idea for opening shot of film
Ok, so I’ve been reading Jameson a lot for my blog post and
he writes a lot about pastiche in postmodern culture and how it relates to what
he calls ‘nostalgia cinema’ (basically cinemas obsession with an idealised idea
of the past through reproduction of their images- whilst making them more and
more devoid of meaning). He makes the distinction between parody and pastiche
by saying
‘pastiche is like parody, the imitation of a peculiar mask,
speech in a dead language: but it is a neutral practise of such mimicry,
without any of parody’s ulterior motives, amputated of the satiric impulse,
devoid of laughter and of any conviction that alongside the abnormal tongue you
have momentarily borrowed, some healthy linguistic normality still exists.
Pastiche is thus blank parody’
Its all very wordy I know, but I think the essence of it is
something that is really interesting, especially when we’re thinking of a
documentary about nostalgia.
And, I know it goes against the whole kind of intention of
this text, but I was recently watching Oshima’s Diary of a Shinjuku Thief and
the opening shot is this brilliant sequence in which he shows the times from
all round the world (at a certain moment- i.e Paris – 4’oclock, Moscow 6’oclock
etc) and it really creates this feeling of a universal concept (something that
nostalgia is). Then it cuts to a clock being smashed with a brick and then to a
human hand removing the clocks hands.
I was wondering what people thought of potentially making a
pastiche of this shot (i.e take it lmao) as our opening shot for the
documentary. The influence of pastiche fits perfectly in the devoid nature of
nostalgia (as talked about with Jameson), but the symbolism of the smashing of
the clocks invokes this feeling of a disruption of time. This void in time is a
space in which nostalgia can thrive (as seen with pretty much everything we’ve
talked about), but it also links into Lizzie’s use of Fisher’s slow
cancellation of the future (we live in a world where we collectively cannot
imagine a future- therefore the ghosts of the past are reoccurring).
Its just a thought, but I think there is definitely some
artistic merit to it, that would work really well as a sort of introduction to
our visual piece. If anyone wants to read more about Jameson, I’ve put a link
to a text and another to the opening shot of Oshima’s film.
http://art.ucsc.edu/sites/default/files/Jameson_Postmodernism_and_Consumer_Society.pdf
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=RWFE-g9Ll-w
Plus its so Goldsmiths™.

Yo I love this clip from Oshima's film, would be great to use
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