Tuesday, October 6, 2009

Eisenstein reading

I thought it was a very enlightening statement when Eisenstein suggested that montage was an “…unrolling of an idea with a series of single shots…” rather than a stacking of shots like building blocks. This is an idea performed masterfully in his epic staging of the Cossacks vs. the people on the steps of Odessa. There are continual shots that switch from the people and then to the Cossacks, both from long shots and close-up. What is important that also has to do with the tempo of the sequence is the way the film takes its time to show the brutality of the Cossacks. The framing has everything to do with the feel of the sequence because it heightens emotions, leaning toward the people’s side.

The Shots of the Cossacks are never close-up; always from a wide shot, displaying them as a wall of unwavering force descending on the people. The quick shots to the civilian reactions show the fear, anger, and pain as they are brutalized one by one. All of these elements show what Eisenstein meant when he referred to the montage as “unrolling of ideas.” These are not simply pictures stacked on top of each other, but multiple points of view fitted together with a purpose to keep a steady tempo while heightening emotion and accomplishing its point. This is what I took from the article in relation to the film we screened, though I admit I found this reading very hard to follow.

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