Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Acknowledgements
- Preface: The Poly-Expressive Symphony of Futurist Cinema
- Section 1 Joyful Deformation Of The Universe
- 1 Introduction: The Poetics of Futurist Cinema
- 2 Speed and Dynamism: Futurism and the Soviet Cinematographic Avant-garde
- 3 Futurism and Film Theories: Manifesto of Futurist Cinema and Theories in Italy in the 1910-1920s
- 4 Film Aesthetics Without Films
- 5 Marinetti’s Tattilismo Revisited: Hand Travels, Tactile Screens, and Touch Cinema in the 21st Century
- 6 Dance and Futurism in Italian Silent Cinema
- 7 Futurism and cinema in the 1910s: A Reinterpretation Starting from McLuhan
- 8 The Human in the Fetish of the Human: Cuteness in Futurist Cinema, Literature, and Visual Arts
- Section 2 Daily Filmed Exercises Designed To Free Us From Logic
- 9 Yambo on the moon of Verne and Méliès: From La Colonia Lunare to UN MATRIMONIO INTERPLANETARIO
- 10 An Avant-Garde Heritage: VITA FUTURISTA
- 11 Thaïs: A Different Challenge to the Stars
- 12 VELOCITÀ, a Screenplay by F.T. Marinetti: From Futurist Simultaneity to Live Streaming Media
- 13 Velocità/Vitesse: Filmed Dramas of Objects and ‘avant-garde integrale’
- 14 From Science to the Marvellous: The Illusion of Movement, Between Chronophotography and Contemporary Cinema
- Section 3 Shop Windows Of Filmed Ideas, Events, Types, Objects
- Chronology: Fernando Maramai
- Filmography
- Index
- Film Culture in Transition
4 - Film Aesthetics Without Films
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 12 December 2020
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Acknowledgements
- Preface: The Poly-Expressive Symphony of Futurist Cinema
- Section 1 Joyful Deformation Of The Universe
- 1 Introduction: The Poetics of Futurist Cinema
- 2 Speed and Dynamism: Futurism and the Soviet Cinematographic Avant-garde
- 3 Futurism and Film Theories: Manifesto of Futurist Cinema and Theories in Italy in the 1910-1920s
- 4 Film Aesthetics Without Films
- 5 Marinetti’s Tattilismo Revisited: Hand Travels, Tactile Screens, and Touch Cinema in the 21st Century
- 6 Dance and Futurism in Italian Silent Cinema
- 7 Futurism and cinema in the 1910s: A Reinterpretation Starting from McLuhan
- 8 The Human in the Fetish of the Human: Cuteness in Futurist Cinema, Literature, and Visual Arts
- Section 2 Daily Filmed Exercises Designed To Free Us From Logic
- 9 Yambo on the moon of Verne and Méliès: From La Colonia Lunare to UN MATRIMONIO INTERPLANETARIO
- 10 An Avant-Garde Heritage: VITA FUTURISTA
- 11 Thaïs: A Different Challenge to the Stars
- 12 VELOCITÀ, a Screenplay by F.T. Marinetti: From Futurist Simultaneity to Live Streaming Media
- 13 Velocità/Vitesse: Filmed Dramas of Objects and ‘avant-garde integrale’
- 14 From Science to the Marvellous: The Illusion of Movement, Between Chronophotography and Contemporary Cinema
- Section 3 Shop Windows Of Filmed Ideas, Events, Types, Objects
- Chronology: Fernando Maramai
- Filmography
- Index
- Film Culture in Transition
Summary
Abstract
This chapter discusses the ambivalent relation between Futurists arts and cinema. On the one hand, there is Marinetti's statement that cinema is his favorite medium; on the other hand, film only plays a peripheral role in his artistic work. Additionally, it is not during the ‘periodo eroico’ that the Futurists turn to film, but it is later than 1916, during a phase that is rather affirmative or regarded to be more of a commentary on the so-called heroic, subversive early days. They are, in fact, more interested in movements in pictures (or literature) than in moving pictures. Crossing cultural film and media studies and literary criticism, this article offers an overview of Italian silent cinema. Furthermore, the article analyses the futurists contradictory rhetoric of cinema in their collective manifestos and in Boccioni futurista: Pittura Scultura Futuriste (1914).
Keywords: Film Theory, Futurist Manifestos, Marinetti, Boccioni, Futurist Literature
When F.T. Marinetti publishes his first manifesto in Le Figaro (19 February 1909), cinematographic technology has reached a stage at which films with a running time of up to 40 minutes can be produced. The first movie theatres are being built, seating up to 1000 people. Consequently, film is present in the early manifestos as a sign of technological modernity: the screen should compete with the stage, for instance, since film is able to show scenes that cannot be properly depicted on stage, e.g. war battle scenes or car races (Marinetti 1913 a, b). Marinetti also contrasts the short duration of film with the merely long duration of the old medium, the book (Marinetti et al. 1916). In 1913, he even claims to have been working with film for a long time in a large survey conducted by the Nuovo Giornale di Firenze on the topics of literature and film (Marinetti 1913c: 3). When Umberto Boccioni in 1911 and Marinetti in 1912 in Maison d’étudiants claim that the day would come when a simple picture would no longer be sufficient to depict the ever increasing movement of life (Baumgarth 1974: 71), both appear as visionaries, as seen from today's perspective.The Futurists do develop, as this article shows, an aesthetics appropriate to the new medium, but films as such play only a peripheral role in their artistic work.
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- Futurist CinemaStudies on Italian Avant-garde Film, pp. 57 - 68Publisher: Amsterdam University PressPrint publication year: 2017
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