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Archive for July, 2007

Ciao…Antonioni! Cinema passes away

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Yesterday it was Ingmar Bergman, today Michelangelo Antonioni. Old men fading away in rain, sat in the parkbench like bookends. And I can see a lonely man in Grenoble, stubbles and a stick, sitting in the park, paused his weary flipping through the pages of his book named Histoire du Cinema and staring blank. Time is up, JLG! The chessboard is withdrawn, the mimes have ended their tennis-play. No more stories to tell, no more women to look at, no more ideas to give birth to, no more battles to win… No more life in your Europe to wonder at through your lenses. The computers generating images still on the other side of the Atlantic, the box-office won’t pause for a moment of silence. And we forgot, cinema ain’t images only, visual or aural; cinema is the nostalgia of a history of aborted possibilities. Cinema is what would have been, rather than what it was. Recall how a film ended in a park where the girl and the boy would have met? They simply didn’t come and for a rare moment in the history of cinema the camera was rendered free, watching a perfect park, perfect streets, streamlined architecture and nameless faces, each with their own stories to tell. Recall, how the logistics of joining shots were liberated of human drama and an inhuman logistics of decreasing tonalities ended a perfect finale of L’Ecclisse? Neither fiction nor non-fiction, but pure cinema? Well man, its fin du Cinema, a cinema is dead, and you have wrote the obituary long ago. Bogarte is drunk and broken, Marilyn is sobbing stroking her wrinkled skin, the last gun is shot and the sheriff is sad as good sheriffs always are after they are impelled to shoot faster; the screen is blank because it’s filled up with pixels, a world blown up, the shooting pieces of an exploding glitz, the shrapnels of a blasting dream, the poetry of a beautiful end…

the final scene of Zabriskie Point (1975) by Michelangelo Antonioni (1912 Sep 29 – 2007 July 31)

The way they touched: in memorium Ingmar Bergman

July 30, 2007 Life's Elsewhere 1 comment

We…as men, as boys…loved your faces, yearned to touch your skins, ruffle your hair and we looked at you long, with our sight, with our eyes. We…as men, as boys…loved your voice, yearned to feel your sounds and we heard you long, with our minds, with our brains, heard your ‘oui’s, heard your ‘nay’s, heard your ’sorry’s, your ‘love you’s and ‘thank you’s, the way we liked them to be. We heard your meanings, not your music, we saw your skin, not those ripples of feelings fleeting away; we matched your words and your looks with our lexicon, and it was just obvious, we seldom understood what you mean or what you are be-ing.

Probably the reason why we all got a high when you meant nothing, you moaned and groaned, as bodies that we own. As boys, as men…we freezed you in frames. Canvases and plates, brush-strokes and light-rays: we loved your sights, we loved your sounds. We bought your faces, we displayed you to friends, they said: your woman is looking beautiful tonight as she was today, we bowed it’s my pleasure, proud that you’re mine, we were in a high.

But touching your skins, the skins of your face, were we able to mean, able to express? So cliched it was, the places to touch, each time the same and you expected none to change the game; as boys, as men…your landscapes were just those few tourist-spots, which in photos were displayed, which the prints described and brochures prescribed: a moonlit land were limited to those erogenous zones where neons glowed, where high billboards…

Then we wondered long: how to understand you, through your words or your faces? Through which do you mean, through which do you express? And we forgot the touch, as we longed for the grapple or for the grove; we forgot what it was: the language of touch…

And then we saw you girls and all you women, knew how to touch your faces, how the touch expresses tenderness and care. How a girl quivers when a girl strokes her face, when she holds her hands. And we have forgot that faces like to be touched, hands like to be held, voices are music, feelings precede meanings. You women remembered and did not teach us men what the mother did to me, how did she expressed before language that love is the glee of a touch in the skin. Bamboozled, bemused…women in love…became numbers to us, doubling the bill, doubling the skins. And we disavowed that you two can do what we desired to be, but never achieved: the language of touch, voices without meanings, words of feelings… And we were left just to stare, recalling the lost: the language of touch, of which no manuals exist, its beyond linguists.

Left in the lurch, we touch your images: the here and the gone, the now and the none…

touching the image 1touching the image 2

All images from films authored by Ingmar Berman (1918 July 14 – 2007 July 30)

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