Table Of Content* pb ‘European Cinema’ 10-06-2005 19:00 Pagina 1
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In the face of renewed competition from Holly-
wood since the early 1980s and the challenges
posed to Europe’s national cinemas by the fall
E
of the Wall in 1989, independent filmmaking in U
CCUULLTTUURREE R CCUULLTTUURREE
Europe has begun to re-invent itself. European
O
Cinema: Face to Face with Hollywood re-asses- P
E
ses the different debates and presents a broader IN TRANSITION A IN TRANSITION
framework for understanding the forces at work N
since the 1960s. These include the interface of C
I
“world cinema” and the rise of Asian cinemas, N
E
the importance of the international film festival M
circuit, the role of television, as well as the A
changing aesthetics of auteur cinema. New
audiences have different allegiances, and T
H
new technologies enable networks to re-
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shape identities, but European cinema still M
A
has an important function in setting criti-
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cal and creative agendas, even as its eco-
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nomic and institutional bases are in flux. L
S
A
Thomas Elsaesser is professor of Media E
S
and Culture and Director of Research, Film S
E
and Television Studies at the University of
R
Amsterdam. Among his most recent publi-
cations are Harun Farocki – Working on
the Sight Lines (2004), and Terrorisme,
Mythes et Representations(2005).
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EuropeanCinema
European Cinema
Faceto Facewith Hollywood
Thomas Elsaesser
AmsterdamUniversityPress
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Table of Contents
Preface 9
Introduction
EuropeanCinema:ConditionsofImpossibility?[]
National Cinema: Re-Definitions and New Directions
EuropeanCulture,NationalCinema,theAuteurandHollywood[]
ImpersoNations:NationalCinema,HistoricalImaginaries[]
FilmFestivalNetworks:theNewTopographiesofCinemain
Europe[]
DoubleOccupancyandSmallAdjustments:Space,PlaceandPolicyinthe
NewEuropeanCinemasincethes[]
Auteurs and Art Cinemas: Modernism and Self-
Reference, Installation Art and Autobiography
IngmarBergman–PersonandPersona:TheMountainofModern
CinemaontheRoadtoMorocco[]
LateLosey:TimeLostandTimeFound[]
AroundPaintingandthe“EndofCinema”:AProposJacquesRivette’s
LaBelleNoiseuse[]
SpellboundbyPeterGreenaway:IntheDark...andIntotheLight[]
TheBodyasPerceptualSurface:TheFilmsofJohanvanderKeuken[]
TelevisionandtheAuthor’sCinema:ZDF’sDasKleineFernsehspiel[]
TouchingBase:SomeGermanWomenDirectorsinthes[]
6 EuropeanCinema:FacetoFacewithHollywood
Europe-Hollywood-Europe
TwoDecadesinAnotherCountry:HollywoodandtheCinephiles[]
RaoulRuiz’sHypothèseduTableauVolé[]
ImagesforSale:The“New”BritishCinema[]
“IfYouWantaLife”:TheMarathonMan[]
BritishTelevisioninthesThroughTheLookingGlass[]
GermanCinemaFacetoFacewithHollywood:LookingintoaTwo-Way
Mirror[]
Central Europe Looking West
OfRatsandRevolution:DusanMakavejev’sTheSwitchboard
Operator[]
DefiningDEFA’sHistoricalImaginary:TheFilmsofKonradWolf[]
UnderWesternEyes:WhatDoesŽižekWant?[]
OurBalkanistGaze:AboutMemory’sNoMan’sLand[]
Europe Haunted by History and Empire
IsHistoryanOldMovie?[]
EdgarReitz’Heimat:Memory,HomeandHollywood[]
DiscourseandHistory:OneMan’sWar–AnInterviewwith
EdgardoCozarinsky[]
RendezvouswiththeFrenchRevolution:EttoreScola’s
ThatNightinVarennes[]
JosephLosey’sTheGo-Between[]
GamesofLoveandDeath:PeterGreenawayandOtherEnglishmen[]
Border-Crossings: Filmmaking without a Passport
PeterWollen’sFriendship’sDeath[]
AndyEngel’sMelancholia[]
TableofContents
OntheHighSeas:EdgardoCozarinsky’sDutchAdventure[]
ThirdCinema/WorldCinema:AnInterviewwith
RuyGuerra[]
RuyGuerra’sErendira[]
Hyper-,Retro-orCounter-:EuropeanCinemaasThirdCinemaBetween
HollywoodandArtCinema[]
Conclusion
EuropeanCinemaasWorldCinema:ANewBeginning?[]
EuropeanCinema:ABriefBibliography
ListofSourcesandPlacesofFirstPublication
Index
Preface
The(West)Europeancinemahas,sincetheendofWorldWarII,haditsidentity
firmly stamped by three features: its leading directors were recognized as au-
teurs,itsstylesandthemesshapedanation’sself-image,anditsnewwavessig-
nified political as well as aesthetic renewal. Ingmar Bergman, Jacques Rivette,
JosephLosey,Peter Greenaway,neo-realism,thenouvellevague,NewGerman
Cinema, the British renaissance – these have been some of the signposts of a
cinemathatderivedlegitimacyfromadualculturallegacy:thatofthethcen-
turynovelandofthethcenturymodernistavant-gardes.Bothpedigreeshave
given Europe’s national cinemas a unique claim to autonomy, but they also
drew boundaries between the work of the auteur-artists, representing the na-
tion,highcultureandrealism,andthemakersofpopularcinema,representing
commerce,mass-entertainmentandconsumption.
These distinguishing features were also identity constructions. They helped
to mask a continuing process of self-definition and self-differentiation across a
half-acknowledged presence, namely of Hollywood, and an unacknowledged
absence, namely of the cinemas of Socialist Europe. Since , such identity
formations through difference, exclusion and otherness, are no longer securely
inplace.Cinematodaycontributestoculturalidentitiesthataremoreinclusive
andprocessual,moremulti-culturalandmulti-ethnic,moredialogicalandinter-
active,abletoembracethe‘newEurope’,thepopularstar-andgenrecinema,as
well as the diaspora cinemas within Europe itself. It has meant re-thinking as
well as un-thinking European cinema. Has it made cinema in Europe an anx-
iousart,seekingsalvationinthepreservationofthe“nationalheritage”?Many
times before, European cinema has shown itself capable of re-invention. This
time, the challenge for films, filmmakers and critics is to be European enough
topreserveEurope’sculturaldiversityandhistoricaldepth,aswellasoutward-
lookingenoughtobetrans-nationalandpartofworldcinema.
The essays brought together in European Cinema: Face to Face with Hollywood
present a cross-section of my writings on these topics over a period of some
thirty-fiveyears.Theyre-examinetheconflictingterminologiesthathavedomi-
natedthediscussion,includingthenotionof“thenation”in“nationalcinema”,
and the idea of the artist as creator of a unique vision, at the heart of the “au-
teur-cinema”. They take a fresh look at the ideological agendas, touching on
politically and formally oppositional practices and they thoroughly examine
Europeancinema’srelationtoHollywood.
Description:Has European cinema, in the age of globalization, lost contact not only with the world at large, but with its own audiences? Between the thriving festival circuit and the obligatory late-night television slot, is there still a public or a public sphere for European films? Can the cinema be the appro