Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of Figures
- The Contributors
- Introduction: The Art of In-Betweenness in Contemporary Eastern European Cinema
- Part 1 Entangled Sens ations, Cinema in-between the Arts
- 1 Intermedially Emotional: Musical Mood Cues, Disembodied Feelings in Contemporary Hungarian Melodramas
- 2 Black-and-White Sensations of History and Female Identity in Contemporary Polish and Czech Cinema
- 3 Sculpture and Affect in Cinema’s Expanded Field. From Aleksey Gherman’s Hard to Be a God to Aleksey Gherman Jr’s Under Electric Clouds
- 4 Intermedial Densities in the Work of Jan Švankmajer: A Media-Anthropological Case Study
- Part 2 Immersions into Memory , Culture and Intermediality
- 5 Trickster Narratives and Carnivalesque Intermediality in Contemporary Romanian Cinema
- 6 Photographic Passages to th e Past in Eastern European Non-Fiction Films
- 7 Trauma, Memorialisation and Intermediality in Jasmila Žbanić’s For Th ose Who Can Tell No Tales
- 8 An Immersive Theatrical Journey through Media and Time in Alexander Sokurov’s Russian Ark
- Part 3 Refl ections upon Reality, Representation and Power
- 9 The Real and the Intermedial in Alexander Sokurov’s Family Trilogy
- 10 Th is is Not Magritte: Corneliu Porumboiu’s Theory of Representation
- 11 Intermedial Détrompe l’Oeil and Contemporary Polish Narrative Cinema
- 12 Superhero Genre and Graphic Storytelling in Contemporary Hungarian and Russian Cinema
- Index
11 - Intermedial Détrompe l’Oeil and Contemporary Polish Narrative Cinema
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 03 October 2020
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of Figures
- The Contributors
- Introduction: The Art of In-Betweenness in Contemporary Eastern European Cinema
- Part 1 Entangled Sens ations, Cinema in-between the Arts
- 1 Intermedially Emotional: Musical Mood Cues, Disembodied Feelings in Contemporary Hungarian Melodramas
- 2 Black-and-White Sensations of History and Female Identity in Contemporary Polish and Czech Cinema
- 3 Sculpture and Affect in Cinema’s Expanded Field. From Aleksey Gherman’s Hard to Be a God to Aleksey Gherman Jr’s Under Electric Clouds
- 4 Intermedial Densities in the Work of Jan Švankmajer: A Media-Anthropological Case Study
- Part 2 Immersions into Memory , Culture and Intermediality
- 5 Trickster Narratives and Carnivalesque Intermediality in Contemporary Romanian Cinema
- 6 Photographic Passages to th e Past in Eastern European Non-Fiction Films
- 7 Trauma, Memorialisation and Intermediality in Jasmila Žbanić’s For Th ose Who Can Tell No Tales
- 8 An Immersive Theatrical Journey through Media and Time in Alexander Sokurov’s Russian Ark
- Part 3 Refl ections upon Reality, Representation and Power
- 9 The Real and the Intermedial in Alexander Sokurov’s Family Trilogy
- 10 Th is is Not Magritte: Corneliu Porumboiu’s Theory of Representation
- 11 Intermedial Détrompe l’Oeil and Contemporary Polish Narrative Cinema
- 12 Superhero Genre and Graphic Storytelling in Contemporary Hungarian and Russian Cinema
- Index
Summary
Video and film have turned digital, and digital technology has significantly informed the way we think about cinema. It seems to command us to revise even our most basic understanding of what fi lm is or of how it operates. However, the full extent of the digital era has probably yet to be grasped. Most writing about – or even the most common sense of – digital cinema is concerned with special effects and technological innovation, which can be notably observed in Hollywood blockbusters. Digital aesthetics and possibilities are flourishing in many areas (from film to advertisement, design and science). Almost everyone now has the technical tools and basic skills needed to produce moving images; by casually holding a (now digital) camera of some kind, everyone is potentially a filmmaker or videographer. The smartphone and the digital video camera are the more portable, perhaps more intuitive heirs to the 8mm, 16mm, and video cameras of the past. The history of the portable camera dates back to the beginning of fi lm (from Marey's 1882 photographic gun to Prószyński's 1909 compressed-air-powered Aeroscope, to his later 120mm domestic camera, the Oko, and so on). If digital cinema is often understood as a break with past film aesthetics, this essay rather sees continuity. Digital culture preserves and prolongs video culture. Indeed, amateur images produced by domestic cameras are also part of digital culture, or of the culture of digital moving images. These ‘domesticated’ uses of digital technology have been investigated by numerous studies (e.g. visual anthropology, focusing on private, non-industrial usages of moving images, or the aesthetics of the so-called ‘poor image’ as opposed to the obsession with high-resolution digital image), and have been contributing to visual artistic practices (e.g. new media art, video installations). The aim of this essay is to investigate the use of video and digital images in the context of minor national cinemas (through the Polish example), and to note how digital filmmaking is also a continuation not only of argentic filmmaking but also of video aesthetics, of video not as art (video art) but as common practice.
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- Caught In-BetweenIntermediality in Contemporary Eastern European and Russian Cinema, pp. 219 - 236Publisher: Edinburgh University PressPrint publication year: 2020