Notebooking Cinema

Dir22

Explaining iconic articles on Cinema in easy to grasp manner

Episodes

  1. 10/05/2025

    The Decay of Cinema by Susan Sontag (1996)

    Key Ideas and Facts: Cinema's Life Cycle and Decline: Sontag posits that cinema has followed a predictable life cycle: "an inevitable birth, the steady accumulation of glories and the onset in the last decade of an ignominious, irreversible decline." She notes that while admirable films still exist, they are "exceptions" and "violations of the norms and practices that now govern movie making everywhere." Ordinary commercial films are described as "astonishingly witless" and failing to connect with audiences.The Death of Cinephilia: A central tenet of Sontag's argument is that the decline of cinema is intrinsically linked to the death of "cinephilia," which she defines as "the name of the very specific kind of love that cinema inspired." This love was born of the conviction that cinema was a unique, modern, accessible, poetic, mysterious, erotic, and moral art form. Cinephiles saw cinema as encapsulating everything, "both the book of art and the book of life."The Dual Origins of Cinema: Sontag acknowledges the dual beginnings of cinema in 1895 with the Lumiere brothers (transcription of reality) and Melies (invention/fantasy). However, she argues that for early audiences, even the "transcription of the most banal reality" was a "fantastic experience." This initial "wonder" is something she feels cinema has struggled to perpetuate and reinvent.The Transformative Experience of Going to the Movies: Sontag emphasises the unique and immersive experience of watching films in a theatre. It was a place where you learned how to navigate life and "lose yourself in other people's lives... faces." The act of "going to the movies" was crucial, and seeing a great film "only on television isn't to have really seen that film." She argues that the "conditions of paying attention in a domestic space are radically disrespectful of film" and that to be truly "kidnapped" by a movie requires being "in a movie theater, seated in the dark among anonymous strangers."The Undermining of Standards: The ubiquitous nature of moving images, appearing on various surfaces beyond the traditional cinema screen, has "steadily undermined the standards people once had both for cinema as art and for cinema as popular entertainment."The Shift from Art to Industry: Sontag notes there was little difference between art and entertainment. However, the "Hollywood system" solidified commercial standards after the advent of sound, challenging the work of original directors. While a period from the mid-1950s saw a resurgence of "original, passionate films of the highest seriousness," the balance has now "tipped decisively in favor of cinema as an industry."The Impact of Rising Production Costs: The "catastrophic rise in production costs in the 1980's" led to a need for films to be immediately profitable, favouring "the blockbuster over the low-budget film." This trend also resulted in shorter theatrical release times and the design of movies for direct-to-video release, contributing to the closure of cinemas.The Struggle of Ambitious Directors: The commercial pressures make it "virtually impossible for artistically ambitious American directors... to work at their best level." Similarly, renowned international directors face difficulties in securing funding and maintaining their artistic vision.The Changing Nature of Film Appreciation: While people still enjoy watching movies, the "distinctive cinephilic love" is less common, particularly among the young. Cinephilia, which values films as "unique, unrepeatable, magic experiences" and supports the idea of the film as a "poetic object," is seen as "quaint, outmoded, snobbish" in the era of "hyperindustrial films."The Link Between Cinephilia and Cinema's Future: Sontag concludes that "If cinephilia is dead, then movies are dead too... no matter how many movies, even very good ones, go on being made." She suggests that a resurrection of cinema would require "the birth of a new kind of cine-love."

    10 min
  2. 10/05/2025

    Pauline Kael - ZEITGEIST AND POLTERGEIST; OR, ARE MOVIES GOING TO PIECES?

    Author: Pauline Kael Date of Original Publication: 1965 (within the book "I Lost It at the Movies") Key Concerns/Themes: Fragmentation and Incoherence in Film: Kael argues that movies are becoming less coherent, with traditional narrative structures being abandoned in favour of visual stimulation and shock value. This is a central thesis throughout the essay.Audience Acceptance of Fragmentation: Audiences, according to Kael, are increasingly accepting of this fragmentation and incoherence. They are no longer primarily interested in following a logical plot.Shift in Audience Preferences: Audiences are more interested in "sensations" and "jolts" than in well-developed stories or character motivations. This preference is seen as a driving force behind the changes in filmmaking.Commercial Pressures on Filmmaking: Kael suggests that the film industry's focus on profit is leading to the production of movies that are commercially viable but artistically less satisfying. The success of fragmented or shocking films encourages this trend.Decline in the Quality of Movies: Kael expresses concern that the trend towards incoherence is leading to a decline in the overall quality of movies.Influence of Television: Television viewing habits, with their inherent breaks and emphasis on action over sustained narrative, are presented as a potential contributor to the audience's diminished "narrative sense."The Rise of "Cinema" over "Movies": Kael draws a sharp distinction between what she considers engaging and entertaining "movies" and the emerging, more fragmented, and often pretentious "cinema," particularly in art-house circles. "Cinema" is seen as prioritizing technique and abstract ideas over traditional storytelling and audience engagement.Ambiguity and Inexplicability as Valued Traits: Both mainstream and art-house audiences and critics are shown to be accepting, and sometimes even valuing, lack of clarity, confusion, and inexplicable elements in films, often interpreting them as complexity or ambiguity.Rejection of Traditional Critical Standards: There's a perceived trend among some critics and viewers to reject traditional critical standards based on narrative coherence and meaning, embracing instead a more subjective or even nihilistic approach to film appreciation.Loss of Connection to Other Art Forms: Kael fears that as movies become "cinema," they lose their connection to song and dance, drama, and the novel, becoming an object of academic study rather than a widely enjoyed art form.The Value of "Kitsch" and "Honest Vulgarity": Kael champions the energy, originality, and excitement found in what might be considered American "kitsch" or "honest vulgarity" in contrast to the perceived pretentiousness and lack of engagement in some "High Culture" cinema. Pauline Kael's essay is a passionate and somewhat pessimistic critique of the direction she saw movies taking in the mid-1960s. She expresses a strong preference for traditional, coherent storytelling and engaging characters, lamenting the rise of fragmentation, ambiguity, and a focus on technique over substance. Her observations on audience behavior and the influence of commercial pressures and television are particularly insightful. The essay highlights a tension between popular entertainment and artistic pretension in film, and Kael firmly stands on the side of films that connect with audiences through story and feeling, even those that might be considered "kitsch." She foresees a future where "cinema" becomes an isolated academic pursuit rather than a vibrant and accessible art form enjoyed by a broad public.

    14 min

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Explaining iconic articles on Cinema in easy to grasp manner