Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Dedication
- Contents
- Acknowledgements
- I Vertigo: Towards a Neurofilmology
- II Acrobatics: On the wires of empathy
- III Fall: Descent to equilibrium
- IV Impact: Experiencing the unrepresentable
- V Overturning: Upside-down dissimulations
- VI Drift: Ungraspable environments
- VII Flight: Towards an Ecofilmology
- Bibliography
- Filmography
- Index
VII - Flight: Towards an Ecofilmology
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 21 October 2021
- Frontmatter
- Dedication
- Contents
- Acknowledgements
- I Vertigo: Towards a Neurofilmology
- II Acrobatics: On the wires of empathy
- III Fall: Descent to equilibrium
- IV Impact: Experiencing the unrepresentable
- V Overturning: Upside-down dissimulations
- VI Drift: Ungraspable environments
- VII Flight: Towards an Ecofilmology
- Bibliography
- Filmography
- Index
Summary
Abstract
As a conclusion, the chapter ‘Flight. Towards an Ecofilmology’ offers a synoptic view of the characteristics of the five tensive motifs, carrying out a general anatomy of the strategies used to generate cinematic tension with particular reference to their narrative role in the light of the embodied simulation hypothesis. The fundamental aspect highlighted is the link between the different ways in which the tensive motifs embody intentionality and the dynamic of disembodying-reembodying involved. Accordingly, the motifs can be understood as a means of negotiation between the desire for vertigo and excess and the necessity of bringing overstimulation back beneath the threshold that assures the legibility and reception of the film, in perceptual as well as moral, social, and commercial terms.
Keywords: Gravity, Contemporary film experience, Intentionality, Embodiment, Ecofilmology
As the nineteenth century dies it bequeaths us two new machines. Both of them are born on almost the same date, at almost the same place, then simultaneously launch themselves upon the world and spread across continents. They pass from the hands of the pioneers into those of operators, crossing a ‘supersonic barrier’. The first machine realizes at last the most insane dream man has pursued since he looked at the sky: to break away from the earth. Until then, only the creatures of his imagination, of his desire-the angels-had wings. This need to fly, which arises, well before Icarus, at the same time as the first mythologies, seems to all appearances the most infantile and mad. It is also said about dreamers that they do not have their feet on the ground.
—Edgar Morin, ‘The Cinema, the Airplane’, in The Cinema, or The Imaginary Man, 1956 (2005, 5)Vertiginous feelings
We have walked alongside an acrobat on a high wire suspended in mid-air, fallen at breakneck speed towards a fatal impact with the ground, and performed somersaults and upside-down flips that have taken us into outer space, into the shoes of an astronaut drifting in the void. It has been a journey without pause, a progressive abandonment of firm certainties and a drawing closer to the unfathomable. At the end of this journey, we saw ourselves reflected in the characters that cinema uses to engage us, above all through its corporeality, through a series of aerial motifs that vertiginously put our sense of gravity in tension.
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- Chapter
- Information
- Neurofilmology of the Moving ImageGravity and Vertigo in Contemporary Cinema, pp. 201 - 228Publisher: Amsterdam University PressPrint publication year: 2021