- Postmodernist film
Postmodernist film describes the articulation of ideas of
postmodernism through the cinematic medium. Postmodernist film upsets themainstream conventions ofnarrative structure andcharacterization and destroys (or, at least, toys with) the audience'ssuspension of disbelief to create a work in which a less-recognizable internal logic forms the film's means of expression.Among the earliest and most significante events in postmodern film was th advent of the
French New Wave in the 1950s and 1960s. Proponents of postmodernism as a movement cite such films asJean-Luc Godard 's "À bout de souffle " (deeply indebted toBertolt Brecht 'smodernist epic theatre with its Verfremdungseffekt or 'defamiliarization effect'); and in Italy with Antonioni's "L'avventura " (1960) and Fellini's "8 1/2 " (1963).Luis Buñuel andSalvador Dalí 's 1928 surrealist short "Un Chien Andalou " provides an importantmodernist precursor, although its extreme deconstruction of structure and character make its meaning almost entirely arbitrary. In order to convey some desired meaning, postmodernist films continue to maintain conventional elements in order for the audience to grasp them. Two such examples areJane Campion 's "Two Friends ", in which the story of two school girls is showed in episodic segments arranged in reverse order; andKarel Reisz 's "The French Lieutenant's Woman ", in which the story being played out on the screen is mirrored in the private lives of the actors playing it, which we also see.By making small but significant changes to the conventions of cinema, the artificiality of the experience and the world presented are emphasised in the audience's mind in order to remove them from the conventional emotional bonds they have to the subject matter, and to give them a new view of it. An example is
Michael Winterbottom 's "24 Hour Party People " in which the character based onTony Wilson frequently breaks out of the constructed world of the film and talks directly to the audience straight through the camera lens. Jarring in effect, it conveys the characters' pre-occupation with breaking free of the cultural and economic constructions of the world they live in.Winterbottom's postmodernist effect, however, is hardly new:
Federico Fellini , among other master filmmakers, used it memorably in "Satyricon " (1969) and "Amarcord " (1973). David Lynch's "Mulholland Drive " (2001) exploits postmodernist aesthetics to an unusual degree whileQuentin Tarantino 's "Pulp Fiction" is considered an example of Postmodernist film.The antithesis of postmodern cinema is
remodernist film in which emphasis is placed on a subjective emotional connection to the film. Remodernism rejects postmodernism because of its perceived "failure to answer or address any important issues of being a human being". [ [http://www.stuckism.com/remod.html Hangman Com' 0006/ stuck ] ] This so-called "failure" is debatable. One such remodernist film isJesse Richards short "Shooting at the Moon ".These two styles of filmmaking, however, need not be mutually exclusive. Since postmodernism has been absorbed into the contemporary lexicon of filmmakers, it has become just another way to explore themes and characters.
References
External links
* [http://www.britishfilm.org.uk/lynch/blue_velvet.html Post-modernism and Authorship in David Lynch's Blue Velvet]
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