so through language
Colton Reyes
won't you get banned for this?
I'm not really familiar with Todd, any recommendations for his works?
I've always had the opinion that stream of consciousness should be easy to translate to film.
John Lewis
The asshurt
Joshua Gray
Anything you can find on his Vimeo page really, Artificial Atmospheres and Cove are personal favourites - I don't know his works so well myself though, if I'm to be honest.
Grayson Reyes
>won't you get banned for this? apparently not
Landon Walker
Thanks mate, much appreciated. Guess it wasn't there last time I looked for it.
Owen Brooks
some of the shots were surprisingly amateurish in Artificial Atmosphere, imo. Especially between 2:45 and 3:00 Though I suppose that comes with the territory, conceptual films and all.
Other than that, it was certainly interesting. Reminded me of Under the Skin actually.
Thomas Morales
No, it is the spoken word. They are entirely different. Or have you not read any Plato?
Logan Adams
Your opinion is eternally invalid for enjoying the films of Wes Anderson
Brody Young
Nice meme
Ryan Cook
I don't think its that dire a problem to like Anderson films, they look, feel and sound fantastic My problem with Wes Anderson is mostly his stories and characters, which are shit
Cooper Wood
almost wholly false
Dominic Ross
This is almost completely wrong
Christian Price
My problem with Wes is that, though his concepts and premises differ, their execution in each film is nearly uniform. The same words can be used to describe his entire filmography: charming, picturesque, earnest, even magical. Wes for all intents and purposes is the author of many children's picture books.
Cooper Sanchez
>their execution in each film is nearly uniform
This I enjoy. Rather have a steady style than sell your ass for the different producers like Ridley Scott. Every good directors has a steady handmark and a few adjectives to describe their whole filmography: Ozu, Bergman, Fellini etc.
As Ebert said of Kaurismäki: 'Once you've seen one of his films, you've seen them all. But you have to see them all.'
Jack Green
It's not as easy to draw general terms for Kubrick or Paul Thomas Anderson.
I see your point, but there is a third option: 1) Pre-fab style = copy and paste = no innovation past the original 2) Inconsistent styles = weak degree of authorship = low artistic merit (meaning) 3) The third is a mastering of disparate styles, a conscious and continuous effort to challenge the self, to search for new "truths" in new territories. Here, what is consistent is the will, not the logistics. Kubrick, Picasso, Cage, maybe Tzara are examples.
It's obvious I still haven't seen much film, but I've experienced a good amount of art and music to learn to be wary of an unchanging style. Very simply, nothing new is being said.
Jackson Peterson
I appreciate your opinion and I think our differences are mostly caused by what we are looking for in film
I like filmmakers who show themselves on the screen and perfect their vision film by film without much variety, as in Bresson who found redemption in a jailbreak in A Man Escaped and an ass's death in Balthazar, while you look for great artistic innovation and progress which isn't as personal, as in Kubricks evolution from back-tracking trench dollyshots in Paths of Glory to the wildly forthgoing steadicam work in the hotel corridors in Shining
Also, to better understand my point of view, I suggest looking into Andre Bazin and the Cahiers de Cinema people, not necessarily their films, but their film critique and the auteur-theory
Ayden Martinez
A "perfected vision" is that artist's masterpiece. It is a masterpiece not solely because it "resolves" the personal history of the visionary, but because it can now stand autonomously in the company of other masterpieces, even from different mediums. Masterpieces can be compared to one another because they are so refined as to enter the "general case" - they are like examples or maxims whose meaning can be understood regardless of context. Perhaps what I'm getting at is that the masterpiece, the "perfected vision," exists beyond the creator, in a way that I can't yet articulate.
Thank you for the recommended reading and conversation.