Film Fables
In Film Fables Jacques Ranciere turns his critical eye to the history of modern cinema. Combining an extraordinary breadth of analysis with an attentiveness to detail born from an obvious love of cinema, Ranciere shows us new ways of looking at and interpreting film. His analysis moves effortlessly from Eisenstein's and Murnau's transition from theatre to film to Fritz Lang's confrontation with television, from the classical poetics of Mann's Westerns to Ray's romantic poetics of the image, from Rossellini's neo-realism to Deleuze's philosophy of the cinema. The book also includes extended commentaries on the work of Hitchcock, Godard, Vertov and Bergman. Film Fables is essential reading for anyone wanting to gain a better understanding of the power and complexity of the cinematic form and it's rich history.
Table of contents
Translator's Preface
Prologue: A Thwarted Fable
Part I: FABLES OF THE VISIBLE
Between the age of the theater and the television age
1. Eisenstein's Madness
2. A Silent Tartuffe
3. From One Manhunt to Another: Fritz Lang Between Two Ages
4. The Child Director
Part II: CLASSICAL NARRATIVE, ROMANTIC NARRATIVE
5. Some Things To Do: The Poetics of Anthony Mann
6. The Missing Shot: The Poetics of Nicholas Ray
Part III: IF THERE IS A CINEMATOGRAPHIC MODERNITY
7. From One Image to Another? Deleuze and the Ages of Cinema
8. Falling Bodies: Rossellini's Physics
9. The Red of La Chinoise: Godard's Politics
Part IV: FABLES OF THE CINEMA, (HI)STORIES OF A CENTURY
10. Documentary Fiction: Marker and the Fiction of Memory
11. A Fable Without a Moral: Godard, Cinema, (Hi)stories
Index