Title: Realism in Classical American Film
1Realism in Classical American Film
2Film as Illusion
- The old experience of the movie-goer, who
sees the world outside as an extension of the
film he has just left (because the latter is
intent upon reproducing the world of everyday
perceptions), is now the producers guideline.
The more intensely and flawlessly his techniques
duplicate empirical objects, the easier it is
today for the illusion to prevail that the
outside world is the straightforward continuation
of that presented on the screen. This purpose
has been furthered by mechanical reproduction
since the lighting was taken over by the sound
film. Theodor V. Adorno and Max Horkheimer,
Dialectic of Enlightenment, p. 126
3Film as Illusion
- FILM IS ILLUSION OF WHAT?
- Illusion that what you are watching is a real
world. spectators experience the diagetic
world as environment. Noël Burch - (diegetic in a story)
- Film as combination of imaginary signifiers
Christian Metz - (imaginary the state in which you cannot
distinguish between the real and the invented gt
Lacanian psychoanalysis - (signifier sign)
4Film as Illusion
- Woody Allens Purple Rose of Cairo (1985)
- Extreme exposition that film could work as
illusion
5Film as Illusion
- CLASSICAL AMERICAN FILM AS ILLUSIONIST FILM
- American cinema developed its techniques and
styles in order to dupe the spectator to take a
narrative and images for reality - Or to increase its reality and truth effects.
- The spectator is willing to accept illusion or
demand it in film.
6American Classics as Realist Films
- (Classical) Hollywood products between 1917and
1960 are considered as a type of realist films. - Why 1917 and 1960?
- By 1917 most American fiction adopted
fundamentally similar narrative strategies - PROSIBILITY
7American Classics as Realist Film
- The studio mode of production had been organized
around the division of labour, hierarchical
managerial system, factory-like system of
filmmaking - CONTINUATION of the established uniformity in
narrative and visual styles
8Classical American Film as Realist Film
- The 1960s - the end of Hollywoods traditions
- Studios moved to the production of television
programmes ? The breakdown of studio system
(stars turning free agents producers becoming
independent the death of B-movies and decrease
in demand for studio directors and staff)
9American Classics as Realist Films
- Challenge from international art cinema, e.g.
Ingmar Bergman, Akira Kurosawa, Italian
neorealists and French directors of Nouvelle
Vague - DIVERSIFICATION in contents and styles
10American Classics as Realist Films
- TECHNIQUES, STYLES AND STRATEGIES EMPLOYED TO
CREATE AN ILLUSION OF REALITY IN AMERICAN CINEMA - A) A story is the first key element.
- B) Uniformity is a basic attribute of the visual
style.
11Classical American Film as Realist Film
- C) The American cinema in this period purports to
be realistic in an Aristotelian sense - true to
the probable. - D) It strives to conceal its artifice through
visual uniformity and invisible storytelling. - E) It should be comprehensible and unambiguous.
12American Classics as Realist Films
- F) It should possess a fundamental emotional
appeal which transcends class and nature. - PROBABLE, CREDIBLE, NATURAL AND REAL
13American Classics as Realist Films
- Best Years of Our Lives (1946) directed by
William Wyler - About three ex-servicemen who try to cope with
their lives after returning from the WWII.
14American Classics as Realist Film
- Story is the primary element of the film
- Uniform film style
- Probable story
- Stylistic understatement
- Unambiguous,
- Comprehensible
- Emotional appeal to
- everyone
15Narrative
- Narrative a long tale made of the arrangement
of shorter stories which tell fictional or
non-fictional events. - Narration an act of narrating, telling a
narrative - Narrator - the one who tells a narrative
(generally by voice-over in the case of cinema) - Narratology - study on narrative, narration and
narrator.
16Realist Narrative
- The most important component of Classical
American Films is narrative (story). - The bottom line - their narratives are
constructed in such a way that they give the
viewer an impression that he/she is watching
something plausible and probable - that is,
real render reality and truth effects in
story. - The first concern plausibility
17Realist Narrative
- Various techniques employed to achieve
plausibility - However - paradox -, these techniques must be
invisible and unobtrusive so that the viewer
barely notices them and can concentrate on
following narrative. - When narrative techniques become conspicuously
visible and obtrusive, the film becomes more
formalist than realist
18Realist Narrative
- Narration techniques and devices employed to
create illusion of reality but must be kept
invisible are - CHRONOLOGICALITY and CAUSALITY
- CHRONOLOGICALITY - events occur in a 1-2-3 order
(occasional flashbacks - the only permissible
narrative manipulation)
19Realist Narrative
- Most of the films made during the classic period
of American film (1917-60) - Chronological story telling with some unobtrusive
flashbacks - John Hustons classic film noir, The Maltese
Falcon (1941) chronological storytelling
20Formalist Narrative
- Formalistic Narrative
- Christopher Nolans Memento (2000)
- The entire story is told in backward ( from the
present to the past). - Leonard, as a result of a blow received on his
head in an assault on him, he has no short term
memory.
21Formalist Narrative
- He is looking for the real killer of his wife,
with the assistant of a Polaroid camera and
tattooing on himself the important facts he
finds. Each scene the viewer watches is one
earlier than the last one. (In normal
storytelling, the scene you have just seen is the
one later than the last)
22Realist Narrative
- CAUSALITY - actions are joined together as a
series of CAUSES and EFFECTS - Plot is a careful and logical working out of
- the laws of cause and effect. The mere
- sequence of events will not make a plot.
- Emphasis must be laid upon causality,
- and the action - reaction of the human will.
- Francis Patterson, Manual for Aspiring
Screenwriters, 1920
23Realistic Narrative
- e.g. A storm isolates a group of characters
- a war separate lovers
- a lack of care kills tropical fish
- a cheat leads to a divorce
- a betrayal prompts a revenge
- In The Maltese Falcon, Marlow starts an
investigation after his client requests it.
24Formalist Narrative
- Mulholland Drive (2001) - divided into two main
sections the first, which could be interpreted
as a dream (1 hour 56 minutes), and the second,
the final 25 minutes, which might be made of real
events. Important events in the first section
are repeated in the second section, but with
significant differences.
25Formalist Narrative
- Different characters repeat the same actions, and
these different characters are played by the same
actors. Furthermore, the important events in the
first part are mysterious, but those in the
second half are more mundane repetitions of those
in the first part.
26Formalist Narrative
- There is not much logic of cause and effect in
the actions in the first part. The lack of
causality is compensated by the repetition, which
gives the film more textual coherence.
27Realistic Narrative
- COINCIDENCE
- According to the Hollywood narrative formula,
coincidence should be confined to the initial
situation. - The later in a film a coincidence occurs, the
weaker it is - the loss of credibility.
28Realist Narrative
- A woman and a man separated in Paris and many
years later she suddenly walks into the bar he
runs in Casablanca. Of all the gin joints in all
the towns in all the world, she walks into mine. - She did not know who owns the bar. Coincidence
happens in the earlier part of the film.
29Realist Narrative
- A case in which a coincidence takes place in the
middle of a film. People in a local community
discussing about the birds attack on school
children. - Alfred Hitchcocks The Birds (1963)
30Realist Narrative
- An action must have a MOTIVATION
- One must have a good reason for what one does.
- When an action is unmotivated, it would lose its
credulity
31Realist Narrative
- In order that the motion picture may convey the
illusion of reality that audiences demand, the
scenario writer stresses motivation - that is, he
makes clear a characters reason for doing
whatever he does that is important. Frances
Marion, Scenario Writing, 1938
32Formalist Narrative
- An example completely ignoring the (realist)
narrative formulae developed in classical
American films - Chronologicality, Causality, Motivation
33Formalist Narrative
- Surrealist film by Louis Bunuel designed by
Salvatore Dali - Un Chien Andalou (1929)
34Illusion of Reality in Realist Narrative
- The film drama is
- LIFE WITH THE DULL BITS CUT OUT
- (Alfred Hitchcock)
35Illusion of Reality in Realist Narrative
- Classical realist narrative is NOT retelling of
what happens in reality as it does because it
extracts from the world of its characters almost
only elements which are relevant to its progress. - The realist narrative in classical American
films, which is achieved through various
techniques and devices, is the one which gives
the viewer truth effects, but is not exactly
real.
36Purer Form of Realist Narrative
- Purer form of realism in narrative is found in
non-diegetic elements. - Diegetic - being relevant to the progress of a
story - Non-diegetic - being irrelevant to the progress
of an imaginary story
37Purer Form of Narrative
- Siegmund Kracauer finds an inverted relation
between those images that further the story and
those retain a degree of independence of the
intrigue and thus succeed in summoning physical
reality.
38Purer Form of Narrative
- Roland Barthes characterizes literary reference
to objects that have no discernible narrative
function except to give a material, worldly
weight to the description as reality effect.
39Purer Form of Narrative
- A purer form of film realism is found in an
incidental or contingent element in narrative.
in the middle of the chase the little boy
suddenly needs to piss. So he does. (André
Bazin) - Vittorio de Sicas Ladri di biciclette (1948)
40Realism in Classical American Film
- Do artless arts in American films in the
classical period still dupe you to take
narratives and images for reality? - Do those films that the cinema audience in the
early half of the twentieth century took
realistic or mistook as an extension of their
reality continue to have the same effect on you
now? - If not, why do you think they do not?