Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Foreword to the Second Edition
- Preface to the First Edition
- Acknowledgments
- Notes on the Essays
- The “I” of the camera
- 1 Hollywood Reconsidered: Reflections on the Classical American Cinema
- 2 D. W. Griffith and the Birth of the Movies
- 3 Judith of Bethulia
- 4 True Heart Griffith
- 5 The Ending of City Lights
- 6 The Goddess: Reflections on Melodrama East and West
- 7 Red Dust: The Erotic Screen Image
- 8 Virtue and Villainy in the Face of the Camera
- 9 Pathos and Transfiguration in the Face of the Camera: A Reading of Stella Dallas
- 10 Viewing the World in Black and White: Race and the Melodrama of the Unknown Woman
- 11 Howard Hawks and Bringing Up Baby
- 12 The Filmmaker in the Film: Octave and the Rules of Renoir's Game
- 13 Stagecoach and the Quest for Selfhood
- 14 To Have and Have Not Adapted a Film from a Novel
- 15 Hollywood and the Rise of Suburbia
- 16 Nobody's Perfect: Billy Wilder and the Postwar American Cinema
- 17 The River
- 18 Vertigo: The Unknown Woman in Hitchcock
- 19 North by Northwest: Hitchcock's Monument to the Hitchcock Film
- 20 The Villain in Hitchcock: “Does He Look Like a ‘Wrong One’ to You?”
- 21 Thoughts on Hitchcock's Authorship
- 22 Eternal Véritées: Cinema-Vérité and Classical Cinema
- 23 Visconti's Death in Venice
- 24 Alfred Guzzetti's Family Portrait Sittings
- 25 The Taste for Beauty: Eric Rohmer's Writings on Film
- 26 Tale of Winter: Philosophical Thought in the Films of Eric Rohmer
- 27 The “New Latin American Cinema”
- 28 Violence and Film
- 29 What Is American about American Film Study?
- Index
24 - Alfred Guzzetti's Family Portrait Sittings
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 05 June 2012
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Foreword to the Second Edition
- Preface to the First Edition
- Acknowledgments
- Notes on the Essays
- The “I” of the camera
- 1 Hollywood Reconsidered: Reflections on the Classical American Cinema
- 2 D. W. Griffith and the Birth of the Movies
- 3 Judith of Bethulia
- 4 True Heart Griffith
- 5 The Ending of City Lights
- 6 The Goddess: Reflections on Melodrama East and West
- 7 Red Dust: The Erotic Screen Image
- 8 Virtue and Villainy in the Face of the Camera
- 9 Pathos and Transfiguration in the Face of the Camera: A Reading of Stella Dallas
- 10 Viewing the World in Black and White: Race and the Melodrama of the Unknown Woman
- 11 Howard Hawks and Bringing Up Baby
- 12 The Filmmaker in the Film: Octave and the Rules of Renoir's Game
- 13 Stagecoach and the Quest for Selfhood
- 14 To Have and Have Not Adapted a Film from a Novel
- 15 Hollywood and the Rise of Suburbia
- 16 Nobody's Perfect: Billy Wilder and the Postwar American Cinema
- 17 The River
- 18 Vertigo: The Unknown Woman in Hitchcock
- 19 North by Northwest: Hitchcock's Monument to the Hitchcock Film
- 20 The Villain in Hitchcock: “Does He Look Like a ‘Wrong One’ to You?”
- 21 Thoughts on Hitchcock's Authorship
- 22 Eternal Véritées: Cinema-Vérité and Classical Cinema
- 23 Visconti's Death in Venice
- 24 Alfred Guzzetti's Family Portrait Sittings
- 25 The Taste for Beauty: Eric Rohmer's Writings on Film
- 26 Tale of Winter: Philosophical Thought in the Films of Eric Rohmer
- 27 The “New Latin American Cinema”
- 28 Violence and Film
- 29 What Is American about American Film Study?
- Index
Summary
In the early 1960s, what might be called the classical period of cinèma-vèritè, there was something like agreement among filmmakers in America on what a documentary was and how one was to be made. This consensus was at one level an agreement on the need to break with a tradition of American documentary, strongly influenced by British and European models, which in the late 1930s commanded its consensus, including such filmmakers as Pare Lorentz and Willard Van Dyke.
The older kind of documentary composed its views of people lyrically or expressionistically and used them rhetorically in illustration of some social theme. The ambition of cinèma-vèritè, by contrast, was to capture the spontaneity of the human subject by recording people's behavior and interactions in their “natural” setting. The goal of filmmakers like Richard Leacock and D. A. Pennebaker was a film with no sign of direction or directedness to an audience, the screen transparently revealing human beings simply going about their lives. Increasingly flexible synch-sound technology was developed (often by the filmmakers themselves) along with increasingly effective strategies for filming people without making them appear manipulated or self-conscious.
What is projected on the screen in cinèma-vèritè claims to be a recording of something that really happened, and the method by which the film was made – which defines a role for the filmmaker in filming the scene as it unfolds – seems to ensure the authenticity of the scene.
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- The 'I' of the CameraEssays in Film Criticism, History, and Aesthetics, pp. 304 - 320Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2003