Wednesday, March 27, 2019

Film vs Literature :: Technology, Film, DVD

Since the beginning of train, technology has played an important role in the maturation of the medium. Film, much more so than literature, relies on the ever-changing nature of expert development to stay relevant. In 1980 when Seymour Chatman wrote What Novels Can Do That Films Cant (And Vice Versa), there were no such thing as videodisk players and the VCR was a newly introduced, and thus non-perfected, product. Today when viewing a picture show, one has the luxury of returning to previous scenes immediately and effortlessly in order to further soak in and contemplate bringic choices. In his essay, Chatman focuses to a fault heavily on narrative drive and, in saying that film cannot describe, does not give full merit to the idea of returning to and repetition a film for purpose of textual analysis. In direct cable to Chatmans views are those of Laura Mulvey. In her book Death 24x a Second, she champions the support of film as a way to inscribe import onto the piece. This wait is achieved mostly finished the act of rewatching scenes or freezing frames to parse through some of the more subtle expand of the shot. Chatman agrees that looking at a single frame enables us to examine it at our leisure, but he does not find a contradiction in this act (448). His course involves looking at a short story that is also a film of the same name, Une Partie de campagne. He says that films do not allow duration to dwell on plenteous details, but only after he dwells on the plenteous details of a shot in the film (448). Details are a point both Chatman and Mulvey spend metre discussing. Mulvey says that the mise en scne is where the unsaid and unspeakable find cinematic expression (Mulvey 146). The unsaid and unspeakable are undoubtedly the minute details of the scene that may only become apparent after sevenfold viewings or through pausing. She goes on to say that the mise en scne contributes a kind of cinematic commentary or description, inscribing into the scene significance that goes beyond the inarticulate consciousness of characters (Mulvey 147). For Mulvey, the key is for viewers to find moment in a film through the details of the scene, which may not be evident the first time. But is the pressure from the narrative destiny that Chatman refers to so insurmountable that details cannot be explored in a film?

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