Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Table of Contents
- List of Images
- Acknowledgements
- Introduction
- 1 Themes – The Framed Hand and Being
- 2 Symbolism – The Semiotic Hand
- 3 Aesthetics – The Stylised Hand: Beauty, Ugliness, Genre
- 4 Narration – Hands Doing and Being
- 5 Characterisation – Hands and Identity
- Concluding Case Study – Steven Spielberg's Jaws (1975)
- Filmography
- Index
3 - Aesthetics – The Stylised Hand: Beauty, Ugliness, Genre
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 16 November 2022
- Frontmatter
- Table of Contents
- List of Images
- Acknowledgements
- Introduction
- 1 Themes – The Framed Hand and Being
- 2 Symbolism – The Semiotic Hand
- 3 Aesthetics – The Stylised Hand: Beauty, Ugliness, Genre
- 4 Narration – Hands Doing and Being
- 5 Characterisation – Hands and Identity
- Concluding Case Study – Steven Spielberg's Jaws (1975)
- Filmography
- Index
Summary
Abstract
This chapter deals with pro-filmic hands as creative contributors to the filmmaking process and on-screen hands as stylistic elements. Thus, it considers the manual labour involved in certain aspects of film production as well as paying attention to the tonal qualities generated by different manual effects and designs across various genres. It interrogates some of the recurring ways that filmmakers have used the hand as a stylistic entity and analyses how framing the limb as a thing of beauty or ugliness can create an aesthetic effect that permeates the whole representation tonally. With a view to exploring theoretical writing on film studies by analysts who have considered the Camp aesthetic and the haptic effects of film spectatorship, it uses the hand as a starting point to propose new possibilities of intervention into those areas: in both cases attempting to problematise some of the existing lines of debate.
Key Words: Film genre; Camp cinema; haptic cinema; manual labour and filmmaking
Behind the Scenes: Unseen Creative Hands
Before mechanised cameras and projectors became standard, their handcranked predecessors created a direct, physical connection between the bodily motions and rhythms of the operator and those of the performer. Constant adjudication of the speed with which the hand of the machinist revolved the cogs and take-up reels of the mechanism was required to ensure accurate recording of the filmed action. With stop-frame photography the hand of the artist shifts more directly between operating the shutter and manipulating the framed object. These magical effects are applied for the anthropomorphic animation of lifeless matter and objects, but they are also used on the human body. Legs, arms, hands, faces, heads, and torsos, whether alive or lifeless, attached to or severed from their hosts, frequently undergo impossible contortions, liquefactions, and distortions for the delectation of audiences. The image of the active detached hand or arm appeared frequently in early cinema and the representation connoted or critiqued a modernist tension between mechanical disempowerment and autonomous expressions of agency and creativity. Volker Pantenburg has addressed the connection between the hand and pioneering examples of cinema by celebrating
its potential – particularly inherent in the silent film – for independent articulation, and its detachment from its owner, which initiates thoughts about the alienation of one's own body.
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- Hands on FilmActants, Aesthetics, Affects, pp. 135 - 188Publisher: Amsterdam University PressPrint publication year: 2022