Notes on the cinematograph / Robert Bresson ; translated by Jonathan Griffin.
Material type: TextLanguage: English Original language: French Series: New York Review Books classicsPublisher: New York : New York Review Books, [2016]Description: pages cmContent type:- text
- unmediated
- volume
- 9781681370248 (paperback)
- Notes sur le cinématographe. English
- 791.43 23
- PN1995 .B7313 2016
- PER004010 | PER004020 | PER004000
Item type | Current library | Call number | Status | Date due | Barcode | Item holds | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Book | Sonoma Academy Library | 791.43 BRE (Browse shelf(Opens below)) | Available | 900096 |
"A key influence on the French New Wave and the director of such iconic works as Pickpocket and A Man Escaped, Robert Bresson is one of the central figures of French cinema. Notes on the Cinematograph is not only his definitive treatise on film--its inherent peculiarity and potential--but an ascetic meditation on how art transcends, and is transformed by, the senses. Bresson upends inherited truths with empirical ones, calling for film to divest itself of the trappings of theater in order to come into its own as an art form. While theater is capable of simulation, film can capture immanent being. Therefore, he argues, the two forms are innately at odds: "No marriage of theater and cinematography without both being exterminated." To this end, Bresson rechristens his actors "models" and conducts them through grueling shoots where they repeat their lines and movements until he deems them vacant of actorly intention and charged, instead, with inscrutability: "A model. Enclosed in his mysterious appearance. He has brought home to him all of him that was outside. He is there, behind that forehead, those cheeks.""--
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