The End of Cinema?: A Medium in Crisis in the Digital Age by André Gaudreault and Philippe Marion (review)

IF 0.2 3区 艺术学 0 FILM, RADIO, TELEVISION Canadian Journal of Film Studies-Revue Canadienne d Etudes Cinematographiques Pub Date : 2016-04-01 DOI:10.5860/choice.192479
J. Locke
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Abstract

THE END OF CINEMA?: A MEDIUM IN CRISIS IN THE DIGITAL AGE By Andre Gaudreault and Philippe Marion Translated by Timothy Barnard New York: Columbia University Press, 2015, 240pp.REVIEWED BY JOHN W. LOCKEMost of the members of the film studies community have thought about and been concerned about film's change to digital. What will happen to film/ cinema? We have had the conversations, but few of us have made it a priority as we allocate our thinking and research time.The End of Cinema? is an important record of the thinking of two scholars about the cinema/digital/film nexus of issues. Particularly if you have worried about these issues and want to understand their history as well as to become current, this book is an excellent introduction. For example, it contains a clear discussion of the positions of Raymond Bellour and Jacques Aumont who hold views that each of us has heard expressed. For Gaudreault and Marion they represent "classical cinephiles" for whom "movie-theatre projection ... defines cinema" (20). Cinema only exists when a film is being projected in a dark movie theatre. Each has a book supporting their position, but the first chapter of The End of Cinema? briefly states the Bellour and Aumont positions and outlines comments by Dudley Andrew, James Lastra and Tom Gunning. It is a thorough review of the literature.Gaudreault and Marion have selected a dramatic metaphor, "the death of cinema," to organize many of their points. The transition to sound is the cause of "the death of silent cinema" which for them is the fourth death of cinema. This may come as a surprise for many readers who perhaps have viewed silent cinema as a smoothly developing history. What were the three earlier deaths? It is clear when reading this book that the early history of film is a particular area of research for the authors. I will not attempt to summarize their decades of work in a few sentences, but a value for a reader finding this book about digital cinema is that they may be led to read their work on early cinema. The idea that cinema had three deaths before the coming of sound is intriguing. Their work gives proper importance to changes such as the transition to renting films rather than selling them and to another death in the 1910s, which actually represents the birth of cinema for the authors.Although earlier periods of cinema are well discussed, the focus of the book "is the passage to digital" (50). The authors consider whether this is a revolution, a rupture, a mutation, a turn, or an upheaval and think their way through these descriptions. Their conclusion is the reasonable one of explaining distinctions, but deciding to use a range of terms (revolution, rupture, passage, turn, mutation) rather than being distracted by arguing for a single term. If their discussion had taken place a decade earlier, it would have been about a transition in progress, moving towards a start to finish fully digital cinema, but they are now able to title Chapter Two "Digitalizing Cinema from Top to Bottom." Their book comes at the right time.A particularly useful contribution of this book is to quickly move the reader deeper into the discussions about digital and cinema. For example, they deal with questions such as whether the application to film of Charles Sanders Peirce's concept of indexical becomes moot with digital images. Or, if the normalization outside a movie theatre of the ability to pause, or to quickly review an earlier image, represents a new standard way to view a film. There are also issues such as whether it could be that film projections and digital projections cannot be told apart versus the position that digital images are characterized by a "clinical coldness." The authors discuss the publications on these questions, allowing the reader to take an excursion into these topics or move ahead with the book's development. …
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电影的终结?《数字时代危机中的媒介》作者:安德烈·高德罗、菲利普·马里恩
电影的终结?《数字时代危机中的媒介》安德烈·高德罗、菲利普·马里恩著,蒂莫西·巴纳德译纽约:哥伦比亚大学出版社,2015年,240页。电影研究界的大多数成员都在思考和关注电影向数字化的转变。电影/电影院会发生什么?我们有过这样的对话,但在分配思考和研究时间时,很少有人把它作为优先事项。电影的终结?是两位学者关于电影/数字/电影联系问题的思考的重要记录。特别是如果你担心这些问题,想要了解它们的历史,并成为当前,这本书是一个很好的介绍。例如,它明确讨论了雷蒙德·贝鲁尔和雅克·奥蒙特的立场,我们每个人都听到过他们所持的观点。对高德罗和马里昂来说,他们代表了“古典影迷”,对他们来说,“影院放映……定义电影”(20)。电影只有在黑暗的电影院放映时才存在。每个人都有一本书来支持他们的观点,但是《电影的终结》的第一章?简要陈述了贝洛尔和奥蒙特的立场,并概述了达德利·安德鲁、詹姆斯·拉斯特拉和汤姆·甘宁的评论。这是对文献的全面回顾。高德罗和马里昂选择了一个戏剧性的比喻,“电影的死亡”,来组织他们的许多观点。向有声电影的过渡是“无声电影之死”的原因,对他们来说,这是电影的第四次死亡。这可能会让许多读者感到惊讶,他们可能认为无声电影是一段发展顺利的历史。之前的三起死亡是什么?在阅读这本书时,很明显,电影的早期历史是作者研究的一个特定领域。我不会试图用几句话来总结他们几十年来的工作,但对于读者来说,找到这本关于数字电影的书的价值在于,他们可能会被引导去阅读他们关于早期电影的著作。在声音出现之前,电影已经消亡了三次,这个想法很有趣。他们的作品对一些变化给予了适当的重视,比如电影从出售向租赁的转变,以及20世纪10年代的另一次死亡,这对作者来说实际上代表了电影的诞生。虽然早期的电影有很好的讨论,但这本书的重点是“向数字的过渡”(50)。作者考虑这是一场革命、一次破裂、一次突变、一次转折还是一次剧变,并通过这些描述思考自己的方式。他们的结论是合理的解释区别,但决定使用一系列术语(革命,破裂,通过,转向,突变),而不是被争论一个单一的术语分心。如果他们的讨论发生在十年前,那将是一个正在进行的过渡,从开始到结束全数字电影,但他们现在能够将第二章命名为“从上到下的数字电影”。他们的书来得正是时候。这本书的一个特别有用的贡献是迅速将读者深入到关于数字和电影的讨论中。例如,他们处理诸如查尔斯·桑德斯·皮尔斯(Charles Sanders Peirce)的索引概念在数字图像中的应用是否变得毫无意义等问题。或者,如果在电影院外暂停或快速查看早期图像的能力的标准化,则代表了观看电影的新标准方式。还有一些问题,如胶片投影和数字投影是否无法区分,以及数字图像的特点是“临床冷漠”的立场。作者讨论了关于这些问题的出版物,允许读者对这些主题进行短途旅行或向前推进本书的发展。…
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