Några aspekter på filmens tid : Ögonblicket och nuet i filmen och fotografiet

Abstract    Cinematic time is the most complex of all: it is composed of public time (clock), personal time (experienced) and in addition, it can run backwards, be contingent, stored and (re)created. The present study examines some aspects of cinematic time, with special reference to the instant, th...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Revenäs, Björn
Format: Others
Language:Swedish
Published: Stockholms universitet, Filmvetenskapliga institutionen 2010
Subjects:
tid
nu
Online Access:http://urn.kb.se/resolve?urn=urn:nbn:se:su:diva-62335
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spelling ndltd-UPSALLA1-oai-DiVA.org-su-623352013-01-08T13:33:01ZNågra aspekter på filmens tid : Ögonblicket och nuet i filmen och fotografietsweRevenäs, BjörnStockholms universitet, Filmvetenskapliga institutionen2010the instantthe momentthe presentcinematic timephotographydigitalfilmtidögonblicknufotografidigitalAbstract    Cinematic time is the most complex of all: it is composed of public time (clock), personal time (experienced) and in addition, it can run backwards, be contingent, stored and (re)created. The present study examines some aspects of cinematic time, with special reference to the instant, the moment and the present. The strictly defined instant or moment does not exist. It is a passage between the past and the future and it is impossible to record on film or a photograph. One example is the moment of death, which is an abstraction with zero duration. The present must consequently contain the past and/or the future. Roland Barthes describes these complex multidimensional time relations in a photograph. André Bazin emphasizes that the image and the duration are ”mummified”. According to Gilles Deleuze , before the Second World War, the movement-image dominated and time was subordinated. With the long take of uncut time and deep focus, the cinema creates an increased experience of presence. After the war the time-image dominated. According to Deleuze it can represent time itself in the ”pure state”. Several images, simultaneously present, represent the crystal-image. Such an experience of time, a non-chronological present (durée), is founded in the philosophy of Henri Bergson. For the film director Andrei Tarkovsky, time and rhythm in the shot, was the essence of the cinema. His work is flooded with time-images, and it is possible to experience a time and space beyond the frame, in a multidimensional present. The digital technique has made cinematic time even more complex due to the possibility to create a continuous, synthetic present. Student thesisinfo:eu-repo/semantics/bachelorThesistexthttp://urn.kb.se/resolve?urn=urn:nbn:se:su:diva-62335application/pdfinfo:eu-repo/semantics/openAccess
collection NDLTD
language Swedish
format Others
sources NDLTD
topic the instant
the moment
the present
cinematic time
photography
digital
film
tid
ögonblick
nu
fotografi
digital
spellingShingle the instant
the moment
the present
cinematic time
photography
digital
film
tid
ögonblick
nu
fotografi
digital
Revenäs, Björn
Några aspekter på filmens tid : Ögonblicket och nuet i filmen och fotografiet
description Abstract    Cinematic time is the most complex of all: it is composed of public time (clock), personal time (experienced) and in addition, it can run backwards, be contingent, stored and (re)created. The present study examines some aspects of cinematic time, with special reference to the instant, the moment and the present. The strictly defined instant or moment does not exist. It is a passage between the past and the future and it is impossible to record on film or a photograph. One example is the moment of death, which is an abstraction with zero duration. The present must consequently contain the past and/or the future. Roland Barthes describes these complex multidimensional time relations in a photograph. André Bazin emphasizes that the image and the duration are ”mummified”. According to Gilles Deleuze , before the Second World War, the movement-image dominated and time was subordinated. With the long take of uncut time and deep focus, the cinema creates an increased experience of presence. After the war the time-image dominated. According to Deleuze it can represent time itself in the ”pure state”. Several images, simultaneously present, represent the crystal-image. Such an experience of time, a non-chronological present (durée), is founded in the philosophy of Henri Bergson. For the film director Andrei Tarkovsky, time and rhythm in the shot, was the essence of the cinema. His work is flooded with time-images, and it is possible to experience a time and space beyond the frame, in a multidimensional present. The digital technique has made cinematic time even more complex due to the possibility to create a continuous, synthetic present.
author Revenäs, Björn
author_facet Revenäs, Björn
author_sort Revenäs, Björn
title Några aspekter på filmens tid : Ögonblicket och nuet i filmen och fotografiet
title_short Några aspekter på filmens tid : Ögonblicket och nuet i filmen och fotografiet
title_full Några aspekter på filmens tid : Ögonblicket och nuet i filmen och fotografiet
title_fullStr Några aspekter på filmens tid : Ögonblicket och nuet i filmen och fotografiet
title_full_unstemmed Några aspekter på filmens tid : Ögonblicket och nuet i filmen och fotografiet
title_sort några aspekter på filmens tid : ögonblicket och nuet i filmen och fotografiet
publisher Stockholms universitet, Filmvetenskapliga institutionen
publishDate 2010
url http://urn.kb.se/resolve?urn=urn:nbn:se:su:diva-62335
work_keys_str_mv AT revenasbjorn nagraaspekterpafilmenstidogonblicketochnuetifilmenochfotografiet
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