Monday, April 28, 2008

Post 9

Un Chien Andalou is a film that leaves the viewer confused as to what has taken place. The film offers no story line with disconnected scenes that in no way relate to one another. The meaning is ambiguous leaving the interpretation of the film up to the viewer. The intention of this film seems to shock and confuse people, much like surrealist art. The film made by two surrealists Dali and Brunel captures the essence of the movement in which in represents. It relates to Freud's analysis in his work "On Dreams". Freud believes that we repress things in our minds so as not to revuls ourselves which is present in the obscurity of dream images. When we sleep our unconscious is able to revel itself to us and we are able to see what we are repressing. These thoughts come to us in obscure images so as not to induce repulsion at what are true thoughts are.  It is up to us to interpret these images and gain meaning out of them.
The film acts as a type of dream that we are meant to interpret through the obscure images that are being presented before us. The film shows images that in no way relate to one another and do not correspond with the previous image or scene much like dreams. In this way we are meant to glean our own meaning from the film and figure out what each of these images mean to us.

Sunday, April 27, 2008

Un Chien Andalou is a trip and a half, to say the least. With no plot, an ambiguous meaning, and vivid imagery, it is a film that is sure to shock and provoke the audience into an existential conundrum. Freud's essay on dreams has some relevant ideas that can be applied to the film. Freud says that dream images reproduce logical connection by approximation in time and space so even though two corresponding objects may be very different from one another, there is still some "intimate connection" which relates the two. This idea is present in something like the scene where the man is dragging two pieces of wood, two missionaries, and a piano with a dead mule on top of it. Particularly his idea on repression and rejection seems to apply the most to the film.
The intentions of the film was influenced by a motive of shock and revulsion. This revulsion is particularly important to Freud's concept of repression. The obscurity of the dream-image, he believed, was important to prevent the dreamer from becoming to repulsed by his own self. During sleep, the censorship part of our brain becomes less powerful and the unconscious part tends to take advantage of the circumstance by trying to reveal itself. The need for obscuring the image is to prevent exposing those repressed images which Freud believed were universal. Therefore, these repressed thoughts and feelings are represented by metaphors and similes, things which are intended for interpretation. These metaphors are objects which relate to the objects around it. First we draw material for our dreams from recollections from our waking lives, specifically those which have made an impression on our life (excitement, trauma, etc). The ideas which are present in our dreams are repetitions of a theme. The collected material goes through a process of condensation and displacement. The recollections become condensed into fragmentations of images, speeches, or thoughts which effectively act as a representation for one idea. The act of displacement puts the images used for the metaphor through a selective process "in favor of those portions of it which are the most appropriate for the construction of situations". The images are then appropriately juxtaposed with other images that are associated with the same idea.
Comparing Un Chien Andalou to these dreams theories becomes difficult because of the intentions and motivations. Bunuel and Dali intentionally juxtaposed irrational images strictly to defy reason. One can interpret the film loosely based off of possible conjectures of what each image is supposed to represent. The problem I have with comparing dreams to the films is that a dream still pulls things from real life and implies a personal undercurrent between them. Dreams, in this way, are entirely personal things which reveal our unconscious selves. The filmmakers take away that relevance and instead insist that the viewer/interpreter comes up with it themselves. This does not create a substantial analysis for the individual because it is not based on their personal psyche's.
The film acceptably imitates a dream sequence but lacks the key element that gives the dream sequence any value: real, personal meaning. Therefore, the film can only succeed in making the viewer uncomfortable and this could be for any number of reasons. The objects are so general they leave themselves wide open for interpretation, but any interpretation will be automatically superficial because there is no depth to the film. The sequences which succeed in making the audience uncomfortable will most likely appeal to bad taste than to psychological repressions.
All in all the film is an amusing experiment and a fantastic short film with incredible imagery, but that is all it gets. This is a problem I get with a lot of Dali's work. It may be my own ignorance, but I feel like he is more concerned with superficial elements than of depth of meaning. The film rely's on superficial forms of repression and is met with superficial anxieties. We cringe at the slashing of the eyeball because we think about what it would feel like to have our eyeballs slashed and not, as Freud suggests, because it relates to some repressed memory or childhood anxiety.
I did not get particularly uncomfortable by this film for that very reason. I thought it was fun to try and interpret the various images and make up some meaning as to how they related, but I was not confronted by any anxieties or frustrations as a result of the images. This did not make me question my identity, as a true dream would. It is a successful imitation of the dream world but an ineffective reflection

Sigmund Freud's 'On Dreams' is a clear demonstration of the surrealist world presented in Un Chien Andalou. "The physical material of the dream-thoughts habitually includes recollections of impressive experiences" (Freud, 21). I would say this quote summarizes the concept of this film altogether. For a 1929 film, Un Chien Andalou features some creepy images that are so graphic they seem real. More interesting enough, the theme of desire is easily expressed in the film and this is where I would mainly like to focus. These examples of desire are used through displacement, condensation, and pictorial images.

Sigmund Freud explains the need or urge of a human in real life and the film Un Chien Andalou provides a realistic feeling but is clearly in a surrealist world. However, this idea of displacement is easy to spot in the short, 16 minute film. A few examples of urge can be explained such as the man who stares at the woman frequently seen in the film. He looks her down with those bold, hawk eyes and slowly moves toward her. She seems frightened at first with a face that reads confusion. He begins to walk even closer to her and attempts to grab her breasts in a very disturbing manner. His intention to grab her sexually is an urge, but the surrealist aspect begins to take affect as she resists at first, but then her facial expression implies that she is not disgusted, but interested. This face she has reads that she is also interested and has an urge for this rather creepy man to continue these disgusting antics.

Condensation in the mind of Freud is the many emotions or feelings condensed into one major image. In this case, the entire film is an example of condensation as there is obviously no real plot, but many different short stories without words condensed into an entire 16 minute film. Very close to the opening of the film the moon is shown to demonstrate a darkness of the film. This is immediately followed by the desire concept as a man holds a razor and proceeds to slit a woman’s eye ball with personal pleasure as she does not resist and does not show pleasure, but just lets it happen. She doesn’t seem displeased and this disturbing scene is followed by another odd clip with no relation whatsoever to the infamous eye ball scene. The entire film is condensed with odd images and Freud is noting that we don’t know why or how these dreams are related but they simply follow one another. In my opinion, dreams are surreal just as this film and none of our dreams seem to be related to one following another.

I personally can have a good or bad day that is then brought back into my dreams. Hopefully this is not weird and happens to everyone, but the importance is this is the pictorial dream concept that Freud writes about. The other night I watched a basketball game on television in which I had an urge to play myself. Later this exact night my dreams led me to play basketball with a random friend I had not seen in forever. I can’t explain the friend but this game was a desire I had that was followed in my dream. In Un Chien Andalou, the woman looks out her window and sees a man on his bike. She makes a face that seems questionable in terms of what she prefers. Immediately following the close up on her face, the man crashes on his bicycle. Her face begins to turn into a smile as this dream like feeling demonstrated her emotion of desire. Un Chien Andalou is a film that can take these dream like feelings of surrealism and relate them to a condensed reality that is similar to a dream world. Freud’s concept of dream like feelings relate very much to the film.

Post 9

Un Chien Andalou presents its viewers with a disconcerting take on the traditional format of a film. It disconnects itself from any successive coherent narrative arrangement, with no links between successive scenes. It leaves the opportunity for any interpretation to be drawn from the images shown and every single scene seems to be random and unconcerned with any other. Throughout the film, Bunuel, the director, repeats images in situations where they shouldn't necessarily be added, or don't really make sense, which adds to the already confusing undertone of the film and enhances the off-putting nature inherent in the film. Bunuel worked with Dali on this film, both employing a Surrealist take on film-making with a psychoanalytical undertone brought on by Freud's theories, which the Surrealists incorporated in their ideology of their art forms. The Surrealists were extremely interested in the unconscious as a way to escape reality and subvert the limitations imposed on people by a rational, civilized world where the conscious realm of the mind rules. The surrealists favored Freud's theory of dreams, the unconscious state, the conscious state, the Id, the ego, and the super-ego, incorporating facets of his theories into their own works. Freud postulated a sharp divide between reality and dreams with his concecpts of condensation and displacement, which were both widely used in surrealism. Freud studied dreams for uncovering problems brought on during the awakened state. He understood dream reality to be a fragmented story with many levels and perspectives of interpretation, and this is showcased in Un Chien Andalou on a number of levels. The film intentionally distorts reality but establishes a picture that is mostly realistic in its deliverance. It blurs the distinction between the reality and the dream, making the viewer very confused as to what exactly is going on and how to make sense of these fragmented images that are seemingly incompatible in the sense of a rational narrative. Bunuel conveys surreal images, projecting scenes that are made up of both external experiences and inner life experiences, which are reminiscent of a dream-like state. The opening scene in the film perfectly exemplifies this fusion between Freud's ideas regarding dreams and life functioning in an altered, dream-like state of unconsciousness, with the moon in the sky being quickly replaced by a close-up, disturbing shot of an eyeball being sliced. This automatically sets the viewer up for what they are to expect through the rest of the 17-minute film, a combination of unrelated images repeated throughout the film, which have no apparent meaning or representative substance. The eye ball cutting sequence which opens the film produces a state of free association for the viewer, allowing the viewer to feel a number of things regarding the images placed before them. The viewer is transported into a dream-like state of mind where there is no real explanation for what they are seeing, just a random selection of images and experiences that they can draw multiple interpretations from. 
The characters and props make the film even more of a confusing dream-like experience, with the irrational montage, which facilitates the negation of reality, forcing the viewer to rely on emotion and the impact of the unconscious to carry them through the rest of the film. The viewer has to negotiate with the unconsciousness in order to make sense of the images placed before them. The young man in the film seems to be fighting his own unconscious urges for the young woman as he strains against the combined weight of a piano, a donkey, and two priests, which can be viewed as a representation of his own personal struggles with reality and the world outside as well as his struggles with his unconscious state of mind and his super-ego. 

Saturday, April 26, 2008

Post 9 Un chien Andalou

Un Chien Andalou, directed by Luis Buñuel, is a very interesting and bizarre short film. This was my second time watching it and it still continues to confuse and shock me. Both times I have watched this film I have felt a feeling of anxiety and perplexity. We talked about in class how we felt the film is meant to evoke certain emotions from the viewer and not necessarily make sense. If this is true, then the film is excellent because I did have strong reactions to some of the images displayed, such as the slicing of the eye, the dragging of the dead bodies behind the piano and the hand being poked by a stick on the floor. The main reason why I really enjoy this film is because I love Salvador Dali’s work. I find it very unique and creative. The fact that Dali helped with this film, and some imagery from his paintings such as the ants and the reference to time appears in the film makes watching Un Chien Andalou, fun for me.

Reading Sigmund Freud’s ‘On Dreams’ was very interesting, because a lot of connections can be made to Un Chien Andalou, because of the films dream like sequences. Sigmund Freud said, “The content of dreams, however, does not consist entirely of situations, but also includes disconnected fragments of visual images, speeches and even bits of unmodified thoughts.” 21 This instantly made me think of the film because of how the film does not consist of shots put together to create one cohesive story. This film contains “disconnected fragments of visual images, speeches and bits of unmodified thoughts.” It almost works like a collage, a mix of completely different thoughts and ideas.


Displacement-Freud’s idea of displacement is that if the dreamer has a real life urge or want, this thing that the dreamer wishes for can appear in a different form in a dream. For example, if I was very mad with someone and wanted to do something bad to him or her, I might have a dream that something bad occurs to the person. In my dream, I physically didn’t have anything to do with that person having bad luck. That desire or want is covered up and disguised as a random happening. In the film, there is a lot of images having to do with desire. The one example I thought of that reminded me of displacement was when the main man in the film starts touching the main woman. He is grabbing her breasts and drools in delight. His emotions show that he wishes he was touching her naked body, but only gets to touch over the clothes. The viewer of the film is shown nudity but in reality, he does not get to see this. This reminded me of displacement because his desires are covered up.


Condensation-Freud’s idea of condensation is when the dreamer hides an urge or emotion by condensing it into a short dream image. Most of the time we do not know why these images are condensed because we cannot “discover or recognize the dream-thoughts in the dream content, unless we understand the reason for their distortion.” What came to mind were the films short flashes of images. I thought of the cutting of the eye segment and the image of the moth, all which are very short and seem to be randomly placed. Also, the whole film can be seen as an example of condensation. We cannot understand what is really going on because all the images and the plot are condensed. We only see short segments places together, making it hard to figure out what it all means.


Dreams as pictorial situations-Freud said that dreams consist of pictorial situations. Dreams take our thoughts and emotions and put them into images and or situations. He also states that many times these pictorial situations show us our desires. Un Chien Andalou, as we discussed in class, has a lot to do with human desire. The main man desires to be with the main woman. He attacks her and even drags a piano across the room to get what he wants. When the main woman leaves the man in the room, she walks on to the beach. There is another man whom she clearly desires, as she tries to embrace him with a kiss. Perhaps, all of these images in the film show the woman what she desires and what she does not.

I found it very interesting when we tried to analyze the film in class. Most everyone was confused, trying to make every image mean something to us. As humans, we feel the need to make everything make sense. We try to decode things and make them have meaning. This is just like dreams. We have dream books and dream interpreters who can tell us what the images we saw in our sleep symbolize. With the film, however, I believe that we are not meant to decipher the meaning in every sequence. I believe the film is just about placing images that evoke emotion together in one short movie. It is about the art of the shots, not what they mean.

Thursday, April 24, 2008

un chien andalou

In Freud’s theory of dreams, he uses four main ways in which the content of one’s dreams and latent thought can be transformed. In the film Un Chien Andalou, the viewer is confronted with a series of images which are difficult to decipher and put into the context of a larger meaning. In Freud’s discussion of dreams and the transformation of latent thought into conscious thought he uses the terms of Condensation, Displacement, and Symbolism. Condensation is defined as two or more latent thought which are combined to create one “pictorial situation” or dream. As viewers we are unable to “discover or recognize the dream-thoughts in the dream-content, unless we understand the reason for their distortion.” In Un Chien Andalou, the viewer is constantly confronted with images, which are un realistic and could potentially be the latent thoughts of the directors. There are many scenes, which are extremely unclear and chaotic, which may reflect the dream or latent thoughts of the directors/writers. Because dreams reflect the unconscious thought process, it is impractical to attempt to decipher the meaning of these disordered visions. The scene with Dali and Bunuel dragging a piano with two dead mules on it dressed as religious figures. This scene addresses this idea of the combination of different unrelated imagery to create one “pictorial situation” through the process of Condensation. Throughout the film the narrative is filled with similar scenes where the process of Condensation creates a “manifest dream image” where the viewer is forced to tackle with multiple images which have little or no logical relation to one another. Freud’s idea of displacement helps to describe the human mind in terms of latent thought and emotional desire. Un Chien Andalou, although a film with an illogical narrative, is filled with issues of human desire. Freud’s idea of displacement discusses the idea of humans’ latent thought not directly imposing their emotional desires on other human beings but rather focusing on an unrelated object. Although, human desire between the male and female characters in Un Chien Andalou, is prevalent throughout he film the desire is not always manifested towards the other figure. For example, the female figure becomes engrossed in a box filled with male clothing. After reading about Freud’s idea of Displacement I was reminded on his psychoanalysis theory of the fetish, and found obvious similarities between the two. The hand is an important object in the film, which many of the figures focus on, perhaps to replace their desires of another human in the form of a fetish.
Freud was also very interested in the object or “dream symbol” which replaces sexual desires. In Un Chien Andalou, the image of a box is repeated throughout the narrative. According to Freud, the box symbolizes female genitalia and desire. The film refers a lot to the idea of the unattainable woman, and the obstacles that men have to go through to have sexual relations with a female. In the case of the film the box may become a fetish object resulting from the frustration that the male feels when he is unable to have the female figure.
“It would be a mistake, however, to suppose that these dream-facades are nothing other than mistaken somewhat arbitrary revisions of dream-content by the conscious agency of mental life.” Freud suggests that the latent thoughts and visions that create the pictorial situations of our dreams are often derived from unconscious desire. As stated earlier it is clear that Un Chien Andalou is expressing human desire, but because these desires are manifested in such bizarre, unconventional manners they may reflect the dreams of the characters. After reading Freud’s “On Dreams” and reflecting on the film I began to contemplate if the film is a depiction of a dream void of any conscious thought or desire. I began to wonder if the desire between the characters’ is conscious, but the manner in which they approach each other reflects their latent desires, which they have explored in their dream visions. Dreams and human latent thought are personal experiences, which are typically not shared. Therefore when the viewer is confronted with these visions although they may have similar thoughts they are bemused by the visions because they are experiencing them in a situation where they are “conscious”.

Wednesday, April 23, 2008

Un Chien Andalou--Post 9

Discuss some ways in which Un Chien Andalou can be understood in terms of Freud's theory of dreams, especially his analysis of displacement, condensation, and dreams as "pictorial situations."

DUE SATURDAY, APRIL 26

Sunday, April 20, 2008

Post 8

Belly of an Architect proposes a new idea regarding artistic creation, most notably in its use of the human body and anatomy as the catalyst for this creative surge in the artist. From the very beginning of the film, the audience is confronted with the theme of the belly, with the first scene showing Kracklite, the films protagonist, engaging in a sexual act aboard a train, with his bulbous belly sticking out, blocking his wife, Louisa, and her body from the camera. This trip marks the birth of both Kracklite's project and his heir (which we find out about later on in the film), as he consummates his relationship with his wife as he enters into Italy, where he will be for nine months working on this projecting honoring the relatively forgotten life of Boullee. Additionally, throughout the film, the audience is faced with numerous images of belly-shaped objects, architecture, and the belly itself. The cake at the dinner honoring Boullee is shaped like a dome or belly. It is shown before it is cut and then when the wife cuts into it, and then eventually the camera exposes the interior of the cake, eaten and torn apart with the one pound note burning inside of it. These images work as a means of representing Kracklite's creativity, as well as his tumultuous relationship with his wife who metaphorically castrates him throughout the film. The belly imagery can be seen as a metaphor for Kracklite's creativity, which is represented through his lifelong project honoring Boullee's architecture, which can in turn be seen as Kracklite's "baby." 
While in Rome, Kracklite becomes increasingly obsessed with his idol, Boullee, as well as by architecture and by his own insides, which begin to become a problem for him as soon as he arrives. Kracklite becomes increasingly sick throughout the course of the film, eventually resulting in a cancerous cell forming in his stomach, which plagues his character throughout his time in Italy. Kracklite's physical and social decline coincide with his hero's own decline, Boullee, who did not receive critical acclaim or notoriety until much after his death, not until the 20th century. Kracklite becomes obsessed with shapes and contents of both architecture and anatomy, of bellies in sculptures, photographs, and paintings, bringing him to obsessively photocopy larger and larger images of the belly of a particular sculpture, which he then uses as a diagram to draw out his own troublesome areas of his own stomach. He becomes obsessed with historical figures of the past, such as the Emperor Hadrian and other members of ancient Roman culture. His infatuation with figures of the past leads Kracklite to engage in paranoid episodes where he screams at his wife savagely and accuses her of trying to poison him. He connects himself with these heroic figures throughout the film and even takes on a Christ-like martyr role toward the end of the film. 
The beginning of the film where Kracklite and his wife conceiving a child is reinforced with the last scene which closes the film with the opening of Kracklite's exhibition, his "baby," and the actual birth of his child. This theme of conception plays an underlying role throughout the film with imagery supporting it on numerous occassions. As the exhibition honoring Boullee is Kracklite's baby, and as Kracklite's wife becomes pregnant, everything becomes internalized for the American architect, to the point of producing physical defects in his own stomach. Recurring images of conception are seen, such as the scene in which Kracklite and Flavia seduce each other, as she pulls him behind a white sheet, with her shadow mimicking that of a small little boy's, and pulls him in with her by a very long red ribbon placed around his neck. This is reminiscent of an umbilical chord as she pulls him in by the string into the shadow of the white sheet. Additionally, Kracklite's physical decline is a metaphor for his own struggles to fulfill Boullee's legacy and find his own recognition as an American architect thriving in Italy, the place in which Boullee failed.
Additionally, Greenaway uses technical framing to visually deliver the message of the film. He uses deliberate framing of architectural forms such as Roman columns and vertical lines as well as recurring shots of symbolically clean domes, flat white surfaces, and rigid statues that are overwhelmingly large compared to the figures. The immense physicality of Kracklite is squandered by the sheer size of the columns, statues, and architectural forms that envelope him throughout the film. This technique works to visually rectify the relationship between the inner passion and workings of the creative mind, which become huge as they materializes in real life, and far outlive the creators. Kracklite begins seeing himself as an extension of the architecture and sees Boullee's architecture as the man himself, even going as far as to write postcards to the dead architect, speaking to him as if he were still alive and they had encountered each other just that day. 

Bell of an Architect

The name of the game in this film is Obsession. Obsession is portrayed as the corrupting element in these characters lives. Everyone seems to obsess over something. There is a photographer (voyeur) who obsess' about image, an italian chauvanist who obsess' over his genius, a wife who obsess' over pregnancy, and an architect who obsess' over the life of his under-appreciated idol. But these characters also fall into two different categories. The classical/conservative category and the neoclassical/progressive category. In this case the Italian characters figure into the classical/conservative category because of their association with the history of Italy and their snobbish disrespect for kracklites ideas. Kracklite and his wife, on the other hand, fit into the progressive realm of wanting to go forward rather than remaining stagnant, forward into, respectively, a family life and a new form of architecture.
Obsession has a way of interfering in the plans of our protagonist however and everything gets sabotaged. The Italian fascists win. I think the pregnancy was supposed to be the element of redemption for kracklite. His wife revealed to him of the pregnancy before the affair intensified giving him the opportunity to save his relationship and possibly his self. Instead of being saved, he allows his obsession to take priority and blind him to his impending doom. His obsession over Boullee created this paranoia and distrust of everyone around him, alienating him further.
The Directors artistic influence in the film is in his shot composition and the films symbolism. Most of the shots were framed through something like a window or a door frame giving an even more intense voyeuristic feeling, possibly alluding back to the medium of film. We sit and watch a story in the frame of a screen and the camera watches the characters through architectural frames. I also noticed a significant amount of symmetry in the composition. Often times you could draw a line right down the center and and compare the two sides to find they were reverse images. There was also a shot that reminded he a lot of the last supper where the characters are sitting around a square table facing each other (interesting when compared to the round table of King arthur). It was almost a foreboding scene where Kracklite sat across from his wife, both characters surrounded on either side by foreigners. This was one of the those subtle, ambiguous symbolic references that is totally open to interpretation. Because it is not a direct graphic match to the last supper painting, it may or may not actually be an homage, but considering the other religious elements (the least of which being set in Rome, Italy) its symbolism seems likely.
The interesting thing about the setting is that it has nothing to do with Boullee's life. He never left France, so there is a question as to why is it Italy that this party is happening in and not France. I believe there are two reasons. First, Italy was the source of Boullee's foundation. In schools he studied classical and neo-classical architecture which was rooted in Rome, Italy. It was founded during the Baroque/Romantic perod which was primarily influenced by religion. The other reason the film was set in Italy is because of the intentional religious symbolism. At the end of class, one of the major topics we talked about was the religious themes of the film. By creating these subtle, ambiguous religious allusions the director has allowed for an open ended interpretation on classical themes. His suicide creates a great deal of controversy and ambiguity confusing his roles as it relates to symbolism. Is he Christ dying for the sins of others? If he is, then who is in his wife's womb? If she is the "virgin" Mary then he would be God. If he were God, then do we interpret his suicide as God's death or is he killing himself to be reborn in his son confirming the ideology that Christ was God incarnate? The depth of symbolism allows for the opportunity to read very deeply into the film. There is a much deeper interpretation that can be made relating Boullee's work and preferred shape to religion, and even the trinity between Kracklite, Boullee, and a religious figure. Is Kracklite Boullee reincarnate who is an architectural god about the be reincarnated in Kracklite's son? All of these interpretations require a thorough understanding of the work of Boullee as well as the doctrine of the church, both of which I am not prepared to handle.
I think that the topic of artistic creation is linked to obsession. Considering all of the films we've watched so far, Every artist has become deeply obsessed with their own work in one way or another. This obsession blinds them to the world around them and allows them to only see their work and their ideas taking shape. Kracklite falls victim to this artistic perrogative and forfeits his life because of it. He becomes so obsessed with bringing the artist to life again that he practically beckons Boullee's spirit to take over his body. I think the scene of Kracklite photocopying the belly with the green light flashing is not about envy. It is hard to interpret this scene though because there is no juxtaposition of the color green. There is plenty of red, black, and white symbolism (in fact you can't throw a rock and miss it), but there is almost no green except in scenes that include grass. There is most definitely something haunting about the flashing green though. I truly believe it is in that moment that Kracklite succumbs to Boullee's spirit.
As for creation and gender I can't easily identify it. Kracklite nurtures a cancerous tumor in his belly the same way his wife nurtures a fetus in hers. One is corrupting, the other is redeeming. If gender is to be identified with creation, it must also be identified with destruction as its complement. The only destruction that occurs in the film is through obsession, breaking down the relationships of the characters. The only moment of creation is in the train at the beginning. After there it doesn't seem as though there is any real creation. The formation of the exhibition is constantly derailed and can not get itself together until one of the two men is removed from the project. The conundrum of the gender identity occurs through the context of the characters. There are two women and two men. Kracklite and his wife dismiss their relationship in favor a relationship with the italian characters. His wife has an affair with a self-absorbed Italian chauvanist who isn't particularly trustworthy and behaves like a juvenile. Kracklite dismiss' his relationship with his wife in favor of the Italian photographer who is a total stoic but smarter than all of the other characters. She even protects Kracklite by not including film in her camera when they make love. This makes the moral dilemma very convoluted and obscures the interpretation of the ending because no one is particularly innocent and it is unclear as to who is the real victim. Certainly Kracklite takes the limelight as the victim by losing his life's work and his wife, but to what extent did he do it to himself?

Saturday, April 19, 2008

Belly of an Architect

Belly of an Architect is an interesting film as it depicts a new form of inspiration that we have not seen in any of the other films, the physicality of the human body. Although, Kracklite is a fictional character he embodies many of the characteristics of Etienne Boulee through his extreme admiration, idolization and “relationship” with the architect. The film does not focus on original thought, but rather focuses on the inspiration from past works and artists to fuel the creative process. The film also focuses more on failure than success, as Boulee himself planned several buildings, which were too grandiose to actually construct in his lifetime. Kracklite, reflects the shortcomings of Boulee through his physical predicament and failure to finish the planning for the exhibition. The film mainly narrows in on Boulee’s drawings of the building, which was to honor Sir Isaac Newton. The sphere shape of the building draws in an interesting parallel between the “belly” of Kracklite and Boulee’s design. Kraklite is obsessed with his stomach and uses the image of Augustus, who was an important inspiration in Boulee’s work, to feed his obsession with both Boulee and his stomach. Boulee was forgotten for most of the 20th century and Kracklite wanted to bring his architecture back to life through his exhibition. Similar, to films such as Camille Claudel an artist is using hi power to promote another artist as many of the mentors of female artists did.
After watching several films, which are based on female artists it was interesting to see the juxtaposition with a film about a male artist. Because the film is about an architect, which is traditionally a male profession naturally the film focused on the occupation of the male and the males’ role in society. The film also focused a lot on male domination over other males and female characters in the film. The Italians who are involved in preparing the exhibition recognize and obsess over the fact that Kracklite is married to a younger woman. The “woman” Kracklite’s wife is also immediately recognized as an object for the men. She in turn ends up impregnated by Kracklite, depicting his male abilities to reproduce. While pregnant Mrs. Kracklite becomes involved with her husbands “partner” who uses her admiration as fuel to take over and dominate in the preparations of the exhibition. In the film Kracklite believed that his wife, as the wife of the famous historical figure Augustus did was trying to poison him. This unlike other aspects of the narrative is a contrast to the typical construction of the male artists biopic as it shows the power of the woman over the male artist.
The setting of the film in Rome also plays an important role in the film. The Kracklites and the others involved in preparing the exhibition have several dinners in front of such buildings as the Pantheon. Displaying ancient buildings, which have inspired architecture around the world. The setting parallels the idea of inspiration that the film is depicting through Kracklite and his “relationship” with Boulee. Visually the location of Rome makes the film more artistic and aesthetically pleasing to the viewer. If the film were filmed somewhere in the United States it would not have the same artistic appeal.
Although, “Belly of an Architect” is a fictional film it has a similar construct to biopic films of artists. It depicts the “tragic” life of an architect (Kracklite) and focuses on his personal life rather than his life’s work. As in “Artemisia” and “Frida”, the focus is not on the creative genius of the artist and the inspirational work they produced but rather on their personal lives and tragic deaths. Because Kracklite is not an actual architect it is clear why the narrative of the film does not include any of his personal work. But, because the work is not included the film is commenting on artists’ biopics, it is unclear whether or not this is intentional or an unconscious decision of the director/writer. After, watching the film I am unsure whether or not the intention of the film was to highlight Etienne Boulee or any architect could have been chosen and the importance was on the effect of a historical artist on a present day artist? Although, the name Etienne Boulee is very present in the film and images of his architectural plans are shown I do not feel as though I have a full understanding of his life’s work and influence and think that this information was meant to be secondary.

post 9

Belly of an Architect is easily one of the most "out there" films screened in our class thus far. The director creates a main character whose art leads to his madness. As Stourley Kracklite begins to work on his life long dream of exhibiting his favorite artist Boullee in Rome, we the audience start to look at him as a man losing his mind.

The artistic creation of this film mainly directs the audience to focus on the relationship between Kracklite and his new exhibit in honor of Boullee. Boullee is pretty much immediately introduced in the second scene of the movie, explaining that Stourley loves his creative, yet classic style and through Stourley's description, we can understand this deceased architect would be Kracklite's idol. However, Kracklite looks at this new exhibit as his own personal child. He planned the construction of the entire presentation and had, prior to arriving in Italy, spent many years planning what would be done.

As the film progresses, Kracklite becomes more of a defensive artist with very little open minded opinions as any suggestions or changes made seem to result in Stourley's anger and constant aggression. At this point in the film, I was expecting his love life to unfold and move to Caspasian. Anyway, suggestions concerning the lighting were made and Stourley quickly jumped to his angry side. We, the audience begin to look at the reality of how one reacts when his/her personal life long exhibit is being changed. Of course he will react badly, but at times, he begins to be such a target in the movie that the film is simply staged with a lack of realism in terms of what really goes on with these exhibit. A shot in the film show's a few relatives of Caspasian and Stourley in the same room. Shot from a long angle, the camera stays on the same place and the camera begins to move away as we listen to Caspasian's relatives call Stourley out for gradually losing his wife. Immediately, Kracklite punches the relative on the right. This predictable reaction following the blatant instigations of Caspasian's family turn this movie into nothing more than a written film with a predictable plot involving a man losing his wife in a gloomy, outsider world where the victim (Kracklite) can do nothing to stand up for himself besides demonstrating physical aggression. His artistic creation is what he thrives on and these character's taking away his genius right in front of him would bring out the anger in not only Stourley, but any architect for that matter. This could be a reason I did not enjoy the film because it seemed too predictable for Hollywood/Italian cinema.

Creation according to gender is no mystery in this film. Obviously everyone on this blog site will mention Mrs. Kracklite's unfaithful ways and how her baby gradually becomes Caspasian's baby. The movie moves along with more bad news for Stourley as he has no choice in terms of what will be the result of his child's future. He even tries to take Mrs. Kracklite (cheating piece of crap) to America in order for the baby to not be born outside of his home country. As Stourley realizes his baby will not really be his, he falls into even more depression and continues to write sad post cards to a man (Boullee his idol) who has been dead for 200 years. However, a serious issue came to my notice. Stourley is so concentrated on his exhibit that not only does he never notice the first four months of her pregnancy, but he doesn't seem to talk about his future son for more than a few lines. The plot leans the audience's attention on Caspasian's ruthless antics and how Stourley will react.

In terms of what the past does to this man is rather weird and obscure to say the least. He writes letters to the exhibit's based legend Boullee. Not only does he write letters, he gets into detail and writes as if he is really having a conversation with a deceased artist. He is losing his mind attempting to live in the past and seems to neglect his own future family. This movie just seemed to be a little bit off and doesn't really resemble a film that can be looked upon as a director's choice. There are some good long shots and key lighting, featuring unique camera work from in front of the Panteon in which the director has the camera follow Stourley around, yet still leaving the legendary dome building in the background for us to see. We are supposed to acknowledge Stourley looks up to people who create these buildings and that such artistic genius of others inspired a crazy architect who finishes the film with his own suicide.

Friday, April 18, 2008

Post 9

The film, Belly of an Architect, was not my favorite film we have watched this year in class, but it was, however, entertaining. I found that the film, like Pollock, Frida, Basquiat, and Camille Claudel, shows another example how genius can transform into sickness or madness. Because this film is about a make believe architect, Stourley Kracklite, the director plays into the stereotype of the “crazy artist.” After the reading and the movies we have seen about Artist’s real lives, I have learned that this stereotype is not far fetched after all.

Artistic Creation: This film promotes ideas about artistic creation in many ways. The main character, Stourley Kracklite, is an architect who admires the famous French architect Boullée. He travels to Rome to lead the creation of an art exhibit and installation in honor of Boullée. This exhibit is his baby. He is the one who has started the planning for years and his passion for Boullée’s work makes him extremely attached to the creation of this exhibit. Like a mother, he takes care of the exhibit, making sure nothing goes wrong and everything is done exactly the way it should be. His role as an artist is to make a perfected and flawless creation. When one of the other men working on the exhibit, Caspasian, wants to do a kitschy light show for the exhibit, Kracklite becomes extremely defensive. He doesn’t want anyone interfering, especially if he doesn’t agree with what they want to contribute. This film shows that when an artist has a vision or a creation, they put their all into it. It consumes them and takes over their life. The exhibit and thoughts of Boullée devoured him, driving away his wife and leading to his ultimate demise. He becomes sick with cancer, and the stress of the project isn’t helping his ailment. As his health decreases, other men working on the instillation decide that Kracklite is too sick to continue his work. They take his baby away from him, which destroys him. He ends of committing suicide the night the exhibit opens, and he does it at the exhibit. Just like a mother being taken away from their child, he can’t live with the separation.

Creation According to Gender: While Kracklite is working on his “baby”; his wife Louisa is pregnant with his child. Kracklite does not even notice that she is pregnant. He is too consumed in his own work. The film shows the man as a creator and the female of creator of life. They say that with every birth, comes a death. The film shows this by having Kracklite commit suicide while Louis is giving birth.

The influence of the past in the present: Kracklite is extremely influenced by the past. His role model Boullée, is dead and yet Kracklite let’s this architect affect and control his present. He becomes too obsessed with this deceased architect that he begins to write letters to him. He asks Boullée if his life was similar to what he is going through in present day. He shares his thoughts and feelings with Boullée as if he was a friend. The problem with looking to the past is Kracklite forgets to live in the present.

Thursday, April 17, 2008

Post 8

Belly of an Architect has been my least favorite of all the movies we have watched so far. It also is one of the oddest films I have ever seen. The film shot by the artist Peter Greenaway follows the slow mental breakdown of the films protagonist Stourley Kracklite while he works to fulfill his long time dream of staging an exhibition dedicated to his idol, Etienne-Louis Boullee. The film shows how the genius of an artists can be turned into a slow and debilitating sickness that consumes their lives and hinders their ability to work. The film also focuses on the creation of things, weather it be life or the exhibit they both intertwine to show the creation of an artist.
The Boullee exhibit has been Kracklite's baby for almost 10 years. Married to his wife for 7 of them she has had to endure his constant obsession with the creation of his monument to his hero. He is so caught up in his"baby" that he does not realize that he has created a real baby with his wife for many months. He treats his exhibit with more importance than his wife and ultimately drives her into the hands of another man. It shows that his obsession with his exhibit takes any precedence over the other things it in his life. It shows the side of artistic creation, in which the artist becomes so obsessed with his work that he is unable to see anything else. This is often how parents of new born baby's act, which parallels his own life and his seemly disinterest in his own physical creation with his wife. When he becomes to sick to finish his vision and his exhibit is taken away from him, he can not live with not seeing it completed in they way that he envisioned, so the moment that they are about to open it, he kills himself and it is also at that moment that his baby is born. This lends to the idea that he also realizing that his baby will never be fully his, since his wife is cheating on him, he will never be able to realize his vision or creation of what his child would be. When he realizes that he has stomach cancer and will never be able to realize any of his creations to the fullest that is when he decides to kill himself and become a martyr for his creation.
The creation of his two "baby's" is also gender specific. It his is wife who is creating the being that will be able to carry on his genes and his presence in the world, and it is he who is creating something that will carry on the presence of a man that had been dead for around 200 years. Neither will ever be realized to the extent that he wanted them to be, much like Boullee who never finished most of his work. Neither his wife nor he get the choice to have the ability to crate something in the way that he would have wanted them to be. He is so obsessed with bringing past creations to life that he essentially begins to live in the past and pays no mind to the fact that his future is being created as well. He starts writing letters to his dead idol and becoming completely immersed in his past life. It all leads to his eventual unraveling and final decision to kill himself. Personally, I believe that this film is a tad off and a bit melodramatic.

Wednesday, April 16, 2008

Post 8

Discuss Belly of an Architect in terms of how the film proposes ideas about artistic creation, creation in general, creation according to gender, the role of the artist, and the influence of the past in the present.

DUE SATURDAY, APRIL 19

Saturday, April 12, 2008

Post 4

Comic books are great; comic book films, not so much. Documentaries are great; documentaries about specific people, not always. American Splendor does much to alter these stereotypes, telling an entertaining story, and displaying the intertexuality within the film medium.

Tuesday, April 1, 2008

Post 7

“Mainstream films that foreground art, as well as most that background it, induce a rather curious tension, as the reflexive presence of art threatens the seductive flow of the fictional world with a spasm of viewer self-consciousness. This is why we refer to such works as reflexive: it is as though a mirror had been held up to the beholder. The work of art en abyme reminds the viewer that she is viewing. It is interesting, then, to consider what is at stake in such representation.” (Fellman 28)

When dealing with stories of real individuals, how much responsibility do you have to telling their story as accurately as possible? It is with this question that I began my last response, and it feels appropriate to return to this question in response to the Susan Fellman reading. Artistic liberty appears to be a paradigm for true expression. It is difficult to create without freedom. Artists fight fervently to retain some semblance of freedom, and even within a particular genre they are expected and encouraged to take a model and make it their own. So, it would appear likely that this same philosophy would follow cinematic art. Filmmakers often fight studios and producers to have their vision fully realized. While in my last response I displayed frustration at the skewering of Artemisia’s life in Artemisia, Fellman’s piece altered my opinion a bit. It put back into place my perspective of film as an art form. And as an art form, I feel obliged to honor it with the same reverence as any other art form. Though Artemisia does take great liberties with the history of the artist, the filmmaker should reserve the fashion whatever tale she wishes. So long as she is not peddling the film as an absolute factual account (which is not the same as calling something based on a true story) she has maintained her artistic integrity. The basic function of film, like any other art form, is to tell a story. Agnes Merlet’s film tells a story, and though it is not the story the audience expects, it is not necessarily a bad one. It is an interpretation, and it is critical that the viewer understands it as such. As stated earlier, we as consumers of art must also be careful to view film with the same critical eye as any other art form. Picasso’s Guernica is not a literal retelling of the Spanish Civil War, but we take its lack of realism at face value. It is an individual’s interpretation of a real event and a viewer of it can not praise it in one breath and decry another like it in the next.

Now, in establishing a proper scope in which to view the film Artemisia, a proper critique can be served. The film is quite honestly abhorrent in what it claims to be and what it actually is. It is not a feminist film, and any artistic integrity that could have been relegated to Merlet is almost denied in that simple fact alone. Fellman appears to hold a similar sentiment in her statement, “A film ought not be judged by its literary or historical fidelity, but in evaluating one that touts its historical basis and its feminist heroine-and was directed by a self-professed feminist, to boot-one must object strenuously to such distortions (Fellman 29).” To continue down this line of thought would prove redundant for me though, considering the critiques offered in my last post. What appears more relevant is how the scope of viewing films should reflect on the film Camille Claudel. While it holds a similar theme to Artemisia, in the sense that love and sex breeds art, the film is much less polarizing. And frankly, it does claim to be something it is not. If anything, it views like a PBS Masterpiece Theatre film, or an A&E special on art in the 19th century. Unlike Fellman, I did not connect the ‘madness of the mud’ theme to the objectification of Claudel. Instead, I made a negative assumption that that was just how most sculptors were viewed at the time. Further, I connected Claudel’s descent into insanity as a common theme of all artist being a little insane, as defined by modern media. This may appear to be a rather non-analytical approach to the material, in comparison to Fellman’s views, but as critical consumers of media, critiques should be offered outside of the obvious. It is so easy to see objectification in nearly any story, but if the consumer is so focused on one flaw, it may miss the many others. This is not to say that Fellman’s critique does not hold merit, but it feels a bit one-note in the constant stream of discussion surrounding gender depictions.