JCM312/French Modernism: Jean-Luc Godard & Bertolt Brecht (Discussion)
From Screenpedia
Jump to navigationJump to searchThe Modern Theatre is the Epic Theatre
- All Groups: What does Brecht mean by the term "culinary opera"?
- He suggests that "dramatic theater" is culinary. Some film critics suggest that Hollywood classicism is also culinary. Do you agree? Explain.
 
 - All Groups: Consider the key aspects of "epic theater" that are boldfaced below. Do you think Breathless fits any of these aspects? Why or why not?
 
Brechtian alienation
- "Alienation effect"--Verfremdungseffekt
 
| DRAMATIC THEATRE | EPIC THEATRE | 
| plot | narrative | 
| implicates the spectator in a stage situation | turns the spectator into an observer, but | 
| wears down his capacity for action | arouses his capacity for action | 
| provides him with sensations | forces him to take decisions | 
| experience | picture of the world | 
| the spectator is involved in something | he is made to face something | 
| suggestion | argument | 
| instinctive feelings are preserved | [instinctive feelings are] brought to the point of recognition | 
| the spectator is in the thick of it, shares the experience | the spectator stands outside, studies | 
| the human being is taken for granted | the human being is the object of the inquiry | 
| he is unalterable | he is alterable and able to alter | 
| eyes on the finish | eyes on the course | 
| one scene makes another | each scene for itself | 
| growth | montage | 
| linear development [of plot] | in curves | 
| evolutionary determinism | jumps | 
| man as fixed point | man as a process | 
| thought determines being | social being determines thought | 
| feeling | reason | 
Counter Cinema
- All Groups: What is Wollen's "counter cinema"? What is it counter to?
 - Apply the following aspects of counter cinema to Breathless. Do they fit?
- Cite specific scenes, shots, dialog, etc. that support your answer.
- Groups 2 and 5: In your own words, explain the "narrative intransitivity" aspect of counter cinema.
 - Group 3: In your own words, explain the "estrangement" aspect of counter cinema.
 - Group 4: In your own words, explain the "foregrounding" aspect of counter cinema.
 - Group 1: In your own words, explain the "aperture" aspect of countercinema.
 
 - Groups 1, 2, & 4: Make the case for Breathless as a classical film.
 - Groups 3 & 5: Make the case for Breathless as a counter-cinema and/or Brechtian film.
 
 - Cite specific scenes, shots, dialog, etc. that support your answer.
 - What aspects of Wollen's list match Brecht's list?
 
| "DEADLY SINS" OF THE CLASSICAL CINEMA | "CARDINAL VIRTUES" OF COUNTER CINEMA | 
| Narrative transitivity | Narrative intransitivity | 
| Identification | Estrangement | 
| Transparency | Foregrounding | 
| Single diegesis | Multiple diegesis | 
| Closure | Aperture | 
| Pleasure | Un-pleasure | 
| Fiction | Reality | 
Bibliography
- Brecht, Bertolt. "The Modern Theatre is the Epic Theatre." In Brecht on Theatre, pp. 33-42. Edited and translated by John Willett. New York: Hill and Wang, 1964.
 - MacCabe, Colin. Godard: Images, Sounds, Politics. Bloomington, IN: Indiana University, 1980.
 - Wollen, Peter. "Godard and Counter Cinema: VENT D'EST." In Readings and Writings: Semiotic Counter-Strategies. London: Verso, 1982.
 
External links
- Godard illustrations
 - Breathless illustrations
 - Wind from the East online — UbuWeb, TCF
 - Hommage Kit (Butler, 1978)