Sunday, March 11, 2007

The Man with the Movie Camera

Watching the movie, The Man with the Movie Camera, was interesting from various angles. It was a movie that interacted at different levels and in different tiers. While watching it, I was reminded of the Burkeian Parlor. For most part the narration of The Man with the Movie Camera was linear, rendering it multiple entry points for the viewing audience. The effect of the Parlor could be evidenced from the multi-layered function such as a contrast between social classes (class struggle) by using Eisenstein technique of €˜dialectical montage,' that reflects the human society as a struggle between the classes; the beginning, the middle, and the end of a daily life cycle or life at a larger context (through the cross cuts of the lady giving birth, the quotidian occurrences, and the funeral procession); the synchronized pattern of action and sound; action and inaction.At all these levels we are simple engaging ourselves in the use of the terministic screens, where the shots/screens are directing the attention to one field rather than another€. And again, €œWithin that field there can be different screens, each with its ways of directing the attention and shaping the range of observations implicit in the given terminology.€It is in this range of observations that Vertov achieves the universal narrative of the genre of cinema. He uses the camera as the main protagonist along side the human as a walk-on player in the movie. As such, he uses the camera movements like panning, close-up, long shots, cross-cuts, eye-level, high angle, aerial view extensively to define outlines of the characters, which are both anthropomorphic as well as mechanomorphic. Vertov uses the technique of reflexivity by showing the image of eye on the camera lens, as tough to critique its own perceptions. The ubiquitous camera also transfers the sense of Foucaudian gaze to its audience€” the sense of perpetual observation.The Man with the Movie Camera is very thought-provoking, especially in face of our discussion about New Media and its idea freedom.

3 comments:

Rich said...

Absolutely--the dramatistic pentad.

Anonymous said...

Good for people to know.

Anonymous said...

ha, I will test my thought, your post bring me some good ideas, it's truly awesome, thanks.

- Joe