New Independent Films

I recently returned from the Torino Film Festival, a festival which I adore for its dedication to art cinema, where I was engaged as a juror. As my job was to watch competition films, I saw more new films in a week than I normally do in a year, and so I got an instant impression of the themes and styles of new independent work. I must add that my innocence in this regard is much like a time traveler who has recently found themselves in the twenty-first century, as I've spent so much time studying classic films that my viewing of newer independent work has been somewhat lacking.
To begin with, let me say that although the films seemed very disparate on the surface, what was most striking was the similarities between many of the films. If I were to catalogue what seems to be the aim of many of the films, it would seem to be to capture a certain sense of virtuousness through a means of storytelling that leaves out the ordinary parts of stories, and leaves in the parts that are in between. This is in an attempt, I gather, to surprise us by calling our attention to the truth in the minutae of everyday reality.
Indeed, in most of the films, this search for the "truth," coming directly from neo-realist tradition, seemed like a primary concern. Truth in acting is equated with creating unglamorous and inarticulate characters; truth in lighting is achieved by trying to light as little as possible; truth in storytelling is telling the non-dramatic bits of a story; truth in editing is trying not to edit at all, as this pollutes the purity of events as they happen in real time; truth in camerawork is the hand-held camera, without the intervention of storyboards, tripods and cranes; truth in writing is to tell as little as possible, so as not to trample on the viewer's own impressions. Also, incoherence often seemed to be aimed at, I suppose in order to reflect directly the incoherence of experience, and the impossibility of getting at meaning. As well as direct meaning, symbolism seemed to be an element that was avoided (when symbolism, artifice, and self-dramatization were used as devices, they were frowned upon).
The other thing I noticed was that direct pleasure was avoided most of the time, and in its place was the indirect pleasure of self-denial or self-immolation, and the sado-masochistic pleasure in the starkness or ugliness itself. So in the end, this cinema was more striking in terms of what it rejected than in terms of what it embraced: rejection of artifice and all overt devices, rejection of overt pleasure, rejection of meaning. What I was often left with was a cleverness in the filmmaker's ability to seem invisible as a stylist or creator of meaning. So it's a cinema of negation, of what's left when content, form, and desire are taken away.
Looking at all of the films, and at one Nicholas Ray film I caught in between other screenings, which approached cinema from exactly the opposite direction, I felt a pang of grief. I'm so fascinated by older forms of cinema, in which all possibilities were...well, possible. I have literally been told that it's "impossible" to do cinema in a pre-World war II Style, and the reasons why have been explained to me: "because of the way consciousness has been fragmented...because old ways of thinking about identity have been exploded." In Deleuze's books Cinema I and Cinema II, he talks about the postwar shift in cinema, in which the history of cinema can almost be divided into two halves. Deleuze speaks about an older cinema of movement and a newer cinema of time. Neo-realism is discussed, as well as the French new wave, and these forms have remained entrenched in art cinema forever since, seeking new ways to produce glimmers of meaning outside of narrative conventions, always in search of the new. And yet avant-garde practice, up until now, has rejected the previous generation's truth in favor of its own truth, often looking back to much older forms to do so. The newer cinema is almost beyond reproach, as one is seen as a philistine if one questions it, whereas anything else of a more sensuous or direct nature is instantly mistrusted.
Looking at the Nicholas Ray film, "Party Girl," through the eyes of contemporary festival audiences used to this new cinema, I couldn't help but thinking that the Ray film would seem ludicrous, and just WRONG, to them. Full of artificial pleasures, in the form of sets lit with three-point classical lighting, rear-projection in moving cars, the smashingly beautiful and almost otherworldly Cyd Charisse, characters in general that are more glamorous, daring, or attractive than we are, fantastic musical numbers, colorful gangsters, very carefully scripted dialogue and camera work, heavy-handed symbolism, all the dramatic bits left in and everything else left out, a sweeping musical score highlighting the drama, fantastic costumes color-coordinated with the sets, and a strong moral ending.
While I deeply enjoy "serious" art cinema, I am also a hopeless decadent. I refuse to reject entertaining material on the grounds that it's unimportant artistically. I have come around to the other side of art, in which I can find momentous meaning in the choreography of Cyd Charisse's overwhelmingly erotic dance, in much the same way that Apollinaire found more meaning in the lace panties of music hall dancers than in the greatest works of art in museums.
Labels: New Independent Films


9 Comments:
Decadent and self-indulgent is just a Calvinist tag for us pagan folk. The "avant guard" is reactionary rather than celebratory nowadays. Giving into one's desires isn't pure enough and tainted by the pleasures of the marketplace.
Hi Ryan,
Does that mean you're a decadent too? (Ha ha). I'd love to hear you expand your ideas, if you have the time and energy to do so!
Great description of the current high/low plight. I think the variously defined "avant-gardes" often find the "sincerity" of older Hollywood somewhat alarming, especially since so much of the current art world works so hard to signal distance/detachment in their work. Even when the Hollywood model remains complex in its address, it rarely patronizes or condescends to its subject matter.
I have literally been told that it's "impossible" to do cinema in a pre-World war II Style, and the reasons why have been explained to me: "because of the way consciousness has been fragmented...because old ways of thinking about identity have been exploded."
This is a crock. People will eat up dramatic clichés that would have been rejected by George Cukor on his worst day, so long as they are dressed up in shakycam, underlighting, "realistic" acting and all the other contemporary markers of quality.
What's this "exploded identity" in The Blind Side that can't be found in Knute Rockne: All-American? On the flipside: What was the unexploded identity that allowed audiences in the thirties to accept Busby Berkley musicals? (Did people think women really went around in real life dressed as flowers and dollar bills?) And even the styles haven't evolved as much as people claim: Watch an episode of The Hills and you'll see melodramatic acting that would have been considered too purple for a Sylvia Sidney three-hanky picture. If people can't stand prewar cinematic tropes why did Titanic make a billion dollars?
Stick to your guns. You're the only one making interesting movies, because you ignore this kind of dingbattery.
Interesting post, which I mostly applaud, since it sets off a lot of thoughts and things to struggle with. Never fear, decadence will always reassert itself! I would take issue, cautiously, with the opposition between Deleuze’s movement-image and time-image. I personally think the time-image can be used just as decadently as traditional construction. You could argue that the fetishization of minutiae is itself a decadent activity. There’s also the question of ideology. If the purpose of the montage is to continuously reaffirm reliable orientation in space, according to received wisdom, then its purpose is essentially conservative. The majority of film history, I would argue, is ideological reinforcement. The time-image, on the other hand, allowed the image to escape a predetermined course, every cut being a new opportunity to go somewhere else, rather than affirm what had been established. I find that the best films combine the movement-image and time-image strategies. Sometimes the best subversive content is smuggled in a non-subversive form. You think you know where you’re going, but you don’t. Isn’t that what the avant-garde aims for? That’s one reason I thought that it would be interesting to see an even longer, slower version of Viva. I think a lot of new films that aim for truth do it in superficial ways, but without the boldness to really take the time-image seriously. I always wondered why Deleuze didn’t write about the real avant-garde (Brakhage, Deren, Warhol, etc.), which went farther with the time-image than most of his examples. Is it because it escaped the sociopolitical resonance that was important to him? I also find the nostalgic impulse interesting, the longing for earlier aesthetics. I have a lot of nostalgia about pre-WWII cinema, but possibly even more for 70s cinema, largely because of its attempts to use European time-image strategies. Maybe that nostalgia is informing a lot of new movies as well. Will film lovers a hundred years from now be nostalgic about today’s movies? If so, will it be because of their decadence?
The reason I brought up Deleuze is that I had an absurd conversation with someone who was telling me that certain types of cinema are "impossible" now. He was a hypocrite too, since he loves lots of old Hollywood movies. I would never tell anyone that something is impossible just because it doesn't fit into my ideology. As you are suggesting that different things work, you are in agreement with me. That's really all I'm saying here.
It's not like you can take some formula for making cinema and plug it into your independent movie and suddenly make it good. There has to be something behind it. So what we have is a slew of hackneyed and thoughtless films that are paint-by-numbers film school ideology and nothing else. I am going to argue that the NEW cinema is ideological reinforcement just as the old cinema was, just in a different venue and for a different crowd. I also question film being thought of as only an ideological tool. And I object to the words "subversive" and "non-subversive" used here, as if there's a clear distinction and definition. Those definitions are fluid and changing, although film scholars would have them cemented in a time somewhere around 1950. Today it's the vogue to erase all traces or personality in filmmaking. Tomorrow it may be something else.
It was so comical to watch people at that festival desperately trying to love a bad film that fit their ideology, and refusing to take seriously a quite interesting film that didn't. Exiting a very interesting and actually quite avant-garde film that used surrealism, symbolism, and text to tell a story, I heard sighs of anguish and irritation as a person next to me squirmed in his seat, afterwards sighing, "That was very painful for me." I knew at once what was painful, and then heard it from his and others' mouths: " too much mixing of genres - it's too much like the film of a visual artist - it's not really a film - there's too much imagery in it - there's too much text." Of course they would HATE Matthew Barney, given their criteria. They hate any "dense" filmmaking. Instantly. I would argue that it's for the same reason people wince when there are too many gewgaws on a designer bag. It's all about taste, set by trend-setters, and those who wear last year's gown are subject to giggles and embarrassed stares.
By the way, to reiterate what Tim Cavanaugh said, they loved certain very conventional narrative films, and their criteria for loving them, AND for the more experimental, non-narrative films they liked also, was that they were "emotionally moved" by them. I am suggesting that if such a criterion is valid for judging the value of a film (and I don't think that it is, at least in the absence of other criteria), then we have to at least make room for the fact that different people are moved by different things.
Hi. I've just seen the trailer for Viva. Visually, it reminds me of particular 1970s "masala" Bollywood films. You might want to check them out if you're not familiar with them.
Example...
http://memsaabstory.wordpress.com/2007/10/30/bullet-1976/
http://memsaabstory.wordpress.com/2008/12/20/apradh-1972/
http://teleport-city.com/wordpress/?p=4526
More here: http://memsaabstory.wordpress.com/hindi-film-index-chronological/
http://p-pcc.blogspot.com/
http://bethlovesbollywood.blogspot.com/
http://diedangerdiediekill.blogspot.com/search/label/Bollywood
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1BCO5WBh8SQ
Viva's visual style is taken from Technicolor films from the '50s through the early '70s, which was similar around the world. The style is characterized by highly designed color-coordinated sets and costumes, hard lighting, portrait lighting on close-ups, and picturesque framing privileged over camera movement. I do love those old Bollywood musicals, but I think the reason you see the connection so much is that I'm in the film, and I'm "exotic."
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