{"title":"Ken Jacobs and the Perverted Archival Image","authors":"Pablo Gonçalo","doi":"10.1515/ausfm-2016-0015","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"Abstract This paper analyses two recent works by American filmmaker Ken Jacobs that deal with aspects of remediation. The first is A Tom Tom Chaser, in which Jacobs records the telecine process that transforms the classic silent film Tom, Tom, the Piper’s Son from chemical into electronic media. The film is riddled with poetic turns inviting the audience to rediscover the medial noise hidden by images. Moreover, Jacobs focuses on the moment of transition from a material medium (the film strip) to the immaterial (the image, the video), so that the noise brings the viewer closer to a perception or brief capture of the medium in itself. Images are both figured and disfigured along this process. The second work is The Guests, an unconventional 3D film in which Jacobs transforms a short take from a Lumière Brothers film by discovering unseen views of the original footage. In his remediation of the 3D technology, Jacobs employs the Pulfrich effect, which allows him to blur the images of the archival film and to create instances of uncertainty between the views coming from the two human eyes. As a result of this procedure, the characters in the film seem to look directly at the audience. The analysis of both films highlights the poetry of the typical manoeuvre by which Jacobs perverts the archival medium, whereupon the viewing mode between media denaturalizes the usual media gaze (framed and representational), focusing on the moment of viewing in itself. This, as a result, favours the medium for what it is and subverts the gaze that expects something representational, discursive, perhaps story-driven.","PeriodicalId":40721,"journal":{"name":"Acta Universitatis Sapientiae-Film and Media Studies","volume":null,"pages":null},"PeriodicalIF":0.1000,"publicationDate":"2016-12-01","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"0","resultStr":null,"platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"Acta Universitatis Sapientiae-Film and Media Studies","FirstCategoryId":"1085","ListUrlMain":"https://doi.org/10.1515/ausfm-2016-0015","RegionNum":0,"RegionCategory":null,"ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"","PubModel":"","JCR":"0","JCRName":"FILM, RADIO, TELEVISION","Score":null,"Total":0}
引用次数: 0
Abstract
Abstract This paper analyses two recent works by American filmmaker Ken Jacobs that deal with aspects of remediation. The first is A Tom Tom Chaser, in which Jacobs records the telecine process that transforms the classic silent film Tom, Tom, the Piper’s Son from chemical into electronic media. The film is riddled with poetic turns inviting the audience to rediscover the medial noise hidden by images. Moreover, Jacobs focuses on the moment of transition from a material medium (the film strip) to the immaterial (the image, the video), so that the noise brings the viewer closer to a perception or brief capture of the medium in itself. Images are both figured and disfigured along this process. The second work is The Guests, an unconventional 3D film in which Jacobs transforms a short take from a Lumière Brothers film by discovering unseen views of the original footage. In his remediation of the 3D technology, Jacobs employs the Pulfrich effect, which allows him to blur the images of the archival film and to create instances of uncertainty between the views coming from the two human eyes. As a result of this procedure, the characters in the film seem to look directly at the audience. The analysis of both films highlights the poetry of the typical manoeuvre by which Jacobs perverts the archival medium, whereupon the viewing mode between media denaturalizes the usual media gaze (framed and representational), focusing on the moment of viewing in itself. This, as a result, favours the medium for what it is and subverts the gaze that expects something representational, discursive, perhaps story-driven.
摘要:本文分析了美国电影导演肯·雅各布斯最近两部涉及补救方面的作品。第一部是《Tom Tom Chaser》,雅各布斯记录了将经典默片《Tom, Tom, The Piper’s Son》从化学媒介转化为电子媒介的电视制作过程。影片充满诗意的转折,邀请观众重新发现隐藏在图像中的媒体噪音。此外,雅各布斯关注的是从物质媒介(胶片)到非物质媒介(图像、视频)的过渡时刻,因此噪音使观众更接近对媒介本身的感知或简短捕捉。在这个过程中,图像既被塑造又被破坏。第二部作品是《客人》,这是一部非传统的3D电影,雅各布斯将lumi兄弟电影的一段短片转换为原始镜头的未见视图。在他对3D技术的修复中,雅各布斯采用了普尔弗里奇效应,这使他能够模糊档案电影的图像,并在两只眼睛的观点之间创造不确定性的实例。这一过程的结果是,电影中的人物似乎直接看着观众。对这两部电影的分析突出了雅各布斯歪曲档案媒介的典型手法的诗意,因此,媒介之间的观看模式使通常的媒体凝视(框架和代表性)变性,专注于观看本身的时刻。因此,这有利于媒介本身,并颠覆了期待具有代表性、话语性、可能是故事驱动的凝视。