sexta-feira, 7 de dezembro de 2007

The Pillow Book and The Illustrated Text

Esta é uma entrevista de 1997, onde Spencer Abbott pergunta a Peter Greenaway sobre seu filme "O Livro de Cabeceira" e sobre questões relacionadas à idéia de "illustrated text". Essa é uma entrevista muito boa, principalmente com relação ao "illustrated text".
Greenaway não comenta apenas seu trabalho, mas também outros filmes e outros diretores.
É uma entrevista um pouco longa, mas vale a pena.


How did you first discover The Pillow Book?

I was trained as a painter. And while my European, London-based training very sensibly, very obviously accentuated Western art, I was particularly interested in all that painting at the end of the 19th century, which had a very strong Oriental influence. Painters like Gaugin, Van Gogh and Toulouse-Lautrec were very much interested in that sort of world. It was no particular requirement of my educational background to examine the literature as well, but just out of curiosity I did. And I worked my way back through the Edo period all the way right back to the Heian and found this extraordinary book. I was very much aware that a whole series of women were writing at this time and in some senses creating the Japanese language, writing quietly in their very dark interiors, incredibly circumspect in their thousand and one robes, not allowed to move, basically being, I suppose, wombs, and nothing else. So it was really a personal discovery.
.
I understand that you're an advocate of film as an autonomous medium. Yet Pillow Book is based on an ancient Japanese text.
.
One shouldn't start a discussion of this film by referring to a set text because the origins of the project are much deeper than that, and respond to, I suppose, my general sense of anxiety and disquiet about the cinema we've got after 100 years -- a cinema which is predicated on text. So whether your name is Spielberg or Scorsese or Godard, there's always a necessity to start with text and finish with image. I don't think that's particularly where we should organize an autonomous art form. That's why I think that, in a way, we haven't seen the cinema yet, all we've seen is 100 years of illustrated text.
A supreme example is The English Patient. Why would anybody spend so much time and energy and money to make a product like that which is just perfectly well in a book?
That makes it highly questionable in regards to, "do we really feel confident that cinema is an autonomous medium that can create its own product?" Why do we have to keep running off to the bookshelf all the time? But that's an extreme example. Whether your name is Godard or Woody Allen, there's still a way we have to start the text. If I'm going to get a movie started, I have to start with text and I eventually follow through by publishing that text as a book. The whole situation is full of paradoxes and contradictions. But again, I'd like to believe with Godard, once you've written the text and you've found the money and you've got your stranglehold over the producer, you throw the text away.
Unfortunately, circumstances as they are at this present time don't allow us to do that, and I proselytize for an autonomous cinema, which is essentially image-based, not text-based. So my search all the time, and not just for this film, but other films as well, is to find alternative systems for organizing the material. The Cook, The Thief, His Wife, and Her Lover is based on a color-coding system. Zed and Two Nought is based upon the alphabet, Drowning By Numbers stands for itself. There are other ways of trying to find taxonomies or strategies or ways of organizing material which I personally would liken to 20th century painting.
My films are very much based on the notion of the grid. The grid has determined the paintings of Mondrian, Jasper Johns, and is relative to the notion of 20th century art, which is intimately related to the edges of the frame, it's a very frame-conscious notion. That's another whole ballgame which I would like to continue to explore. The screen is only a screen is only a screen; it's only an illusionary space and I would quarrel seriously with Bizan on the knowledge that cinema is a window on the world. It is not. It is an artificial construct which is contained within its own conventions and devices, and I think we should acknowledge that in a very self-conscious way.

But the framed orientation of film seems to almost contradict the free-flowing nature of Japanese text. Why merge the two together?
.
I was drawn to the hieroglyph, because it is both an image and a text. The Oriental notion of culture is not divisive like ours is in the West, where we separate the painters and the writers, and that is very appealing to me. You would think that cinema would be the ideal place to put these two things together. Yet all cinema is predicated on the notion of being text-driven and not image-driven. There are very, very few films that I can think of that have actually created true cinema. Last Year In Marienbad, perhaps, is about the closest I can feel. It approaches a notion of real, true cinematic intelligence. It is not a slave to text. It is not a slave to narrative. It deconstructs all these phenomena and creates a product which is truly and absolutely cinematic because it cannot exist in any other form. Whereas the majority of cinema can always be explained in other mediums, which is a true indication, I feel, that it hasn't yet reached that essential autonomy. But maybe I'm being very churlish and impatient. Cinema's only 100 years old and I'm talking about languages and calligraphy which are 4,000 years old and the history of painting, certainly in Europe, is at least 2,000 years old. So maybe my impatience is unfair.

I noticed that the use of hieroglyphs in The Pillow Book strays slightly from your previous use of systems. What drew you to use the hieroglyphs as your main focal point of The Pillow Book?
.
I wanted to explore the possibility of metaphor or a module for the reinvention of, or a search for, the cinema. Why can't we bring image and text together in a way that the hieroglyph has? I mean, you might argue that we are already talking about a system of communication whose days are numbered because the whole world now is horribly slated on the notions of the Western alphabet and the conveniences of the computer and the fax machine. But I am very much interested in the gestural notion, the highly physical idea of the hieroglyph, which is made by the body and not made by a machine. I can draw a figure of a man, and that single gestural movement which is made by the body can express the notion of man in a thousand different ways in terms of its masculine or feminine nature, whether it's bold, or rich or poor or decaying or dying, etc. I can't make the letter 'A' do that in the same sort of way. There's a great excitement about the sheer visual energy that's contained in this sort of idea. So that takes me back to this extraordinary book again, The Pillow Book of Sei Shonagon. It was diary or journal which used to be kept inside the wooden pillow that the Japanese used to lay their heads on when they went to sleep at night. The Pillow Book has certain characteristics which excited me, so without any attempts to illustrate the book in any way, I took some of its sensitivities, primarily where Sei Shonagon said, "Wouldn't the world be desperately impoverished if we didn't have literature and we didn't acknowledge our own physicality?" And the movie's just about that. It's all an excuse for me to indulge, in a thousands different ways, on lots of different levels, in a celebration of text and sex. When you see the sex you see the text. When you see the text you see the sex. It's sort of an ideal way to bring together these two extraordinary high points of our experience.

So you're trying to draw a parallel between the human body and the creation of text?
.
Lacanne in his famous French essay from 1953 talks about how the body makes the text. And I would facetiously answer in this film if the body makes the text then the best place for that text is back on the body. I'm not serious in that, it's metaphorical. But what he does argue is how the mind is influencing the arm and the arm is influencing the hand and the hand the pen and paper. So the body makes the text, very, very physically. Now, in the 20th century, although you have written text here, ultimately your product will be typed up on keyboards, so we've broken that magic connection by this mechanical reproduction between the notion of physically making a mark that signifies. Which leaves us lots of other propositions. Let's suppose, as our new Prime Minister in Great Britain has promised, that every child of 5 will be given their own free computer. Does this mean in three decades we won't need to learn to handwrite anymore? And then what happens with the collapse of our physical energy? We'd all be totally and absolutely bereft.

It's sort of ironic that you chose to explore this notion of physicality through the largely passive medium of film.
.
Consider the circumstances of going to the cinema. You're seated. That's a prime disadvantage. You can't use your legs, you can't use your body, you can't move. So we're cutting down on our potential reactions to the world. You're in the dark. What the hell is man doing in the dark? He's not a nocturnal animal. So again you're circumscribed by cutting down your physicality. You're looking in one direction. French philosophers have told us always that the world is not just in front of us, it's around us. So we're cutting down on all of the potentialities of our physicality and our emotional and intellectual approach to the world, so I would agree with you. I think cinema is a very, very passive medium and that's its problem. That's one of the reasons why it's dying now, very, very rapid Exponential experience of another sort is demanding multimedia, is demanding interactivity. And cinema can't supply these things. I don't really think that there are any interesting filmmakers left. All the interesting people have gone to video and all the other forms of new media. So somebody like the American video artist Bill Rayola for me is worth 10 Scorseses.

Is that why you employ such video techniques as overlays, insets, shifting screens, and freeze frames in your films such as Prospero's Books and most recently in The Pillow Book?
.
Why should the devil have all the best tools? There's a way in which television now -- and though we could all be very critical about its social and political uses and its dumbing down and its appalling, I suppose, mediocrity of presentation -- is actually at the same time developing the most extraordinary post-production technology. Very amazing ways that I could put you inside of a glass, stick you on the moon, I can change your sex, I can do absolutely anything to the visual world now. And it seems so tragic to me that so many filmmakers are making movies up against this extraordinary revolution with one eye closed and two hands tied behind their backs. Why is this the case? Why do we feel somehow so dubious about the shock of the new? Why, as I suppose again that Godard suggested, do we look up at cinema, but we look down at television. But then I'm English and I come from the golden land of television, so maybe I should be careful of my criticism. But we keep talking, keep paying lip service to the multimedia revolution. We should try and do something about it, harness its energies, utilize it, try and make the artifacts for the next millennium. Again, alas, Woody Allen suggests if you're going to choose heroes, choose the very best ones. There is a way that we ought to be able to become Picassos and Michelangelos on our own, to utilize this vocabulary. I don't say that lightly, because I think the whole democratic processes of art desperately have to change. We now have very post monarchical systems in the democratic Western world, but our artistical renaissance is still very much predicated on Stravinskys, and Spielbergs, and we have to break all that down and become very much associated with the social and political ideals of democracy. We should all become film directors.
.
.
.
EXTRAS:
.
Este é o link de um vídeo curtinho de Greenaway comentando exatamente "illustrated text", que ele menciona nesta entrevista.
.
Entrevista de Greenaway dada ao escritor Christopher Hawthorne. (inglês)
.
Site que contém todas as obras de Greenaway com diversas informações. O layout é um pouco complicado, mas o material é muito bom. (inglês)

A Última Tempestade - Paulo Ricardo de Almeida (Contracampo)

Crítica do filme "A Última Tempestade", de 1991, por Paulo Ricardo de Almeida, publicado no site da revista virtual Contracampo.

http://www.contracampo.com.br/64/tempestade.htm



"Por que realizar uma obra, se é tão belo apenas sonhá-la?", questiona Pier Paolo Pasolini em Decameron (Decameron, 1972). Peter Greenaway, em A Última Tempestade, transforma os delirantes sonhos vingativos de Prospero (John Gielgud), Duque de Milão exilado em ilha distante com sua filha e seus livros, em fatos reais, para refletir acerca da criação artística, ao mesmo tempo angelical e diabólica, pois, embora capaz de gerar a beleza redentora e de absorver todo o conhecimento do mundo, traz consigo, inseparável, o poder do artista, tanto sobre a obra e os personagens, quanto sobre o público para quem se dirige.

Peter Greenaway adapta A Tempestade, de William Shakespeare: a biblioteca com que Prospero é exilado - pelo próprio irmão, que lhe toma o ducado para aliar-se ao Reino de Nápoles - permite ao cineasta inglês instaurar a intensa intertextualidade que caracteriza seus filmes, visualmente expressa através do aproveitamento da superfície do quadro - sobreposição e divisões de imagens dentro da tela, uso gráfico dos textos, quebrando a linearidade temporal da narrativa ao estilhaçar o espaço para aproximá-lo da tela do computador, hipertextual por excelência, com links que remetem sempre a outros links. Dessa forma, enquanto Prospero, cercado por figuras mitológicas (sobretudo Ariel e Calibã, o Anjo e o Demônio, respectivamente), escreve a trama de vingança, Greenaway aproveita para relacionar a obra em gestação com todos os livros que ajudaram a construir o imaginário do artista, que agora se apropria e se utiliza da rede de signos conhecida a priori a fim de criar o novo, ato em si mágico, misterioso e inexplicável, exprimindo os sonhos fantásticos que lhe atravessam a alma e o corpo.

A Última Tempestade, no entanto, não cai nas autocitações vazias que marcam, por exemplo, Oito Mulheres e Meia (Eight and A Half Women, 1999) e As Maletas de Tulse Luper, A História de Moab (The Tulse Luper Suitcases, The Moab Story, 2003), em que Peter Greenaway se preocupa somente com o próprio umbigo. Se em Oito Mulheres e Meia cada seqüência se inicia com a página do roteiro que a origina - de modo que a cena fecha-se sobre si mesma - , e se em As Maletas de Tulse Luper, A História de Moab há a onipresença de referências às obras anteriores do cineasta - a repetição do mesmo acontecimento três vezes, bem como a reaparição da personagem Cissie Colpitts, as quais se ligam a Afogando em Números (Drawning by Numbers, 1988), ou o fato de Tulse Luper ter escrito o roteiro de A Barriga do Arquiteto (The Belly of an Architect, 1987) - , em A Última Tempestade, ao contrário, os livros que pontuam a narrativa acabam por estruturá-la, na medida em que (como aponta a seqüência na qual Prospero os destrói, lançando-os na água, para possibilitar que a peça de Shakespeare enfim surja) eles se referem à alquimia que transforma chumbo em ouro.

É a arte enquanto bruxaria, que materializa as páginas escritas por Prospero, que torna reais os delírios do protagonista, que faz da vingança caminho, através do amor entre Miranda (Isabelle Pasco) e Ferdinand (Mark Rylance), para o perdão e, em conseqüência, para a redenção. Movimento, contudo, inusitado no cinema de Greenaway que, em geral, prefere o humor negro a fim de revelar o cinismo das relações pessoais e dos códigos sociais que as pautam, seja na mãe e nas filhas que matam os maridos em Afogando em Números; seja no estupro coletivo como método de punição à falsa gravidez em O Bebê Santo de Macon (The Baby of Macon, 1993); seja no exótico jantar servido ao final de O Cozinheiro, O Ladrão, Sua Mulher e o Amante (The Cook, The Thief, His Wife and Her Lover, 1989). Trata-se, por certo, de mostrar o poder que perpassa e que desequilibra o contato entre os homens, visto que os desiguala: na disputa pelo controle da exposição entre Stourley Kracklite (Brian Dennehy) e Caspasian Speckler (Lambert Wilson) em A Barriga do Arquiteto; nos enquadramentos precisos e arbitrários de Mr. Neville (Anthony Higgins) para seus desenhos, aos quais dispensa a mesma violência com a qual chantageia sexualmente aquela que o emprega em O Contrato do Amor (The Draughtman’s Contract); na obsessão de Greenaway pelos números, que servem para ordenar, para sistematizar e, por fim, para anular qualquer afeto ou sentimento dos personagens neles imersos.

Conforme evidenciam tanto o pré-cineasta encarnado por Mr. Neville, quanto Nagiko (Vivian Wu), a qual domina os corpos dos amantes ao usá-los como páginas em O Livro de Cabeceira (The Pillow Book, 1996), a arte se constrói enquanto estratégia de controle. Prospero, em A Última Tempestade, detém o poder sobre os personagens que cria, pois, literalmente (é o próprio John Gielgud quem fala por eles), dá-lhes voz. Para perpetrar sua vingança, escraviza Ariel e Calibã. Frente à rebelião do segundo - a qual marca a independência progressiva das demais figuras em cena do jugo do artista - , resta a Prospero apenas a obediência do primeiro, a quem promete libertar caso o objetivo a que se propõe seja alcançado.

Ariel, mas também Prospero, pois enquanto Ariel executa as ações no mundo imaginado por Prospero, este igualmente representa a ponte entre o universo cinematográfico visto na tela e o público para o qual ele se destina. De maneira que a liberdade de Ariel liga-se a de Prospero, o qual a adquire quando reconhece que não há onipotência na criação, quando, paradoxalmente, abandona o papel de criador para abraçar o de personagem: os sonhos do artista - de Prospero, de Greenaway - como veículos para incitar os sonhos dos espectadores, verdadeiros senhores a quem o cinema se subordina."

(Paulo Ricardo de Almeida)

"8 1/2 Mulheres" - Felipe Bragança (Contracampo)

Crítica do filme "8 1/2 Mulheres", de 1999, por Felipe Bragança, publicado no site da revista virtual Contracampo.

http://www.contracampo.com.br/22/oitomulheres.htm




"Os momentos mais bonitos de Oito Mulheres e Meia estão, certamente, em sua primeira hora de projeção: Triste pela morte da mulher, um velho banqueiro suíço se reencontra com seu filho, no casarão onde vive, e passa por momentos de intimidade que nunca haviam tido. Nas palavras do pai com seu filho, e vice versa, há uma aproximação inusitada e rara entre dois personagens masculinos que, sem perder sua masculinidade, se entregam um ao outro com extrema doçura. Nus diante do espelho, os dois homens falam de seus corpos, da relação que têm com seu sexo e com o sexo oposto, da sensação de ver no corpo do outro uma extensão de suas próprias vidas. Uma dimensão de cumplicidade e cuidado com o outro, a Amizade elevada ao ápice de sua potência... Eles estão tristes, e sozinhos, e dormem nus abraçados um ao outro... Greenaway cria imagens de beleza deslumbrante a partir dos corpos de seus personagens ali parados, pensativos, sentados diante da piscina... Um filme que não fala das oito mulheres e meia do título, mas dos Homens e da masculinidade, do desejo masculino: como na referência à relação de Fellini com suas mulheres deslumbrantes... Ou no inusitado depoimento do velho, ao concluir que seu desejo de um dia ser engenheiro provinha da reincidente visão do grande pênis que seu pai possuía... Com muita sensibilidade e humor, Greenaway fez uma primeira hora de filme raríssima, com passagens e diálogos que entram a fundo no universo sexual masculino; um universo, geralmente brutalizado e menosprezado...

É uma pena que, logo após a bela cena do teatro japonês, o filme pareça se perder: nas fantasias dos dois homens, no absurdo daquelas mulheres, na confusão daquele casarão transformado em harém, no sentido confuso que seu título ganha com a presença daquela estranha meia mulher... O filme parece mal construído desse ponto em diante e perdemos de vista a relação entre pai e filho, a mais interessante desde o início. Em sua conclusão, um tanto quanto moralista, Greenaway acaba por fazer um filme abaixo do esperado de um diretor responsável por obras como O Bebê Santo de Mâcon e O Livro de Cabeceira (onde, aliás, a relação é a inversa: uma mulher busca em inúmeros amantes, sua realização sexual).

De qualquer forma, é um belo filme, cravejado de imagens belíssimas, algumas pérolas de diálogo e alguns elementos difusos ainda a serem pensados em sua estrutura. Um filme que, pelo menos por sua primeira hora, vale a pena ser apreciado."

(Felipe Bragança)

quinta-feira, 6 de dezembro de 2007

Sobre Godard - "O cinema está morrendo, e foi destruído por Godard."

Tradução de trecho do Greenaway argumentando sobre o Godard, postado no post anterior:

"De certo modo, acredito que já é tarde demais: Cinema é uma tecnologia velha. Acho que vimos um incrível cinema agonizante nos últimos 30 anos. De certa maneira, Godard destruiu tudo - um grande, grande diretor; mas, de certo modo, ele tocou o alarme mortal, pois ele destruiu o cinema como um todo, fragmentou-o, tornou-o muito, muito consciente de si mesmo. Como todos os movimentos estéticos, o cinema durou cerca de 100 anos, passando por 3 gerações: o avô que organizou tudo, o pai que basicamente o consolidou e o jovem que rompeu com tudo. É apenas um padrão humano."




Outro trecho da entrevista, ainda não citado no blog, em que ele explica quem seriam, metaforicamente, o avô e o pai do cinema:

"(...) Mas cada um destes cineastas foram muito influenciadas pelo cineasta que veio antes, e nisto você descobre que a admiração de Godard por Orson Welles é extremamente forte, e a admiração de Orson Welles por Eisenstein é extremamente forte. Então, de um certo modo, eles estão andando em uma carruagem, se te servir o termo; ele são os três grandes conspiradores: vamos fazer, vamos aperfeiçoar, e agora vamos jogar tudo fora."

Citações

Algumas "quotes" do Greenaway. Greenaway por ele mesmo:

http://www.amk.ca/quotations/peter-greenaway/


Prospero's Books is the Terminator 2 for intellectuals.

Peter Greenaway

... there are those who think that Zeffirelli's Hamlet is the way to treat Shakespeare. I think that cinema can handle much more. We somehow expect cinema to provide us with meaning, to console us. But that's not the purpose of art.

Peter Greenaway

My father died. His ornithological knowledge, never collected or collated in anything like a comprehensible book -- it was five suitcases and two trunks of scattered notes -- died with him. A loss of knowledge. I made a film in small part reparation.

Peter Greenaway

On the making of A Walk Through H

I think that every artist dreams of renewing the forms which came before, but I think very few can be considered to have achieved that. We are all dwarves standing upon the shoulders of the giants who preceded us, and I think we must never forget that. After all, even iconoclasts only exist with respect to that which they destroy.

Peter Greenaway

Creation, to me, is to try to orchestrate the universe to understand what surrounds us. Even if, to accomplish that, we use all sorts of strategems which in the end prove completely incapable of staving off chaos.

Peter Greenaway

I always think that if you deal with extremely emotional, even melodramatic, subject matter, as I constantly do, the best way to handle those situations is at a sufficient remove. It's like a doctor and a nurse and a casualty situation. You can't help the patient and you can't help yourself by emoting. And I don't think cinema is intended for therapy, so I object also to that huge, massive manipulation which is perpetrated on the public.

Peter Greenaway

From an interview on salon.com

I was trained as a painter. I'm very familiar with the nude body, masculine and feminine. I do, I suppose have a soapbox position, and I want to be certain that the human body is in the center of the frame. Its physicality is important and is always very, very strongly positive because I think that that physicality would begin to lose perspective over all the other senses.

Peter Greenaway

From an interview on indieWIRE.com

I suppose on another level, I'm often irritated that, basically, certainly should we say Hollywood orthodox cinema deals in nudity primarily from the point of the view of the female body and she has to be aged between 16 and 30. What happens to the rest of us? What happens to the whole mass of man/female, masculine/feminine kind who do not get represented in this context? We ought to be there along with everybody else.

Peter Greenaway

From an interview on indieWIRE.com

What initially attracted me to The Seventh Seal was that it had values and characteristics which I was familiar with in other art forms, most notably, the European novel and certain forms on English drama, and indeed, in relation to my rather academic interest in history -- not "history" in the normal sense, but history as a form of entertainment. It might be a very unfashionable view but I believe that history is an amazing bank or reserve area of plots, characterisations, extraordinary events, etc.

Peter Greenaway

From an interview in Art and Design, no. 49

I don't have any particular wish to be polemical or didactic; I don't have a "message", but what I do thoroughly enjoy are those works of art, not necessarily in the cinema, but in the other arts as well, which have an encyclopaedic world.

Peter Greenaway

From an interview in Art and Design, no. 49

One of my heroes, almost necessarily from what I'm saying, of course, is Borges, who is a supreme master of doing thing -- being a data bank -- and the beauty of this economy is that he could have written War and Peace in three or four pages; who knows, it might have been a better book.

Peter Greenaway

From an interview in Art and Design, no. 49

I made a very bad mistake; I miscounted these scraps of information on the record as 92, and in continual homage to this man who had been so influential to me, I began creating or constructing my own films on this so-called "magic" number of 92 ... but when I eventually made a film about John Cage and met him, I explained this to him, and he found it very amusing because there are only 90 stories on the two sides of the record, and I'd based three years of my filmic career on this mathematical error!

Peter Greenaway

On John Cage's Indeterminacy, from an interview in Art and Design, no. 49

It seems to me that dominant cinema seems to require an empathy or a sympathy between the film and the audience which is basically to do with the manipulation of the emotions and it seems to me again -- and this is a very subjective position -- that most cinema seems to trivialise the emotions, sentimentalising or romanticising them.

Peter Greenaway

From an interview in Art and Design, no. 49

You don't go into the National Gallery of any famous capital city and cry, sob, laugh, fall about on the floor, become very angry -- it's a completely different reaction. It's a reaction which is to do with a much more composed sense of regarding an image; it's a reaction with a thought process as opposed to an immediate emotional reaction.

Peter Greenaway

From an interview in Art and Design, no. 49

All my films are somewhat experimental, they are all, each one, taking a certain amount of risk, but there's always the basic assumption that we should be able to appreciate the cinema as much with the mind as we can through emotional empathy. Sometimes it works, sometimes it doesn't.

Peter Greenaway

From an interview in Art and Design, no. 49

I think it is really important to be in some way provocative -- either intellectually or viscerally -- in the films one makes.

Peter Greenaway

From an interview in Art and Design, no. 49

I made, for a London television company a programme called 26 Bathrooms ... which was about the ways in which people behaved in their bathrooms. It was about where people put the soap on one level, or the colour of the bathroom curtains, the acoustics, about whether you sang in the bath, and it was structured very simply on the alphabet. We had a man and a woman who arrived one by bus, one by bike, to come and demonstrate for me, in front of the camera, how a jacuzzi operated. I asked both of them to take their clothes off because obviously you don't get into a bath with your clothes on. They hesitate, but eventually their dressing gowns came off and they got into the bath. They had never met one another before. Six weeks later I got an invitation from these people that I had brought together so peculiarly in this jacuzzi -- they were planning to get married! I understand that now they have three children.

Peter Greenaway

From an interview in Art and Design, no. 49

I think that films or indeed any art work should be made in a way that they are infinitely viewable; so that you could go back to it time and time again, not necessarily immediately but over a space of time, and see new things in it, or new ways of looking at it.

Peter Greenaway

From an interview in Art and Design, no. 49

Film is such an extraordinary rich medium which can handle so many different modes of operation, combining together in the same place all these extraordinary disciplines which may be executed in their own right -- music, writing, picture making of all kinds, and I often feel that some filmmakers make films with one eye closed and two hands tied behind their backs.

Peter Greenaway

From an interview in Art and Design, no. 49

Interviewer: "Let me ask you about the body and nudity ..."

PG: "Aha, the classic American question!"

Peter Greenaway

From an interview on salon.com

I remember seeing [David] Lynch's "Blue Velvet," which I thought was a magnificent film, some years ago now, of course. I pay it the highest compliment by saying I wish I'd made it myself.

Peter Greenaway

From an interview on salon.com

In a sense I think it's already too late: Cinema is an old technology. I think we've seen an incredibly moribund cinema in the last 30 years. In a sense Godard destroyed everything -- a great, great director, but in a sense he rang the death knell, because he broke cinema all apart, fragmented it, made it very, very self-conscious. Like all the aesthetic movements, it's basically lasted about 100 years, with the three generations: the grandfather who organized everything, the father who basically consolidated it and the young guy who chucks it all away. It's just a human pattern.

Peter Greenaway

From an interview on salon.com

I want to regard my public as infinitely intelligent, as understanding notions of the suspension of disbelief and as realizing all the time that this is not a slice of life, this is openly a film.

Peter Greenaway

From an interview on salon.com

I suppose I am basically a clerk, a cataloguer. I like the reductiveness of that, I like the stripping down, the basic form of organization.

Peter Greenaway

From an interview on salon.com

Tulse Luper is a sort of alter ego I created many many years ago -- Tulse to rhyme with pulse, and Luper is the Latin for wolf. So he's the wolf on your pulse.

Peter Greenaway

From an interview on salon.com

I have a very, very secret drive to become a dilettante, without the pejorative overtones or the obligation to produce myself. There's so much to examine, so much to contemplate. I have enormous enthusiasm when I start a new project but then there's the meetings and the counter-meetings, the rehearsals, the struggles. You have to keep pushing and pushing and pushing to get your dreams realised.

Peter Greenaway

From an interview by Sheila Johnston

O click

Bom, como de custume, enquanto eu lia artigos sobre cinema, achei dois artigos muito interessantes e salvei no meu favoritos.
Como apareceu esta grande oportunidade de mostrar a todos, estão aqui os dois textos retirados do portal OClick, que inclusive possui textos muito legais, vale a pena conferir.

www.oclick.com.br

Os textos que apresentarei são de autoria de Cristina Brandão

Refletindo sobre o Pós-moderno



Entender filmes, entender peças, artes plásticas, televisão, entender notícias , entender enfim as pessoas que nos cercam e suas atitudes mais inexplicáveis. Tudo isso é possível se começarmos a refletir sobres a nossa contemporaneidade, ou seja, nowaday - os dias de hoje. À primeira vista parece um pouco complicado mas a minha intenção nesse texto é passar alguns elementos que talvez possam esclarecer um pouquinho sobre a nossa situação atual.

Então, vejamos. Estamos diante de um modismo extravagante e com humor ( vide Casseta e Planeta) .Por outro lado, micros, videogames,vídeo-bar, FM, moda eclética, maquilagem pesada, new wave, ecologia, pacifismo, esportivismo, pornô, astrologia, terapias, apatia social e sentimento de vazio.Esses elementos povoam a galáxia cotidiana pós moderna onde o indivíduo tornou-se consumista, hedonista e narcisista. Compare , observe seus amigos à sua volta. O indivíduo pós-moderno consome bens personalizados. Há uma fragmentação dos gostos, não uma unanimidade. Cada um no seu "mundinho particular"tem sua cultura pessoal. O hedonismo - moral do prazer e não de valores faz com que a maioria, busque a satisfação aqui e agora . É uma filosofia portátil. Ainda assim, tem paixão por si mesmo , um cuidado com a auto-imagem ou então com a informação pessoal, a performance no que diz respeito à cultura em geral.Ao contrário dos antigos "tímidos", hoje imperam os "falsos tímidos".No fundo, todos se entregam a um narcismo militante.

Enquanto estilo extremamente individualista, o pós modernismo prolonga o jeito de ser liberado e imaginoso vivido na boêmia pelas vanguardas artísticas modernistas.Ele é hoje a democratização, no cotidiano, daquilo que as vanguardas pretendiam com a arte: expressão pessoal, expansão da experiência, vida privada.

Viver, quem sabe, hoje possa ser um estado pleno de mudanças para as novidades.Com uma gama enorme de bens e serviços, para todas as faixas e gostos ao nosso alcance, só resta ao indivíduo escolher entre eles e combina-los para marcar fortemente sua individualidade.Embora a produção seja massiva, o consumo é personalizado ( vide cheque-personalizado)

Assim o sistema propõe e o indivíduo dispõe.É o pleno conformismo . O sistema parece triunfar de cabo a rabo. Mas seria uma vitória tranqüila? Não. Contra o sistema aparecem efeitos bumerangues. Típicos do pós-moderno. O individualismo exacerbado está conduzindo à desmobilização e à despolitização das sociedades avançadas.Saturada de informação e serviços, a massa começa a ficar indiferente às coisas públicas. O discutido desencanto das massas ante a sociedade tecnificada e informatizada . Trata-se da apatia diante de problemas sociais e humanos.

Essa indiferença desagrada ao sistema que precisa manter em cena velhos valores e instituições como Pátria, Democracia, História, Família, Religião,Ética do trabalho, ainda que eles sejam puros simulacros. O tecido social começa a se descoser em fiapos.Extravagantes e apáticos, o indivíduo pós moderno vive em ritmo apressado e integra uma paisagem diferente daquela desenhada pela massa moderna.

Agora vejamos a espetacularização do nosso cotidiano: Antigamente, os espetáculos eram as paradas, as festas, jogos, circo - eventos ocasionais. Hoje, a começar pela arquitetura monumental, reinam em pleno cotidiano: TV, vitrines bem decoradas, moda, ruas embelezadas, etc. A intenção é embelezar e magnificar o dia-a-dia pelas cores e formas envolventes.Tudo fica "incrível", "fantástico", "sensacional".Quanto mais uma cidade joga com esses elementos, mais aplaudida é. O espectador é o que vê e aquele que espera novas imagens atraentes e fragmentárias para consumir.Ele se acha mergulhado na cultura blip - cultura do fragmento informacional, cintilações no vídeo. A estetização de tudo, alivia a banalidade cotidiana. Procuramos nas ruas, nos rostos, pó farto colorido das revistas e da TV.

É claro que esse assunto é complexo e longo. Teremos que voltar a ele. Vamos transforma-lo em capítulos. Continuamos semana que vem. Por enquanto, reflitam sobre esses aspectos levantados hoje.

LINK - http://www.oclick.com.br/colunas/brandao45.html






ós - modernismo - arte/ecletismo



Estamos retomando hoje a discussão que iniciamos sobre a Pós-Modernidade encaminhado o assunto para o tema "arte". Embora não tão freqüente, sabemos que opôs-modernismo tem feito visitas à música, à dança, ao teatro e ao cinema . Na música ele assume formas diversas. Podemos citar a experiência que o revolucionário e imprevisível John Cage faz com o silêncio ou Steve Reich para mãos batendo descompassadas. Soa nos temas minimalistas de Philip Glass( frases tocadas em uníssono, repetidas à exaustão com pequenas variações de timbres) e no som tecnopop de Laurie Anderson - a voz humana, os instrumentos e os gêneros populares ou eruditos( mais o rock) sendo processados pela parafernália eletrônica.E ainda temos para acrescentar, o rock punk e new wave, sempre com letras brandas, descontraídas ou então niilistas do tipo "A gente somos inútil "DO Ultraje.

A dança já põe no palco até mesmo o grotesco, a feiúra oferecidas por dançarinas gorduchas. Bailarinos podem passar meia hora passando bolas de borracha uns para os outros ou ainda na linha "minimalista"andando de um lado para outro exibindo gestos banais. ( "Transit"de Steve Paxton) A grande musa, no entanto, é Pina Bausch cuja coreografia passa do belo ao horroroso e redefiniram a dança.No teatro, o Living Theater , de Julian Beck ( a peça vira happening com a participação do público) e nas montagens dos italianos do grupo Gaia Scienza com peças sem texto ou enredo. Apenas corpos imitando fenômenos biológicos .

E no cinema? O pós-modernismo começou a ser sentido nos altos efeitos especiais e na nostalgia aclopada à ficção científica . Na maioria dos filmes, reina o ecletismo ( mistura de estilos) e o pastiche ( imitação barata0 Indiana Jones é a volta ao gibi, ao seriado; Guerra nas Estrelas leva para o cosmos as batalhas medievais apoiando-se no computador e no laser.A nostalgia dos anos 20/30 é refilmada com base em documentários da época . Mesclado ao filme policial, o futuro espetacular da tecnologia pode ser apreciado no histórico "Blade Runner. Mais fores , podemos citar "Quem Puder"de Godard ( base no individualismo) e "Paris Texas", de Wim Wenders, passeando pelo "deserto"atual.

Estamos diante da antiarte pós-moderna? Sim. Das criações grandiosas de Picasso e Joyce às brincadeiras, sem regras estéticas, houve queda ou fim de padrões? A arte agora é pastiche e ecletismo porque perdeu a originalidade ("tudo já foi eito") Nãp sabe mais criar. Niilista, a desestetização é a máxima atual Mas há quem veja no pós-modernismo uma praga boa e saudável porque ele abala preconceitos, pões abaixo o muro entre arte-culta e arte de massa, rompe as barreiras entre os gêneros, traz de volta o passado( os modernos só queriam o novo) e democratiza a produção. A desordem, dizem, pode ser fértil e propõe a convivência de todos os estilos, de todas as épocas , sem hierarquias. O mercado é um cardápio variado e ,sem regras absolutas, cada um escolhe o prato que mais lhe agrada.


LINK - http://www.oclick.com.br/colunas/brandao47.html

POST POR GLAUCO BEZERRA LONGHI (GROMMIE)
Enquanto pesquisava novos links para o blog, achei um site com vários filmes experimentais. Dentro dele, há um de Peter Greenaway, entitulado "Four American Composers (1983)", que ele fez em parceria com os compsotores John Cage, Philip Glass, Meredith Monk e Robert Ashley. O link está abaixo (a duração é de 220 minutos). Acho interessante postar estes links pois mostra que os outros gostos e talentos do Greenaway, que se estendiam para além do cinema:

Peter Greenaway (b. 1942)Four American Composers (1983)
Four American Composers: John Cage
Four American Composers: Philip Glass
Four American Composers: Meredith Monk
Four American Composers: Robert Ashley

Aqui está um trecho do texto de análise (em inglês):

Based on London performances under the aegis of the New York/Almeida Festival, this set of four one-hour documentaries, originally produced in 1983, introduced these avant-garde composers and their music to general British audiences. It is a tribute to the filmmakers' accomplishment (and a sorry comment on how we honor our own prophets) that the set provides no less valuable an introduction for American audiences a full decade later. These videos merit viewing not simply for exporting the avant-garde to a general public, but for explaining it-or, rather, for letting the composers explain themselves. Compared to Meredith Monk and Robert Ashley, John Cage and Philip Glass are household names, yet their relative fame frequently turns on the persistence of misconceptions. All too often, even scholars who might be expected to know better portray Cage as either charlatan or nihilist. Critics in the 1980s tagged Glass's music as "classical music for people who don't like classical music," suggesting his shrewd exploitation of the yuppie market. Director Peter Greenaway and producer Revel Guest weave representative musical excerpts with interviews to present the personalities more accurately, and, in so doing, establishes a broader context for listening. Perhaps the most striking revelation of these documentaries is that such notorious iconoclasts are so soft-spoken in person (compared to the shy, halting Ashley, the loquacious Monk seems downright assertive). - BRIAN ROBISON, Cornell University