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Andre Bazin's Film Theory - Art, Science, Religion (Hardcover)
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Andre Bazin's Film Theory - Art, Science, Religion (Hardcover)
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Through metaphors and allusions to art, science, and religion,
Andre Bazin's writings on the cinema explore a simple yet profound
question: what is a human? For the famous French film critic, a
human is simultaneously a rational animal and an irrational being.
Bazin's idea of the cinema is a mind-machine where the ethical
implications have priority over aesthetic issues. And in its
ability to function as an art form for the masses, cinema is the
only medium that can address an audience at the individual and
community levels simultaneously- the audience sees the same film,
but each individual relates to the narrative in a different way. In
principle, cinema can unsettle our routines in productive ways and
expand our sense of belonging to a much larger picture. By arguing
that this dissident Catholic's worldview is anti-anthropocentric,
Angela Dalle Vacche concludes that Andre Bazin's idea of the cinema
recapitulates the histories of biological evolution and modern
technology inside our consciousness. Through the projection of
recorded traces of the world onto a brain-like screen, the cinema
can open viewers up to self-interrogation and empathy towards
Otherness. Bazin was neither a spiritualist nor an animist or a
pantheist, yet his film theory leads also to ideas of a more
cosmological persuasion: through editing and camera movement,
cinema explores our belonging to a vast universe that extends from
the microbes of the microscope to the stars of the telescope. Such
ideas of connectedness, coupled with Bazin's well-known emphasis of
realism, form the foundation for his film theory's embrace of
Italian neorealism. Choosing to avoid a quantitative naturalism
based on accumulation of details, Bazin's theory instead promotes
the kind of cinema that celebrates perceptual displacement, the
objectification of human behavior, and one's own critical
self-awareness.
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