突击队突袭现实的本质

G. Rhodes
{"title":"突击队突袭现实的本质","authors":"G. Rhodes","doi":"10.5040/9781501325540.CH-010","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"Films exist in many places. A film is in a reel stored inside of a can. A motion picture is encoded onto a shiny DVD that sparkles like a rainbow when held up to the light. But at the same time, those are just objects that contain films. We experience films not by staring at a reel or at a disc, but by gazing elsewhere, at a screen. But even the theatre or television screen is not a film's permanent home, certainly not in the same way that a frame provides to a painting. No, at best it is a fragile, temporal relationship, with the film bounded by opening credits and fades-to-black. The film exists for a short while, until it reaches The End and the screen goes dark. That is not to say that we don't try to provide frames for our cinematic paintings. We attempt to fix them in our memories, honing in, for example, on particular scenes that we like to recall, over and over again. Lines of dialogue as well, even when the memory that we create constitutes something different from our original experience with the film. Humphrey Bogart's Rick never actually said, \"Play, It Again Sam\" in Casablanca (1943), but he certainly did--and continues to do--in our cultural memory. But perhaps our favorite way to combat the temporal is to hinge particular adjectives onto films, as if a single word or two can encapsulate what they are. Movie X is \"heartwarming,\" it is \"uplifting,\" it is--like so many other films before it, of course--\"inspirational.\" By contrast, Movie Y is \"bold\" and \"daring\" and \"original.\" And then of course there is the darker underbelly of cinema, as exemplified by Movie Z, which is \"shocking\" and \"graphic\" and--egad--\"titillating.\" Running time runs, but we can screech the experience to a halt with such adjectives, equally suitable for use in our own conversations as they are for the text on movie posters and videotape boxes. If most films exist (at least when they are not being viewed) as adjectives, I would argue that a small number are verbs. They just are. In some cases, like Bob Quinn's Poitin (1979) and the Coen Brother's No Country for Old Men (2007), perhaps it is because they are so unadorned, so unvarnished, so raw, that they require no flowery adjectives. In other cases, ranging from The Great Train Robbery (1903) and The Cabinet of Dr. Caligari (1919) to Citizen Kane (1941) and A Bout de souffle (1960), they exist as if they have always existed. And they exert a gravitational pull, causing so many other films to orbit around them, tied irrevocably to the gravity of their influence, which is so strong as to just be. And then, well, there is Norman Mailer's 1970 film Maidstone. He directed the film and starred in it, both as the fictional character Norman T. Kingsley, a movie director who runs for President of the United States, and as Norman Mailer, playing himself as the director of Maidstone. After limited engagements in 1971, the film essentially disappeared from sight until a DVD was released in France in 2006, which was followed by a number of public screenings, such as at the Lincoln Center's Walter Reade Theatre in 2007. For over three decades, then, Maidstone had no screen on which to appear; its running time had stopped, and words were all that it had. Though Mailer would insist that the medium of film was \"once removed from words,\" the words through which Maidstone existed during its hiatus were largely his own (\"Course\" 232). Mailer's essay \"A Course on Film-Making,\" published in the New American Review in 1971, described his theory behind shooting Maidstone. A slightly different version of the essay appeared that same year in his book Maidstone: A Mystery, which also printed the film's dialogue and stage directions, transcribed after the fact since Maidstone did not have a shooting script. Many words, to be sure, but one in particular surfaces repeatedly. Not an adjective or even a verb, but a noun: for Norman Mailer, Maidstone was a \"raid.\" More specifically, it was \"analogous to a military operation, to a commando raid on the nature of reality--[the persons involved in making the film] would discover where reality was located by the attack itself, just as a company of Rangers might learn that the enemy was located not in the first town they invaded but another\" (\"Course\" 201). …","PeriodicalId":259119,"journal":{"name":"The Mailer Review","volume":"16 1","pages":"0"},"PeriodicalIF":0.0000,"publicationDate":"2009-09-22","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"0","resultStr":"{\"title\":\"Commando Raids on the Nature of Reality\",\"authors\":\"G. Rhodes\",\"doi\":\"10.5040/9781501325540.CH-010\",\"DOIUrl\":null,\"url\":null,\"abstract\":\"Films exist in many places. A film is in a reel stored inside of a can. A motion picture is encoded onto a shiny DVD that sparkles like a rainbow when held up to the light. But at the same time, those are just objects that contain films. We experience films not by staring at a reel or at a disc, but by gazing elsewhere, at a screen. But even the theatre or television screen is not a film's permanent home, certainly not in the same way that a frame provides to a painting. No, at best it is a fragile, temporal relationship, with the film bounded by opening credits and fades-to-black. The film exists for a short while, until it reaches The End and the screen goes dark. That is not to say that we don't try to provide frames for our cinematic paintings. We attempt to fix them in our memories, honing in, for example, on particular scenes that we like to recall, over and over again. Lines of dialogue as well, even when the memory that we create constitutes something different from our original experience with the film. Humphrey Bogart's Rick never actually said, \\\"Play, It Again Sam\\\" in Casablanca (1943), but he certainly did--and continues to do--in our cultural memory. But perhaps our favorite way to combat the temporal is to hinge particular adjectives onto films, as if a single word or two can encapsulate what they are. Movie X is \\\"heartwarming,\\\" it is \\\"uplifting,\\\" it is--like so many other films before it, of course--\\\"inspirational.\\\" By contrast, Movie Y is \\\"bold\\\" and \\\"daring\\\" and \\\"original.\\\" And then of course there is the darker underbelly of cinema, as exemplified by Movie Z, which is \\\"shocking\\\" and \\\"graphic\\\" and--egad--\\\"titillating.\\\" Running time runs, but we can screech the experience to a halt with such adjectives, equally suitable for use in our own conversations as they are for the text on movie posters and videotape boxes. If most films exist (at least when they are not being viewed) as adjectives, I would argue that a small number are verbs. They just are. In some cases, like Bob Quinn's Poitin (1979) and the Coen Brother's No Country for Old Men (2007), perhaps it is because they are so unadorned, so unvarnished, so raw, that they require no flowery adjectives. In other cases, ranging from The Great Train Robbery (1903) and The Cabinet of Dr. Caligari (1919) to Citizen Kane (1941) and A Bout de souffle (1960), they exist as if they have always existed. And they exert a gravitational pull, causing so many other films to orbit around them, tied irrevocably to the gravity of their influence, which is so strong as to just be. And then, well, there is Norman Mailer's 1970 film Maidstone. He directed the film and starred in it, both as the fictional character Norman T. Kingsley, a movie director who runs for President of the United States, and as Norman Mailer, playing himself as the director of Maidstone. After limited engagements in 1971, the film essentially disappeared from sight until a DVD was released in France in 2006, which was followed by a number of public screenings, such as at the Lincoln Center's Walter Reade Theatre in 2007. For over three decades, then, Maidstone had no screen on which to appear; its running time had stopped, and words were all that it had. Though Mailer would insist that the medium of film was \\\"once removed from words,\\\" the words through which Maidstone existed during its hiatus were largely his own (\\\"Course\\\" 232). Mailer's essay \\\"A Course on Film-Making,\\\" published in the New American Review in 1971, described his theory behind shooting Maidstone. A slightly different version of the essay appeared that same year in his book Maidstone: A Mystery, which also printed the film's dialogue and stage directions, transcribed after the fact since Maidstone did not have a shooting script. Many words, to be sure, but one in particular surfaces repeatedly. Not an adjective or even a verb, but a noun: for Norman Mailer, Maidstone was a \\\"raid.\\\" More specifically, it was \\\"analogous to a military operation, to a commando raid on the nature of reality--[the persons involved in making the film] would discover where reality was located by the attack itself, just as a company of Rangers might learn that the enemy was located not in the first town they invaded but another\\\" (\\\"Course\\\" 201). …\",\"PeriodicalId\":259119,\"journal\":{\"name\":\"The Mailer Review\",\"volume\":\"16 1\",\"pages\":\"0\"},\"PeriodicalIF\":0.0000,\"publicationDate\":\"2009-09-22\",\"publicationTypes\":\"Journal Article\",\"fieldsOfStudy\":null,\"isOpenAccess\":false,\"openAccessPdf\":\"\",\"citationCount\":\"0\",\"resultStr\":null,\"platform\":\"Semanticscholar\",\"paperid\":null,\"PeriodicalName\":\"The Mailer Review\",\"FirstCategoryId\":\"1085\",\"ListUrlMain\":\"https://doi.org/10.5040/9781501325540.CH-010\",\"RegionNum\":0,\"RegionCategory\":null,\"ArticlePicture\":[],\"TitleCN\":null,\"AbstractTextCN\":null,\"PMCID\":null,\"EPubDate\":\"\",\"PubModel\":\"\",\"JCR\":\"\",\"JCRName\":\"\",\"Score\":null,\"Total\":0}","platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"The Mailer Review","FirstCategoryId":"1085","ListUrlMain":"https://doi.org/10.5040/9781501325540.CH-010","RegionNum":0,"RegionCategory":null,"ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"","PubModel":"","JCR":"","JCRName":"","Score":null,"Total":0}
引用次数: 0

摘要

电影存在于许多地方。胶卷装在一个卷轴里,储存在一个罐子里。电影被编码到一张闪闪发光的DVD上,在灯光下闪闪发光,就像彩虹一样。但与此同时,这些只是包含电影的物体。我们不是通过盯着卷轴或碟片来体验电影,而是通过盯着其他地方,盯着屏幕。但即使是剧院或电视屏幕也不是电影的永久家园,当然也不像画框对绘画的作用那样大。不,这充其量是一种脆弱的、短暂的关系,影片只局限于片头字幕和逐渐变黑。影片存在了很短的时间,直到影片结束,屏幕变暗。这并不是说我们不尝试为我们的电影绘画提供框架。我们试图将它们固定在我们的记忆中,例如,我们一遍又一遍地回忆我们喜欢回忆的特定场景。对白也是如此,即使我们创造的记忆与我们最初对电影的体验有所不同。亨弗莱·鲍嘉饰演的里克在《卡萨布兰卡》(1943)中从来没有说过“玩吧,山姆”,但在我们的文化记忆中,他确实说过——而且还在继续说。但也许我们最喜欢的对抗时间的方式是将特定的形容词与电影联系起来,就好像一两个词可以概括它们是什么一样。电影X“温暖人心”,“振奋人心”,当然,就像之前的许多电影一样,它“鼓舞人心”。相比之下,电影Y“大胆”、“大胆”、“原创”。当然,还有电影的阴暗面,比如《Z电影》(Movie Z),它“令人震惊”、“生动”,而且——哎呀——“撩人”。时间在流逝,但我们可以用这些形容词把我们的经历戛然而止,它们既适用于我们自己的对话,也适用于电影海报和录像带盒上的文字。如果大多数电影以形容词的形式存在(至少当它们不被观看的时候),我认为有一小部分电影是动词。他们就是这样。在某些情况下,比如鲍勃·奎因(Bob Quinn)的《波伊汀》(Poitin, 1979)和科恩兄弟的《老无所依》(Coen Brother, 2007),也许正是因为它们如此质朴,如此未经修饰,如此原始,所以不需要华丽的形容词。从1903年的《火车大劫案》和1919年的《卡利加利医生的内阁》,到1941年的《公民凯恩》和1960年的《蛋松饼》,这些故事都像一直存在一样存在着。它们产生了一种引力,导致许多其他电影围绕着它们旋转,不可逆转地与它们的影响力捆绑在一起,这种引力是如此之强,以至于。然后是诺曼·梅勒1970年的电影《梅德斯通》。他导演并主演了这部电影,既扮演了虚构的角色诺曼·t·金斯利(Norman T. Kingsley),一位竞选美国总统的电影导演,也扮演了诺曼·梅勒(Norman Mailer),他本人是《梅德斯通》的导演。在1971年的有限放映之后,这部电影基本上从人们的视线中消失了,直到2006年在法国发行了DVD,之后又进行了一些公开放映,比如2007年在林肯中心的沃尔特里德剧院。此后的三十多年里,梅德斯通没有出现在银幕上的机会;它的运行时间停止了,只有文字。尽管梅勒坚持认为电影这种媒介“曾经脱离了文字”,但梅德斯通在其中断期间所依靠的文字在很大程度上是他自己的(《课程》第232页)。梅勒1971年在《新美国评论》(New American Review)上发表的文章《电影制作课程》(A Course on Film-Making)描述了他拍摄梅德斯通背后的理论。同年,这篇文章的一个略有不同的版本出现在他的书《梅德斯通:一个谜》中,书中还印了电影的对话和舞台指示,因为梅德斯通没有拍摄剧本,所以是在事实发生后转录的。当然,有很多词,但有一个词反复出现。不是形容词,甚至不是动词,而是一个名词:对诺曼·梅勒来说,梅德斯通是一个“突袭”。更具体地说,它“类似于一场军事行动,类似于突击队对现实本质的突袭——[参与制作电影的人]将通过袭击本身发现现实的位置,就像一队游骑兵可能会知道敌人不是在他们入侵的第一个城镇,而是在另一个城镇”(《课程》201)。…
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
查看原文
分享 分享
微信好友 朋友圈 QQ好友 复制链接
本刊更多论文
Commando Raids on the Nature of Reality
Films exist in many places. A film is in a reel stored inside of a can. A motion picture is encoded onto a shiny DVD that sparkles like a rainbow when held up to the light. But at the same time, those are just objects that contain films. We experience films not by staring at a reel or at a disc, but by gazing elsewhere, at a screen. But even the theatre or television screen is not a film's permanent home, certainly not in the same way that a frame provides to a painting. No, at best it is a fragile, temporal relationship, with the film bounded by opening credits and fades-to-black. The film exists for a short while, until it reaches The End and the screen goes dark. That is not to say that we don't try to provide frames for our cinematic paintings. We attempt to fix them in our memories, honing in, for example, on particular scenes that we like to recall, over and over again. Lines of dialogue as well, even when the memory that we create constitutes something different from our original experience with the film. Humphrey Bogart's Rick never actually said, "Play, It Again Sam" in Casablanca (1943), but he certainly did--and continues to do--in our cultural memory. But perhaps our favorite way to combat the temporal is to hinge particular adjectives onto films, as if a single word or two can encapsulate what they are. Movie X is "heartwarming," it is "uplifting," it is--like so many other films before it, of course--"inspirational." By contrast, Movie Y is "bold" and "daring" and "original." And then of course there is the darker underbelly of cinema, as exemplified by Movie Z, which is "shocking" and "graphic" and--egad--"titillating." Running time runs, but we can screech the experience to a halt with such adjectives, equally suitable for use in our own conversations as they are for the text on movie posters and videotape boxes. If most films exist (at least when they are not being viewed) as adjectives, I would argue that a small number are verbs. They just are. In some cases, like Bob Quinn's Poitin (1979) and the Coen Brother's No Country for Old Men (2007), perhaps it is because they are so unadorned, so unvarnished, so raw, that they require no flowery adjectives. In other cases, ranging from The Great Train Robbery (1903) and The Cabinet of Dr. Caligari (1919) to Citizen Kane (1941) and A Bout de souffle (1960), they exist as if they have always existed. And they exert a gravitational pull, causing so many other films to orbit around them, tied irrevocably to the gravity of their influence, which is so strong as to just be. And then, well, there is Norman Mailer's 1970 film Maidstone. He directed the film and starred in it, both as the fictional character Norman T. Kingsley, a movie director who runs for President of the United States, and as Norman Mailer, playing himself as the director of Maidstone. After limited engagements in 1971, the film essentially disappeared from sight until a DVD was released in France in 2006, which was followed by a number of public screenings, such as at the Lincoln Center's Walter Reade Theatre in 2007. For over three decades, then, Maidstone had no screen on which to appear; its running time had stopped, and words were all that it had. Though Mailer would insist that the medium of film was "once removed from words," the words through which Maidstone existed during its hiatus were largely his own ("Course" 232). Mailer's essay "A Course on Film-Making," published in the New American Review in 1971, described his theory behind shooting Maidstone. A slightly different version of the essay appeared that same year in his book Maidstone: A Mystery, which also printed the film's dialogue and stage directions, transcribed after the fact since Maidstone did not have a shooting script. Many words, to be sure, but one in particular surfaces repeatedly. Not an adjective or even a verb, but a noun: for Norman Mailer, Maidstone was a "raid." More specifically, it was "analogous to a military operation, to a commando raid on the nature of reality--[the persons involved in making the film] would discover where reality was located by the attack itself, just as a company of Rangers might learn that the enemy was located not in the first town they invaded but another" ("Course" 201). …
求助全文
通过发布文献求助,成功后即可免费获取论文全文。 去求助
来源期刊
自引率
0.00%
发文量
0
期刊最新文献
Deer Park Words with Friends The Life and Death of the Celebrity Author in Maidstone Overexposed: My First Taste of Filmmaking A Course in Film-Making
×
引用
GB/T 7714-2015
复制
MLA
复制
APA
复制
导出至
BibTeX EndNote RefMan NoteFirst NoteExpress
×
×
提示
您的信息不完整,为了账户安全,请先补充。
现在去补充
×
提示
您因"违规操作"
具体请查看互助需知
我知道了
×
提示
现在去查看 取消
×
提示
确定
0
微信
客服QQ
Book学术公众号 扫码关注我们
反馈
×
意见反馈
请填写您的意见或建议
请填写您的手机或邮箱
已复制链接
已复制链接
快去分享给好友吧!
我知道了
×
扫码分享
扫码分享
Book学术官方微信
Book学术文献互助
Book学术文献互助群
群 号:481959085
Book学术
文献互助 智能选刊 最新文献 互助须知 联系我们:info@booksci.cn
Book学术提供免费学术资源搜索服务,方便国内外学者检索中英文文献。致力于提供最便捷和优质的服务体验。
Copyright © 2023 Book学术 All rights reserved.
ghs 京公网安备 11010802042870号 京ICP备2023020795号-1