ABSTRACT

Jean-Louis Comolli's six-part essay Technique and Ideologyhad a revolutionary effect on film theory and history when it first appeared in Cahiers du Cinéma in 1971. In 2009, Comolli revisited his earlier text, arguing that the present age, marked by the total dominance of media-filtered spectacle over image production, makes the need for an 'emancipated, critical spectator' more pressing than ever. In this volume, Daniel Fairfax presents annotated translations of these two texts to provide an overview of Comolli's activity as both a theorist and a filmmaker.

chapter |30 pages

Introduction

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part |93 pages

Cinema against Spectacle

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chapter |6 pages

Introduction

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chapter |1 pages

Cinema against Spectacle

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chapter I|29 pages

Opening the Window?

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chapter II|12 pages

Inventing the Cinema?

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chapter III|15 pages

Filming the Disaster?

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chapter IV|16 pages

Cutting the Figure?

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chapter V|10 pages

Changing the Spectator?

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part |104 pages

Technique and Ideology: Camera, Perspective, Depth of Field

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chapter |3 pages

Introduction

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chapter I|23 pages

On a Dual Origin

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chapter III|13 pages

“Primitive” Depth of Field

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chapter V|8 pages

Which Speech?

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