Realist cinema as world cinema : non-cinema, intermedial passages, total cinema
Autor
Nagib, Lúcia
Institución
Resumen
This book is about films and filmmakers committed to reality. For them,
the world is not a mere construct or discourse, but made of people, animals,
plants and objects that physically exist, thrive, suffer and die. They feel
part of, and responsible for, this material world and want to change it for
the better. ‘Realism’, this book argues, is what defines these films’ mode
of production and binds them together across world cinema history and
geography.
The idea that ‘realism’ could serve as the common denominator across the
vast range of productions usually labelled as ‘world cinema’ is widespread
and seemingly uncontroversial. Thomas Elsaesser (2009: 3), for example,
starts his insightful essay ‘World Cinema: Realism, Evidence, Presence’ by
declaring: ‘European art/auteur cinema (and by extension, world cinema) has
always defined itself against Hollywood on the basis of its greater realism’.
The potted history contained in this formula suggests that world cinema
started in Europe, more precisely with Italian neorealism in the 1940s,
which, on the basis of a documentary approach to the real, offered fertile
ground for the development of art and auteur cinema. Turning its back on
the Nazi-fascist propaganda machine as much as on Hollywood fantasy, this
new realist strand unveiled on screen the gritty reality of a poverty-stricken,
devastated Europe in the aftermath of the Second World War. As we know,
the raw aesthetics and revelatory power of this foundational movement
inspired a flurry of subsequent (social-)realist schools in the world, such as
Indian independent cinema in the 1950s, Brazilian Cinema Novo in the 1960s,
African post-independence cinemas in the 1970s, the New Iranian Cinema
in the 1980s, Danish Dogme 95 in the 1990s and many other new waves and
new cinemas, remaining influential up to today. Neorealism was moreover
the touchstone of André Bazin’s concept of cinematic realism, the world’s
most foundational and enduring film theory ever written, albeit in the form
of short magazine articles – 2,600 of them, in the count of Bazin specialist
Dudley Andrew (2010: 13) – left behind after his death at a mere 40 years of
age.
Ítems relacionados
Mostrando ítems relacionados por Título, autor o materia.
-
The flexibility behind the cameras: transformations in the productive chain of cinema and the impacts on the labor Market
Almeida, Ricardo Normanha Ribeiro de -
Vanguarda como margem e margem como vanguarda: um olhar sobre o cinema experimental de barbara hammer
Rocha, Gabriela Ribeiro -
Cinema de periferia : novas narrativas, representatividade e luta política
Anjos, Alinny Ayalla Cosmo dos