Poetics of the uncanny : Jean Painlevé, documentary display, and documentary theory
conference contribution
posted on 2006-01-01, 00:00authored byKeith Beattie
In Grierson's theory of documentary, films of the so-called cinema of attractions were relegated to the position of 'lower forms' in contrast to his description of documentary as a form of civic pedagogy. The modes and forms of a cinema of attractions, which form what is here referred to as the practice of documentary display, did not disappear with the ascendency of Griersonian documentary; instead such approaches continued to inform avant-garde film. This paper examines the connections between nonfiction documentations and avant-garde film- and the resultant implications of this meeting for documentary film theory- through an analysis of the film and critical writings of Jean Painlevé (1902-1989). Painlevé, whom, according to Bazin, 'occupies a singular and privileged place in French cinema', informed his understandings of documentary through contact with, among others, Buñuel, Man Ray, Bataille, Eisenstein, and Grierson. The analysis of Painlevé's surrealist documentary display and his extensive body of critical literature on documentary foregrounds overlooked documentary works and constructs, or resurrects, ignored perspectives on documentary film as a way of extending and revising documentary film theory and the documentary canon.
History
Event
Film and History Association. Biennial Conference(13th : 2006 : Melbourne, Vic.)
Publisher
Film and History Association
Location
Melbourne, Vic.
Place of publication
Melbourne, Vic.
Start date
2006-11-16
End date
2006-11-19
Language
eng
Publication classification
E1.1 Full written paper - refereed
Title of proceedings
XIIIth Biennial Conference of the Film and History Association Melbourne