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Chapter 1 - Cinemetamorphosis

from Part I - Theory and Practice

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  27 January 2020

Martin M. Winkler
Affiliation:
George Mason University, Virginia

Summary

Chapter 1 outlines the theoretical basis on which the following chapters build and defines adaptations of literature to cinema, television, and other screens as cinemetamorphoses, an allusion to the title of Ovid’s most famous work. Scholars distinguish between foreground and background Ovidianism: the former indicates intentional, the latter unconscious or not immediately obvious affinities between a work or passage by Ovid and allusions to, or echoes of, this source in later literature or the visual arts. Sergei Eisenstein, the great Russian filmmaker and theoretician of cinema, coined the expression montage of attractions for one of the creative principles of film editing; in the present book, his term is applied in an expanded sense: that of indicating the affinities, either close or loose, between Ovid’s works and films based on or taking up various topics, characters, plot situations, and additional aspects, primarily from famous myths in his Metamorphoses, to which Ovid has given definitive shape. A Roman marble relief showing Hermes, Orpheus, and Eurydice illustrates the close ties between text and image through a classical visual work of art. This chapter also provides a preview of the following chapters’ contents. Finally, Chapter 1 gives examples of the kind of background Ovidianism largely excluded from this book.

Type
Chapter
Information
Ovid on Screen
A Montage of Attractions
, pp. 3 - 23
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2020

With its almost limitless narrative possibilities, the cinema, together with later media, has left all earlier verbal and visual adaptations or imitations of classical literature far behind. Film versions of literary texts may be adaptations, imitations, or the like. The essential change from one medium to another is tantamount to metamorphosis. Such metamorphoses follow their own rules and principles. I propose to call them cinemetamorphoses.

1 A Working Definition

Parker Tyler, in Magic and Myth of the Movies, titled four of his twelve chapters “Magic-Lantern Metamorphoses.”Footnote 1 Cinemetamorphosis then is a conceptual approach whose purpose is to apply a filmic perspective to Greek and Roman literature and, when appropriate, to ancient static images like paintings, sculptures, or mosaics. Cinemetamorphosis examines the affinities between classical texts and images on the one hand and modern visual narratives on the other.Footnote 2 Its chief focus is on the visual qualities in narrative literature and the literary qualities in narrative images. Modern literary critics, with their theoretical agonies over what exactly visual adaptations of literary texts are, have by now produced a veritable jungle of terminologies: “translation, actualization, reading, critique, dialogization, cannibalization, transmutation, transfiguration, incarnation, transmogrification, transcoding, performance, signifying, rewriting, detournement.”Footnote 3 Or this list, applicable to word, image, and beyond: appropriation, assimilation, creative destruction, disjunction, encapsulation, focalization/obfuscation, hybridization, ignorance, montage/assembly, negation, reconstruction with or without supplementation, resignation/revaluation, substitution, translation.Footnote 4 Or, more succinctly but still rather nebulously: “Borrowing, Intersecting, and Transforming Sources.”Footnote 5 By contrast, the all-inclusive term cinemetamorphosis can provide a kind of Ockham’s Razor through the thickets of that jungle – or, to stay within antiquity, a kind of Heracles’ sword rapidly slashing through the proliferating necks of the terminological Hydra. Both of the critical lists quoted above include terms synonymous with metamorphosis. They support, although unintentionally, what I am proposing here. So it seems sensible to use with caution a term like translation in regard to film versions of literature, not least because the change from text to screen is far more intricate than that from one text to another, the basic meaning of translation.Footnote 6 Equally, adaptation may be too vague to be useful, not least since any adaptation runs the risk of being judged inferior to a revered original. What is called for is a neutral term that describes the process of change from text to moving image with greater accuracy and on a larger scale but with less danger of falling victim to prejudice. Cinemetamorphosis encompasses analytical and comparative work in two directions, as it were: transformations of classical texts to the screen, as in films based on Greek and Roman epic, tragedy, comedy, or historiography; and, conversely, the discovery and interpretation of classical themes and archetypes in films not ostensibly based on anything ancient at all. As already indicated, a related area is the cinematic analysis of classical visual art works, especially those that express or imply either motion or a narrative. I turn to a famous example below.

Cinemetamorphosis is not an explication de texte (or d’image) as traditionally practiced since the days of the Alexandrian scholiasts. Rather – and here is a working definition – it is a retrospective interpretation and appreciation of the complexity of classical texts and images made possible by the invention of the motion-picture camera and projector and their digital heirs. To put it slightly differently, cinemetamorphosis is an explication filmique des textes et images classiques. It can also – and here is the other direction mentioned above – be an explication classique des textes filmiques. The fact that the narrative medium of film was unknown and technically impossible to the ancients is by no means an obstacle to the approach I am advocating. Much of the storytelling in moving images is by definition a process of metamorphosis, for the individual static images on a filmstrip appear to be moving and changing in sequential order when they are being projected. The same holds for storytelling on film, video, or computer. To tell about changing forms and appearances – in Ovid’s words: In nova … mutatas dicere formas … corpora (Met.1.1–2) – is the very essence of cinema. It is Ovidian by nature and should be of interest to classicists for this reason alone.

2 Ovidianism and Cinemetamorphosis

What is simultaneously the attraction, even fascination, inherent in such an approach and also its crux is the question of where to draw the line in pursuing a particular theme or figure from Ovid. There exists a huge variety of works to choose from, even if we restrict ourselves to European and American cinema. Many of these lead inevitably to yet others. To put the matter in Ovidian terms: how far should I follow my thread into the labyrinth of cinema history in this book? Traditional philologists may conclude after perusing my chapters that I have on more than one occasion followed it too far away from Ovid, while film experts may criticize me for not going far enough, given the extremely intertextual essence of narrative cinema. Those who believe that I drew the line at exactly the right place are likely to be few. But this dilemma is in the nature of the matter.

Classicists have become increasingly aware of the postclassical and modern uses of the reception of ancient texts and begun to consider allusions and intertexts as integral parts of modern critical thought about literature.Footnote 7 Stephen Hinds once made the following observations about the presence, as it were, of Ovid in Seneca’s plays:

I shall be alert not just to strongly signalled allusions but also to a kind of background Ovidianism (if I may so term it) discernible within the seemingly indiscriminate intertextuality of a Senecan topos. The aim will be to complement the expected … passages with some larger (if less tidy) impressions of the … space which Ovid and his poetry occupy in Seneca’s tragic imagination.Footnote 8

Hinds’s term background Ovidianism is a felicitous soubriquet for what a considerable part of the present book will attempt to show in regard to a non-literary medium. Alessandro Barchiesi once summarized what he calls “the Ovidian poetics of allusion” as “a crucial moment in the history of Roman intertextuality” and included other Roman and Greek poets as well: “allusion reanimates previous works of literature, and even … the issues of ‘voice’, ‘polysemy’, and ‘levels of communication’.” Appropriately, the first chapter in his book is called “Continuities”: “The basic condition for Ovid’s poetics is a sense of continuity and co-existence, between stories as between texts.”Footnote 9 Barchiesi was not thinking of the cinema. But we can easily extend his view of Ovidian poetics to include stories in moving images.

Hinds, Barchiesi, and others, not all of them classical scholars, point in the directions that my subject will take me. The continuities and kinds of co-existence to be demonstrated and examined here will be primarily between stories on the page and stories told in moving images. Obviously all these reanimate previous literary and visual works, from Ovid – really, from Homer – through the entire history of the cinema. Readers will encounter issues of voice, polysemy, and intricate levels of communication in each chapter. To adapt Barchiesi’s phrasing: the cinematic poetics of allusion are a crucial phase, not just a moment, in the cultural history of Ovidian intertextuality. Charmingly and wistfully, Ovid himself envisioned the different books of his “Collected Works” as speaking among each other while lying on their shelf (Tristia 1.1.105–120). What Barchiesi did in his context, I do in mine: I take Ovid’s image of books in their library as an impulse and justification for putting his texts into our modern collection of visual texts, but on a much larger and less tidy (but not untidy) shelf in a nearly endlessly expanding library of narrative.

The chapters that follow may at first appear to present seemingly indiscriminate intertextualities. But my reason to pursue just these and not others will become clear, I hope, through my combination of foreground Ovidianism – expected themes, characters, plots – and background Ovidianism: larger but not untidy impressions that Ovid has left on the cinematic imagination. What Hinds stated about Ovid’s epic shortly after the words quoted above could count as my own justification:

the whole system of Greco-Roman myth has an important and inescapable post-Ovidian dimension. We are used to the idea that the pretension of the Metamorphoses to a kind of mythological comprehensiveness actually does lead to its becoming the encyclopedia of myth for the Middle Ages and Renaissance; but I think we have tended to underestimate just how thoroughly the Metamorphoses is already being absorbed as the “bible” of myth in the Rome of the first century CE.Footnote 10

What began in that first century came to flourish in later ages and culminates, if only for now, in ours. And it does so in a medium that has become the biggest “Bible” of mythmaking ever: the cinema with its unending and unstoppable neo-mythologism.Footnote 11

In sum, Ovidianism is not limited to conscious or intentional adaptations of the poet’s oeuvre. I therefore attempt to demonstrate the nature of filmic engagements with ancient texts by turning to different kinds of visual texts: films based on or inspired by Ovid, films connected to his works only loosely, and films that have no direct model in Ovid but exhibit situations, themes, or characters that we encounter in his works.

The ancients already knew that narrative texts are not to be separated from the visual arts.Footnote 12 Concerning Ovid and his Metamorphoses, we can only assent to the following statement: “In classical culture generally and particularly in Ovid … metamorphosis is of crucial importance for thinking about art, in both literary and visual media.”Footnote 13 I demonstrated the nature of cinema as visual texts in other contexts, in which I examined a number of possible varieties of affinity between classical literature and film.Footnote 14 The present book continues and extends that approach. Ovidianism is useful for the establishment of a wider framework in analyses of connections between ancient literature and modern visual arts. Gérard Genette’s concepts of hypotexts, hypertexts, and various related kinds of such -texts are useful for a broader understanding of narrative than he himself practiced.Footnote 15 This is so because they can readily be linked with the idea of transformation from the verbal to the visual. It is therefore time for a more panoramic view of ancient and modern narrative modes and their interconnections.

My procedure combines two aspects: an explication de texte ovidien based on the inherently visual nature of Ovid’s poetry and an explication ovidienne des textes filmiques, a demonstration of his works’ analogies with the cinema. While much recent scholarship applies modern theories to Ovid, I proceed largely but not exclusively in the opposite direction: by applying, as it were, Ovid’s texts to a modern medium and, to some extent, its theories. Hence my mainly positivist or evidentiary procedure, which makes adherence to specific theories and any immersion in their jargon superfluous.

Before we proceed further with our Ovidian subject, we should briefly glance backward to remind ourselves of the narrative complexity that may be found in ancient visual arts. Here is one example. A Roman copy of a Greek relief sculpture from the fifth century BC shows Orpheus, Eurydice, and Hermes, the divine guide of the shades of the dead to the Underworld. It illustrates a famous tale from Ovid (and Virgil), dealt with in Chapter 7. Marcel Camus’s classic film Black Orpheus (1959) begins with a close-up of this famous relief, showing Orpheus and Eurydice’s heads under its title. (Plate I. Black Orpheus. The film’s title card, with Orpheus and Eurydice on a Roman copy of a Greek relief sculpture.) A medium-long shot showing them with Hermes closes the film. But how can this static image tell a story? Art historian Ernst Gombrich explains:

First we must recognize the protagonists by what are called their ‘attributes’, the singer’s lyre, or the traveller’s hat of Hermes, the guide of the dead. Only then can we identify the episode here represented, the fatal moment when Orpheus has disobeyed the condition imposed on him and has looked back on Eurydice, who is therefore taken back to Hades by the god.

This is straightforward enough, although readers of Virgil or Ovid will immediately have noticed that no Hermes (or Mercury) is present in their ways of telling the myth. The unknown Greek sculptor may be representing a version with which poets, centuries later, have taken some liberties by omitting the divine guide. But how do we know that the moment depicted is the one identified above? The image itself tells us so. Gombrich is again to the point:

Hermes is seen to bend back slightly as he gently takes Eurydice by the wrist to return her to the realm of Hades. The two lovers face each other, her hand rests on the shoulders of the guide who had failed her [i.e. Orpheus], her head is slightly lowered as they gaze at each other in a mute farewell.

This interpretation is entirely convincing. As does the work of art it discusses, it presupposes a point that will come up in another context in Chapter 2: the one that Xenophon’s Socrates made concerning visual art expressing states of the soul. About our relief Gombrich remarks: “There is no overt expression in their [the figures’] blank features, but nothing contradicts the mood we readily project into this composition, once we have grasped its import.” Then comes his most important conclusion. It is worth keeping the art of the moving image in mind when we read what Gombrich says about the interactions between the text or texts that told the myth and the static image based on it:

Such a subtle evocation must rely on the kind of beholder who would also know how to appreciate the reworking of a familiar myth …. The relief, in other words, is not really created to tell the story of Orpheus and Eurydice but to enable those who know the story … to re-live it in human terms.

The relief is an example of “that free dramatic evocation that Greek art had evolved.”

I. Black Orpheus. The film’s title card, with Orpheus and Eurydice on a Roman copy of a Greek relief sculpture.

After antiquity, free dramatic evocation evolved much further and expanded into new technologies, which in turn have changed and expanded the verbal and visual arts of storytelling nearly beyond any limits imaginable before. So it was a fitting choice, presumably on the part of the film’s producers, to include images of this ancient relief in Black Orpheus, one of the two greatest cinemetamorphoses of this myth alongside Jean Cocteau’s Orphée (1950). What has been said about visual art in the Western tradition since ancient Greece applies just as readily to the primary visual art of the twentieth century and beyond. As Gombrich put it: “the artist should show his mettle by interpreting known texts. It was the ‘how’ and not the ‘what’ that the connoisseur admired and pondered.Footnote 16

This last observation could serve as the guiding principle of my book, which is intended to point to the sheer endless possibilities of foreground and background Ovidianism as cinemetamorphoses. The argument advanced in this chapter is by no means any kind of ultimate statement. But I hope it will suffice as my book’s theoretical foundation, together with some additional observations in later chapters.

Concerning the subject of classical works that have been recast in new forms or, to say it with Ovid, that have been changed into new bodies, I adduce one more quotation. Epic French filmmaker Abel Gance once employed a vivid epic metaphor:

Writers perpetually begin themselves again, stirring the ocean of words with the same poor oars that have, after all, been worn out since the time of Homer. And the raft of our minds, tossed about across the centuries, in vain searches for its shore or its anchor.Footnote 17

The pages that follow are addressed primarily to readers who are sympathetic to Gance’s perspective.

3 Montages of Attractions

Sergei Eisenstein, one of the greatest artists and theorists in the history of film, planned but never completed a book to be called Pushkin and Cinema. In the texts he intended to incorporate into it, Eisenstein made an elegant and compelling case for the parallel examination of literary and filmic narratives, as he did elsewhere. He repeatedly pointed to the affinities between literature and film; hence my general debt to him as a model. Two classical scholars have already demonstrated that his views can be applied to Greek and Roman texts.Footnote 18 The subtitle of my book takes up Eisenstein’s term montage of attractions, which denotes a particular aspect of his approach to film editing, perhaps the best-known one.Footnote 19 My use of this expression is, however, not intended in a strictly technical or Eisensteinian sense. Rather, it is meant to alert readers to the nature of Ovidianism on screen: a montage – mosaic, matrix – of a varied number of subjects that should, or at least could, attract a sympathetic reader’s interest. In addition, my subtitle refers to a particular phenomenon of the cinema’s earliest phase, when the attractions presented on the screen tended to be there chiefly for their inherent visual value rather than for the sake of a coherent narrative. Plots in early short films could be flimsy or almost non-existent; what counted was spectacle, the hook to lure viewers. This aspect of cinema history has received extensive attention in recent years, primarily in the work of Tom Gunning, and applies to my own approach.Footnote 20 That is to say, my chapters form a montage of topics – attractive ones, I hope – to which readers can turn as self-contained units or as parts of an overarching theme. The former tends to reflect Gunning’s approach, the latter Eisenstein’s; there is, of course, no clear division between them.Footnote 21 My own preference is, understandably, the second.

How far montages of Ovidian attractions may reach and what the nature of the affinities between an ancient author’s literary works and a modern medium of expression that did not exist at his time might be are large questions. If modern works of high or popular art evince noticeable parallels to an individual ancient work or to a classical author’s body of work but are not specifically or consciously related to antiquity, are such similarities worthy of consideration, let alone serious analysis? To readers who limit the extent of what is generally meant by the classical tradition to artists’ intentional engagements with ancient models or sources, the following chapters might appear to be meandering through, or to have got lost in, a labyrinth of my own making. But to readers who have a broader understanding, one that encompasses what today is generally called the reception of antiquity, any meaningful narrative or visual similarities between classical and modern works, any archetypal parallels even in disparate genres, forms, figures, characters, and media become important as objects of study. In the present context, they are part of background Ovidianism.

This latter perspective seems to be gaining more and more ground. Classicist Craig Kallendorf, editor of an essay collection on the classical tradition, referred in his introduction to “the changes in how we know what we know” about antiquity and noted the “profound consequences for how Greece and Rome are understood by later ages” in regard to modern theoretical approaches to classical reception. He concluded:

Traditional classical philology aims to recover the meanings that ancient texts had in their original contexts. If, however, the reader is an active participant in the making of meaning, then it will be very difficult, indeed perhaps impossible, to recover the original meaning of any text. If interpretation is not simply grounded in original meaning, the different readings of a classical text over time become not misreadings, but the only readings we have, ours being simply the last [better: latest] in the chain of receptions. From this perspective, the chain of receptions moves from the margins to the center.Footnote 22

If we include in this perspective not only classical texts but also classical visual arts, we can agree almost wholeheartedly. The “chain of receptions” has by now moved to the center of academic, educational, and general work on Greece and Rome. Equally, popular adaptations, re-imaginings, and other creative endeavors are not misreadings. At the same time they are not the only objects of readings since we still have the originals. Classical originals and later creative engagements with them exist side by side. This means that there is a place for both, separately or in conjunction. Traditional philologists are not superfluous. Neither are scholars of reception. And neither side ought to be dismissive of or hostile to the other. They ought to co-exist, because together they can demonstrate most effectively why antiquity always matters. What Malcolm Heath has remarked about classical literature may be applied to a wider context. About the scholars’ task of “allowing the text to speak in its own terms,” Heath observes:

The text already speaks in its own terms; the interpreter’s job is to render it intelligible to us by making it speak in our terms. Necessarily, therefore, the text as interpreted speaks in our terms, since the terms it speaks in are ones that we have supplied. But our stock of terms is not static: it changes as we change …. In attempting to achieve a satisfactory explication of a text, we are likely to encounter the need to adapt and extend our existing conceptual repertoire …. The interpreter’s task of making the text speak in our terms may therefore be, in part, a matter of giving us new terms – not in place of the terms we had before, but in addition to them.Footnote 23

These words describe the task of the philologist as interpreter. But what about creative artists as interpreters, especially in media unknown in antiquity? They, too, attempt a more or less satisfactory explication of an ancient text by extending the existing conceptual repertoire with their new artistic and technical or technological means. They, too, give us new terms, new expressions for old texts – not in place of these texts but alongside them.

All of the preceding applies in equal measure to all of the classical arts, whether literature or painting, sculpture, architecture. And it clearly applies to creative engagements with the classical arts after antiquity. Here the cinema and related visual media are especially prominent and therefore important. Today they are integral parts of classical receptions. Concerning film, classicist Joanna Paul has expressed the matter like this:

many [films] have no easily discernible relationship with antiquity or its narratives but … [may be taken] as evidence of its ongoing presence in the modern world. This forces us to confront the difficult question of what grounds we need in order to posit a meaningful relationship between film and ancient text or myth …. The value, or novelty, of such revelations may not convince all readers, but, as a previous skeptic of this kind of approach myself, I would argue that … they challenge us all to reflect further on what we mean by reception. Even though a filmmaker may not consciously appeal to ancient precedents, if [a film’s] “reader” identifies some thematic affinity between the two, then a relationship between past and present is surely enacted through [such a “reader’s”] reception of the film; and if it can be carefully accounted for, as it is here, then it must be afforded some credence and meaning.Footnote 24

Her confession of a change of heart is charming and disarming, but it is more important as an indication of open-mindedness. Here we may be reminded of Rudolf Pfeiffer’s concept of a philologia perennis.Footnote 25 I have elsewhere proposed to expand this fundamental idea into that of a philologia perennis et universalis in the tradition of the great Alexandrians who laid most of the foundation of classical scholarship.Footnote 26 Two scholarly books on Ovid and cinema are fruitful examples of this approach in their different ways.Footnote 27

Some of my readers (many, I hope) will share my enthusiasm for archetypal narrative themes that go beyond direct Ovidian influence – to them, as to me, this book will seem too short and incomplete – while others (few, I hope) will draw a more narrow line; to them, my book will be too long. But my chapters present readers of the latter kind with a series of intellectual test cases, which raise this question: Are more circumscribed views better able to do justice to a topic – in this case cinematic Ovidianism – than wider, indeed panoramic, views? All readers will doubtless reach their own verdict about what constitutes a successful montage of attractions between something ancient and something modern. And that is as it should be. The montage here presented is necessarily only one among many possible others. Here now is an outline of my montage.

4 Preview of Coming Attractions

Following on the theoretical framework introduced here, the next, complementary, chapter of Part I applies Eisenstein’s concept of film sense to Ovid’s works. It demonstrates Ovid’s inherently cinematic imagination by two examples from the Metamorphoses and one from the Amores. Chapter 2 finally considers a post-modern novel as an intentionally anachronistic re-imagining of Ovid from the vantage point of the cinema age, exemplifying the nearly infinite possibilities for retellings of texts, archetypal plot situations, and stylistic phenomena of narratives as they recur in moving images.

Part II is on exemplary moments in film history concerning, first, foreground and, second, background Ovidianism. Chapter 3 shows that Ovid provided the impulse for Gabriele D’Annunzio’s fascination with the cinema and for what has been called the first theory of film ever formulated. The sequence of changes Ovid deals with in his epic is comprehensive and nearly universal, encompassing myth and history from the creation of the world down to his own time. In the process Ovid deviates from linear narrative progression. The Metamorphoses becomes a kind of narrative labyrinth, the subject of Chapter 4. Telling about forms and appearances that have radically changed demanded narrative flexibility from the ancient poet and still demands it from modern artists.Footnote 28 The same demand exists for critical analyses, including those presented here. Additional observations in these chapters are intended further to emphasize the affinities between verbal and visual storytelling that are crucial for any thorough understanding of Ovid’s importance for the cinema. Later chapters include discussions of various theoretical perspectives whenever warranted.Footnote 29

The two chapters of Part III exemplify in detail my overall perspective on cinemetamorphoses. Chapter 5 examines the concept of metamorphosis by focusing on two pervasive if varied patterns: changes from inanimate matter to living body and the reverse. The former is exemplified by, or at least closely associated with, one of Ovid’s most influential tales, that of Pygmalion. The latter is best known from the myth of Medusa. Ovid’s Daedalus is also crucial as creator of movement from stasis. This chapter connects elements from these myths to a variety of related film forms and genres. Chapter 6 takes the first metamorphosis told in Ovid’s epic as its cue to discuss different approaches by filmmakers to putting abnormal psychic phenomena on the screen. This chapter also addresses technological aspects of cinematic metamorphoses from man to beast.

Part IV turns to a topic that is all-pervasive in Ovid: love, seduction, death. Chapter 7 deals with another of Ovid’s most famous tales, that of Orpheus and Eurydice, primarily in post-modern cinema. Chapter 8 starts with Ovid’s Heroides and then turns to the myth of Philemon and Baucis from the Metamorphoses. Chapter 9 provides a critical assessment of the only feature film in which Ovid has appeared as principal character. Since it is the work of an idiosyncratic maker of erotic cinema, it deserves particular attention. This film contrasts with two others by acknowledged masters of cinema. All three demonstrate the differences that are possible in tales of love and seduction.

Part V discusses aspects of immortality, artists’ fame, and the survival of their works. Chapter 10 deals chiefly with a cinematic parallel to one of Ovid’s most fascinating and enigmatic characters, the philosopher Pythagoras, and a tribute to Ovid in the culture of Renaissance Florence on the part of a great humanist filmmaker. Chapter 11 closes the book with a retrospect on Orpheus, Icarus, and Medusa. This chapter is also intended as an apologia to Jean Cocteau, whose Orphée, a milestone of cinema, deserves a chapter to itself. I have, however, addressed this film elsewhere, if from a different perspective, and numerous analyses are readily available. For this reason I concentrate on Cocteau’s two other Orphic films.

All his works, be they erotic, lyrical, or epic, reveal Ovid to be a master of psychology, both male and female. This circumstance predisposes him, in a manner of speaking, to be a master of cinematic character presentation. French filmmaker, cultural critic, and philosopher Edgar Morin provides us with an initial understanding of why this should be so:

It is not pure chance if the language of psychology and that of the cinema often coincide in terms of projection, representation, field, and images. Film is constructed in the likeness of our total psyche …. The inventors of the cinema have empirically and unconsciously projected into the open air the structures of the imaginary, the tremendous mobility of psychological assimilation, the processes of our intelligence. Everything that can be said of the cinema goes for the human mind itself, its power at once conserving, animating, and creative of animated images. The cinema makes us understand not only theater, poetry, and music, but also the internal theater of the mind: dreams, imaginings, representations: this little cinema that we have in our head.Footnote 30

This is as heart-felt a creed as it is insightful. More importantly perhaps, modern neurological research fully vindicates Morin. As a useful primer on the ubiquity of the image, especially the moving image, in our world puts it: “The Brain Sees Pictures First.”Footnote 31 In Aristotle’s words: “the soul never thinks without an image.”Footnote 32 We may call this the essence of cinema and adduce Alfred Hitchcock as a star witness. He once said: “My mind is strictly visual.”Footnote 33

Even though Morin was by no means thinking of Ovid, the concept of metamorphosis in various contexts and with different implications plays a major part in his overall argument. Morin was clearly Ovidian in his understanding of the film medium. He defined the cinema in quasi-Ovidian terms: “A mechanical metamorphosis of the spectacle of shadow and light.”Footnote 34 This statement is as concise as it is elegant.

Ovid introduces his epic as a “continuous poem” that extends “down to my own time” (ad mea perpetuumtempora carmen; Met. 1.4). My book proceeds in a comparable manner. It presents Ovidianism in the cinema through a selection of themes and examples that lead down from early film history until my own time. I have attempted to discuss or at least mention some of the most significant aspects; I hope that readers will think of others. If they do, they may be reminded of Pythagoras’ speech in the Metamorphoses: everything changes, nothing is lost. Metamorphosis is a form of survival. So are the cinemetamorphoses of Ovid’s works. And so are the various manifestations of background Ovidianism that will remind friends of Ovid of their author, sometimes immediately. The entire body of Greek myths from which Ovid drew for his Metamorphoses is a coherent system of interconnected stories. So is the body of international and especially of European and American cinema. Myths and films are webs or tapestries of storytelling. Ovid’s Arachne and Minerva, dealt with in Chapter 2, are their patrons (of sorts).

I sometimes pursue a labyrinthine rather than a straightforward path through a particular topic. Occasionally I quote from published translations of texts not originally in English, but in most cases I use my own. Occasionally I provide both the original text and its English translation: when the original contains crucial terms, is of special importance to my argument, or may be presumed to be of interest to readers. Since my overall argument is an interpretive synthesis of disparate sources, I quote passages from primary and secondary texts and dialogues from films in greater number and sometimes at greater length than some readers may consider strictly necessary.

Only a few classicists have studied Ovid and the cinema in depth. Two recent monographs are especially important. One deals with Ovid’s visualization of myth and the inherently cinematic nature of his art.Footnote 35 This book, whose title (“Cinema in the Head”) echoes Morin as quoted above, makes for a valuable companion to mine. The other traces background Ovidianism exclusively in regard to the tale of Pygmalion.Footnote 36 It is instructive because of its wide-ranging content and for what it implies about Ovid and film. Its author lists nearly a hundred films and television productions about Pygmalion and Pygmalion-like characters in her filmography. It is no undue criticism of this useful work to say that the list could be expanded considerably.Footnote 37 I examine some additional films in Chapter 5. So it is as charming an instance of enthusiastic hyperbole as it is a revealing insight on the part of a cinephile to conclude:

It seems always to have been the artist’s domain to recreate life by reproducing movement.

And when Pygmalion, after resolving to live absolutely celibate, fell madly in love with the statue of Galatea, who materialized from under his chisel and whom Venus at his request animated with the fire of life, the celebrated sculptor created a film [faisait du cinématographe] just as Monsieur Jourdain created his prose; that is to say, without knowing it.Footnote 38

Pygmalion – the first filmmaker! Galatea – the first film star?

The first classical scholar, as far as I can tell, to have considered Ovid alongside the cinema, was Simone Viarre. The third chapter of her 1964 book on image and thought in the Metamorphoses is titled “The Spectacle of Movement” (Le spectacle de mouvement) and contains a brief section called “A Fundamental Relationship with the Cinema” (Une parenté avec le cinéma). Viarre begins by pointing to Ovid’s familiarity with sculpture and painting. But, in terms of the visual, something else is decisive where changes of shapes are concerned:

it is only between cinema and metamorphosis that we find a fundamental contact, on a level more profound than esthetic appearance. It is essential that the Ovidian analysis of the metamorphoses [l’analyse ovidienne des métamorphoses] and the sequence of cinematographic images share the same power of conviction …. One difference only is that the film owes its reality to the magic-esthetic power it produces, whereas Ovidian metamorphosis draws its resources from nature and creates shadowy ghosts [fantômes] endowed, on the other hand, with natural existence, not only in a psychological manner but an entirely concrete one: wolf, poplar, egret provide Ovid with direct models or corroboration, whereas the filmmaker’s work has no tangible proof for his success except in the spectator’s look.Footnote 39

Viarre follows these observations with two longer sections. One examines Book 7 of the Metamorphoses, the story of Jason and Medea, as a film, the other applies some basic cinematic techniques to a number of passages from Ovid’s epic.Footnote 40

Viarre did what I will do, on a larger scale, in Chapter 2: treat Ovid as a potential screenwriter. So I wholly agree with her conclusion: “We can, in this way, imagine a [complete] film of the Metamorphoses.”Footnote 41 Today, classical scholars sympathetic to considering modern moving images along static ancient ones in their attempts to elucidate the profoundness and complexity of Ovid’s art, to say nothing of its modernity, can do the same. This was not always so. In 1967 E. J. Kenney published a scathing review of Viarre (“the failure of this book”) and dismissed her second and third sections on Ovidian cinema as “no more than a curiosity.” My readers, I hope, will not follow his example. But even Kenney considered Viarre’s first section on the subject as one of her (presumably few) “flashes of perception.”Footnote 42

5 Ovidianism on the Cutting-Room Floor

Many of the Greek myths that Ovid put into definitive shape have been adapted to the screen and constitute examples of foreground Ovidianism. Films whose plots contain thematic parallels to Ovid’s works exist in even greater number: background Ovidianism. Altogether there are far more instances especially of the latter than this or any one book could discuss. I have therefore not attempted to cover all possible angles. Hence, to mention only some random examples, no Pinocchio; no Transformers or shape-shifting superheroes or -villains from various comic-book worlds; no RoboCops, Re-Animators, X-Men, androids, cyborgs; no body snatchers, vampires, zombies, or other kinds of the undead; no replicant, equisapiens, or monster type; not even Ladyhawke, Ex Machina, Her, or The Lobster.Footnote 43 I have also excluded all videogames, total ignorance of which I gladly profess. Exclusions, omissions, oversights, and gaps are an unavoidable feature of all work on classics and cinema, for there is always more than even a professional cinephile can know. Regrettably, classical scholars have, overall, paid only little attention to this rich field.Footnote 44 Scholarly Companion volumes and comparable books on Ovid, doubtless meritorious, are generally innocent of listing words like film, cinema, or movie in their indexes even when their contributors examine Ovid’s influence on modern culture.Footnote 45 Art historians, on the other hand, occasionally betray insufficient knowledge or understanding of ancient sources, especially textual ones.Footnote 46 This is sometimes the case, too, when film scholars turn to the classical cultures. Since misguided judgments especially by the latter ought not to be ignored altogether, I point them out when appropriate. An example appears below.

Here are a few instances of the kinds of material I have omitted. The tragic love story of Pyramus and Thisbe (Met. 4.55–161) became the tale of the star-crossed lovers in Shakespeare’s Romeo and Juliet and, as farce, in A Midsummer Night’s Dream and led to a host of retellings in sundry media.Footnote 47 To do justice to this subject, if such were possible, would require a substantial volume by itself. Another instance involves one of the cinema’s great poetic masterpieces, Jean Vigo’s L’Atalante (1934). It tells the story of a newlywed couple’s voyage on the husband’s boat, whose name gives the film its title. In Greek myth there were two stories involving an Atalanta, although ancient authors did not distinguish between them very carefully. This is mainly because both are beautiful virgins, great hunters, and associated with Arcadia. In one myth Atalanta is among the heroes who participate in the Calydonian boar hunt (Met. 8.317–436). In the other she is a fast runner. Suitors intent on winning her hand have to defeat her in a footrace but will forfeit their lives if they lose. The hero Hippomenes manages to win her with a ruse devised by Venus on his behalf (Met. 10.560–707). Did director Vigo take a clue from Ovid, or perhaps from classical myth in general, for his film? Is Juliette, the young bride, an Atalanta figure? If she is, is this a significant aspect of the film? Or is the title unrelated to classical myth or Ovid? A few scholars have attempted to connect L’Atalante with antiquity. Marina Warner, well-known expert on myth, feminism, and film and theater, gives a perfunctory summary of the myth of Atalanta in a version different from Ovid’s, whom she does not mention.Footnote 48 More recently, a scholar of French literature and cinema makes no more than a tenuous case for a connection between L’Atalante and Ovid.Footnote 49 So it may make better sense to look for an explanation elsewhere. Jean Guinée (pen name of Roger de Guichen), the author of the original story on which Vigo’s film was based but which was altered considerably in the screenplay, named the titular boat after a frigate commanded by Guichen’s ancestor in the Seven Years’ War.Footnote 50 The reason for this name seems to have been the mythical Atalanta’s most famous quality, also prized by any navy: speed. As satisfying as it would be to establish either Ovid’s influence on Vigo or at least an unconscious Ovidianism, it may be pointless to search for one.Footnote 51

How tantalizing the impulse may be to discover Ovidianism becomes evident from a momentary verbal echo of Ovid in Preston Sturges’s Sullivan’s Travels (1941), a classic screwball comedy. Its hero is staying with a widow and her spinster sister; both women are elderly and unattractive. The widow, however, begins to set her sights on the handsome male. The tense situation between the sisters leads to the following exchange, here quoted in part:

Widow: Did you notice his torso?

Spinster: I noticed that you noticed it.

Widow: Don’t be vindictive, dear …. Even as a little girl you were more of the acid type, dear …. And furthermore, I have never done anything that I was ashamed of, Ursula.

Spinster: Neither have I.

Widow: Yes, dear, but nobody ever asked you to.

The widow’s withering retort is a clear echo of one of Ovid’s most famous pronouncements on women: “Chaste is she whom no one has asked.”Footnote 52 Writer-director Sturges was one of the wittiest and best-educated filmmakers in Hollywood, so it is sensible to assume that he had read Ovid. But whether he actually had Ovid in mind seems to be equally beyond proof and disproof.Footnote 53 Here and elsewhere throughout film history, all we can do is note and wonder.

A distant echo of both the Pygmalion myth and Daedalus’ invention of moving statues (cf. Chapter 7) may be seen in Das wandernde Bild (1920), an original story by Fritz Lang, the film’s director, and Thea von Harbou, his future wife and frequent screenwriting collaborator. Both were sufficiently well versed in classical literature to incorporate analogies, even if there is no explicit mention or other indication of such intent. This highly melodramatic film survives in an export version shortened by about a third of its original length; plot development suffers accordingly. The Wandering Image, its English title, may be misleading because Bild here refers to a statue, not a painting. A scholar-philosopher believes bourgeois marriage to be all wrong and publishes a bestselling book on free love, if not on the art of free love. A young woman falls under his spell, agrees to forego marriage, and bears him a child. He renounces society, fakes his own death, and lives as a hermit in the Alps. A statue of the Madonna and Child near a cliff face prompts him to vow to return only if the statue were to move. (The film’s working title was Madonna im Schnee: “Madonna in the Snow.”) His lover turns into an angel of mercy to the poor and saves a dying mother’s newborn child. At the climax an avalanche has displaced the Madonna, and the husband sees a woman with a baby moving down the mountain nearby. It is, of course, his lover. He renounces his renunciation and is reunited with her. The sight of the statue apparently come to life is the most arresting shot in the entire film. Lang had filmed the actual statue in such a way that it looks dark against its snowy surroundings; the lover and the baby she is holding are dressed in black. The Madonna really seems to be moving. The traditional iconography of the Virgin Mary shows her, as here, with a headscarf; the woman wears one, too. The resemblance is uncanny, surprising, and wholly convincing even if viewers know who is moving through the snow. Lang had prepared them for the moment in an earlier shot of the mother, wearing a headscarf, with her own child at home (but not dressed in black). Religious overtones, true love conquering all, and a statue seemingly alive – all reminders of ancient archetypes.

A downright haunting example is Europa (1930–1931), a film made in Poland by Franciska and Stefan Themerson and lost or destroyed in World War II. It was based on a 1925 poem of the same name by Futurist Anatol Stern. Stern’s poem, and presumably the film, did not refer to or mention Ovid or the myth of Europa’s abduction and rape by Jupiter (Met. 2.833–875), but the film showed a “photo-collage of a bull’s head superimposed upon a huge molar tooth” and “a languorous Europa surrounded by a cubist pastiche of images.” What Stern said about his poem seems to have applied to the film as well: each was intended as “a dry chronicle devoted to the tragedy, the misery, the wisdom and the wickedness of Europe.” The film expressed “through montages and stream of associations … the mood of anxiety and dissolution” in Eastern Europe.Footnote 54

Except for occasional brief mentions I omit independent and other kinds of video productions, even if they may have their own quirky appeal. Examples of the latter are two videos by former Classics student Jim Piechocki. In Minotaur (1984) Piechocki combined Ovid and, reportedly, Carlos Fuentes. Piechocki’s Pygmalion is a “gender-bending twist” on Ovid “starring a Calvin Klein underwear model.”Footnote 55 When appropriate or sensible, I mention film or television appearances of characters who appear in Ovid’s Metamorphoses; when such mention would not be especially fruitful, I omit it. Examples of the latter are the science-fiction Niobe in The Matrix Reloaded and The Matrix Revolutions (both 2003), the non-mythical Niobe in the TV series Rome (first season, 2005), and the free retelling of Cretan and Athenian material in the Canadian-British television series Olympus (2015), which is replete with characters from Ovid: Minos, Ariadne, Daedalus, among others. Some of the instances just mentioned show that not all possible Ovidian montages are attractive.

Footnotes

1 Tyler Reference Tyler1947. The following is partly based on Winkler Reference Winkler2015a.

2 I have previously termed these and similar relations between ancient literature and the screen “affinities of imagination” (Winkler Reference Winkler2017, especially 1–4).

3 Quoted from Stam Reference Stam2005: 4 (in section titled “Beyond ‘Fidelity’”). Cf. further MacCabe, Murray, and Warner Reference MacCabe, Murray and Warner2011.

4 The terms are taken from “Index of the Transformation Categories” in Abbamonte and Kallendorf Reference Abbamonte and Kallendorf2018: 161. Baker Reference Baker, Abbamonte and Kallendorf2018 gives brief explanations of these terms, summarizing extensive earlier works on “Transformation Theory” listed at 11–12 note 1. His definition of “montage” (20) shows an unacknowledged debt to Eisenstein. On the same page he adds that the list “could be expanded, or perhaps even shortened.” (A case of Anything goes?)

5 Quoted from Andrew Reference Andrew1984: 98 (section title in chapter “Adaptation”).

6 Scholarship on the metamorphoses of texts to texts, languages to languages, is immense. Hardwick Reference Hardwick, Parker and Mathews2011: 39–44 is a useful introduction, with detailed references. She adduces Michael Longley’s sonnet “Spiderwoman” (1994), whose first line is applicable to our context: “Arachne starts with Ovid and finishes with me” (quoted from Hardwick, 52). So is her main title: “Fuzzy Connections.” Whether fuzzy or not, all background connections deserve a measure of consideration, either critical or appreciative, here and elsewhere. André Bazin’s concept of an “impure cinema” (the adjective is not derogatory) is comparable where literature-to-film metamorphoses are concerned; see on this Bazin Reference Bazin and Bazin2009a, which is preferable to Bazin Reference Bazin and Bazin2005a, a better known but abbreviated version (with mixed for impure). His essay first appeared in 1952. Nagib and Jerslev Reference Nagib and Jerslev2014 apply Bazin’s term to film and new media. His image of the river (Bazin 2009a: 136) can serve as an apt parallel to Manilius’ words about Homer (Astronomica 2.8–11), on which Winkler Reference Winkler2017: 4 and 32.

7 I am referring here to the titles of Martindale and Thomas Reference Martindale and Thomas2006, Hinds Reference Hinds1998. For additional details and numerous references in connection with just one particular approach see Nicholson Reference Nicholson2013 (in a journal issue on intertextuality, with bibliography at 133–148). Specifically on Ovid: Barchiesi Reference Barchiesi, Fox and Marchesi2001, Casali Reference Casali and Knox2009, both with additional references. On Roman literature: e.g. von Albrecht Reference Albrecht1999; Edmunds Reference Edmunds2001, especially 133–163 (chapter titled “Intertextuality: Terms and Theory,” with wider implications). Closer to the present context are Meinhof and Smith Reference Meinhof, Smith, Meinhof and Smith2000b; G. Allen Reference Allen2011, especially 169–175 (chapter section titled “Intertextuality in the Non-literary Arts,” including film).

8 Hinds Reference Hinds2011: 9. S. A. Brown Reference Brown1999: 1–22 (chapter titled “Ovid and Ovidianism: Influence, Reception, Transformation”) and passim provides a useful orientation.

9 Barchiesi Reference Barchiesi, Fox and Marchesi2001: 8 and 7 (in “Preface”).

10 Hinds Reference Hinds2011: 9. Compare, if from the opposite chronological perspective and on a larger scale, B. W. Boyd Reference Boyd2017. The Homeric epics in their turn allude to earlier compositions; on this see Currie Reference Currie2016. Similar arguments could be made, and many have been made, about other Greek and Roman authors.

11 On this useful term, coined by Italian writer-director Vittorio Cottafavi, see Mourlet and Agde Reference Mourlet and Agde1961: 24. See further Leprohon Reference Leprohon, Greaves and Stallybrass1972: 174–179, Elley Reference Elley1984: 13–24 (chapter titled “Epic into Film”).

12 Ancient pictorial narration has received increasing attention in recent years. One example is Giuliani Reference Giuliani and O’Donnell2013. The scholarly literature on text and image is immense; useful starting points are Praz Reference Praz1970, Squire Reference Squire2009.

14 Primarily in Winkler Reference Winkler2009a and Reference Winkler2017.

15 Genette Reference Genette, Newman and Doubinsky1997. He mentions the cinema on only a few pages (156–157, 279, 286, 295, 297, 395).

16 This and the preceding quotations are from Gombrich Reference Gombrich and Gombrich1982a: 87–88 and 100.

17 Gance Reference Gance1930: 65. Gance’s words here quoted are the first paragraph of a section of his book that is titled “Divagations sur un nouveau langage” (“Random Remarks on a New Language”).

19 See especially Eisenstein 1988h (originally 1923) and 1988i (originally 1924). Further essays and fragments on the subject are collected in Eisenstein 1991c. A non-technical introduction to Eisensteinian montage is in Seton (n. d. [Reference Seton1952]): 80–85. Additional references to Eisenstein’s theoretical writings appear below in Chapter 2.

20 Gunning Reference Gunning1986, an influential article, builds on Eisenstein. Cf. further Gunning Reference Gunning1993.

21 This was already the case in early cinema, as Gunning has been aware. Musser Reference Musser1994 presents a complementary argument. See further Christie Reference Christie2015 and, in much greater detail, Gaudreault Reference Gaudreault and Barnard2011. This book provides a detailed bibliography on early cinema as well.

22 The three quotations are from Kallendorf Reference Kallendorf and Kallendorf2007b: 2. See further Martindale Reference Martindale and Kallendorf2007, with a section titled “Reception or Tradition?” and with one on Ovid and Velázquez. On classical reception in general see Hardwick and Stray Reference Hardwick and Stray2008.

23 M. Heath Reference Heath2002: 129 and 129–130.

24 Paul Reference Paul2010: 341 (part of review of Winkler Reference Winkler2009a; punctuation slightly adjusted). A more detailed survey of this and related aspects is Paul Reference Paul, Hardwick and Stray2008, with additional references. On the subject of subjective selection of works for the analysis of an author’s reception or Nachleben cf. S. A. Brown Reference Brown1999: 4: “all my readings, both of Ovid himself and of his imitators[,] are determined by my own tastes and interests, themselves the products of various contingent circumstances.” So are mine, except that they include considerably more than Ovid and his conscious or intentional imitators.

26 Winkler Reference Winkler2009a: 57–69.

27 Fondermann Reference Fondermann2008, James Reference James2013. Cf. on both below.

28 On the variations and intricacies of Ovidian metamorphoses see especially Vial Reference Vial2010.

29 Scholarship on Ovid’s Metamorphoses is, unsurprisingly, vast. Throughout this book I adduce only works that are directly relevant to the context at hand; it would be pointless for me to attempt to be exhaustive (even if such were possible). The fundamental philological work on the epic is Bömer Reference Bömer1969–1986 and 2006. Forbes Irving Reference Forbes Irving1990 is a solid introduction and provides a descriptive catalogue, with source references and bibliography.

30 Morin Reference Morin and Mortimer2005: 203; italics in original.

31 The quotation is a chapter title in Apkon Reference Apkon2013: 75–101.

32 Aristotle, On the Soul 3.7.3 (431a16–17). Cf. below, Chapter 3.

33 Quoted from Truffaut Reference Truffaut and Scott1985: 316.

35 Fondermann Reference Fondermann2008. Fondermann Reference Fondermann2008: 11–30 analyzes a reader’s intellectual process of visualizing the text being read; he lists (121) Ovid’s terminology of seeing and its unusual frequency in contrast to other Roman epic poets.

36 James Reference James2013. She includes, for example, considerations of various robots, cyborgs, “gynoids,” automata, and other such creatures. James, 115–118, has summary remarks on this topic.

37 James Reference James2013: 219–221. She observes that a myth like Pygmalion’s “is a never-ending story” (207). James 2018 shows this to be so. The myth is adduced repeatedly in Jacobs, Felleman, Adriaensens, and Colpaert 2017. This book’s descriptive “gallery” (= Adriaensens and Colpaert Reference Adriaensens, Colpaert, Jacobs, Felleman, Adriaensens and Colpaert2017) is useful but necessarily incomplete; it includes some of the films dealt with in my chapters.

38 Quoted from Coissac Reference Coissac1932: 14–15. Monsieur Jourdain is the title character of Molière’s Le bourgeois gentilhomme.

39 Viarre Reference Viarre1964: 99–100. These two pages contain her first section on Ovid and cinema.

40 Viarre Reference Viarre1964: 100–108 (Le “film” de Livre VII) and 108–113 (Découpage et montage: “Screenplay and Editing”).

41 Viarre Reference Viarre1964: 113.

42 The quotations are from Kenney Reference Kenney1967: 53. The title of his review is taken from Met. 1.9.

43 I also exclude Bertrand Bonello’s Tiresia (2003), Yanira Yariv’s Amori e metamorfosi (2014), and Carlo Lavagna’s Arianna (2015), feature films on different kinds of “intersexuality.” Yariv’s film deserves further attention from Ovid scholars since it is directly inspired by him and since he appears on screen, played by Italian actor Andrea Vergoni. On this film see Zucco Reference Zucco2015, including an interview with the director, and Fusillo Reference Fusillo, Fedeli and Rosati2018:498–500. Nor do I offer anything on the cinema of Tim Burton. On this subject see now Menegaldo 2018 and, in this, O’Neill Reference O’Neill and Menegaldo2018. Not all of the latter’s analogies may convince, but who could resist her disarming opening: “There can be no doubt: as creator of a darkly brilliant universe, Burton descends from the author of the Metamorphoses” (O’Neill, 119).

44 Examples of their rare engagements with Ovidian themes in film are J. F. Siegel Reference Siegel and Winkler2001 on the Tereus and Philomela story (Met. 6.424–674); Distelrath Reference Distelrath2002 (in connection with Baz Luhrmann’s Romeo + Juliet of 1996), a didactic perspective; Martín Rodríguez Reference Martín Rodríguez and Henríquez2011; Martín Puente and Conde Salazar Reference Martín Puente, Salazar and Berdonés2014: 642–645. Passing mention of Ovid’s Arcas, Callisto, and Atalanta appears in Manwell Reference Manwell, Rogers and Stevens2017. A few other instances, especially involving Orpheus and Eurydice and Pygmalion, will be cited in appropriate contexts elsewhere. Revard Reference Revard2008 describes a student project less about Virgil (Aeneid 1.81–91) than Ovid’s Metamorphoses (Pyramus and Thisbe, Arachne and Minerva, Pygmalion and Galatea). Dragosei Reference Dragosei, Abruzzese and Ragone2007 offers brief but apposite observations from a comparative perspective.

45 Such books include B. W. Boyd Reference Boyd2002, Hardie Reference Hardie2002a, P. E. Knox Reference Knox2009, Volk Reference Volk2010. Walde Reference Walde, Janka, Schmitzer and Seng2007 makes a few passing references to film. The neglect of cinema is especially glaring in Hinds Reference Hinds2005, a long article which deals with Ovid in great detail (63–79) and twice mentions the cinema (but not in connection with him), and in Boyd and Fox Reference Boyd and Fox2010. Martindale Reference Martindale1988, S. A. Brown Reference Brown1999 and Reference Brown2005, and Ziolkowski Reference Ziolkowski2005 are aware of a few Ovidian moments in the cinema. So are film and media scholars, if only haphazardly. The title of Brunetta Reference Brunetta2011 promises more than the book’s contents deliver; the term classical is used loosely, and Ovid makes only two brief appearances by name. Lawrence Reference Lawrence1991: 1–3 takes Ovid for her starting point. Cubitt Reference Cubitt1998: 92–121 (chapter entitled “Pygmalion: Silence, Sound and Space”) briefly mentions Ovid’s Pygmalion (99–100) in the context of sound recording, especially that done by Henry Higgins in Shaw’s Pygmalion and its 1941 film version. Kinder Reference Kinder and Sobchack2000 refers to classical authors (Ovid, Homer, Sophocles) several times, but not in detail. S. A. Brown Reference Brown, Grafton, Most and Settis2010: 672 col. 1, repeated from S. A. Brown Reference Brown2006: 620, mentions the cinema in passing. Adriaensens Reference Adriaensens, Colpaert, Jacobs, Jacobs, Felleman, Adriaensens and Colpaert2017 and Reference Adriaensens, Dahlquist, Galili, Olsson and Robert2018, despite the prominent references to Ovid in their titles, deliver less Ovidian material than readers will expect.

46 Stoichita Reference Stoichita and Anderson2008: 7–20 and 210–213 (= Chapter 1, titled “Modifications,” i.e. of the Pygmalion myth), is a case in point. He asserts, without support, that Eurydice was lost to Orpheus because she had been “petrified by his careless gaze” (9). Neither was she petrified nor was his gaze at all careless – on the contrary. Virgil, Georgics 4.488–491, and Ovid, Met. 10.56–61, are clear about Orpheus’ overwhelming love for her; Ovid emphasizes his concern (56). Stoichita’s quotations from Latin repeatedly show that he is unfamiliar with the language, as in these examples: “the ‘marvelous craft’ [feliciter arte] of the artist” (10), “Pygmalion’s feliciter ars” (13), “simulatus corpus” (16). The first sentence in this chapter is about Pelops, who had received an ivory shoulder: “the reconstituted hero went on to live a long and, so we are told, happy life.” An endnote (210 note 1) lists as sources Pindar, Olympian Odes 1.26 (he means 1.24); Virgil, Georgics 3.7; and Ovid, Met. 6.410–411 (better: 6.403–411). None of these passages deals with Pelops’ longevity or happiness. Pindar says nothing about Pelops besides naming him, Virgil mentions his shoulder, and Ovid briefly recounts the part of Pelops’ myth that deals with it. Pelops’ long life is mentioned in the Chronicles of Eusebius, a late source (Chron. ad A. M. 3890). Clinton Reference Clinton1834: 80 note 8 lists Eusebius’ chronology, with brief quotations.

47 For a short Ovidian analysis of just one film version (1999) see Polleichtner Reference Polleichtner2007. Fowler 2000a, on Pyramus, Thisbe, King Kong, only briefly mentions the cinema’s King Kong and does so chiefly via The Second Mrs Kong (1995), an opera by Harrison Birtwhistle (music) and Russell Hoban (libretto).

48 Warner Reference Warner1993: 21, naming Melanion (after Apollodorus, Library of Mythology 3.9.2) instead of Ovid’s Hippomenes as Atalanta’s suitor. (Ovid names a Milanion at Ars amatoria 2.185–188.) Warner’s book, very short (and not free of errors), is reprinted in White and Buscombe Reference White and Buscombe2003: 272–296. The detailed chapters on L’Atalante in Salles Gomes Reference Salles Gomes1971: 148–194 (original French edition: 1957) and Temple Reference Temple2005: 91–134 make no mention of myth or Ovid.

49 Kline Reference Kline2010: 13–34 and 195–198 (chapter titled “Cinema and/as Poetry: L’Atalante’s Apples as Poems”). The golden apples referred to in his chapter title are the means by which Hippomenes diverts Atalanta from her course during their footrace and so manages to defeat her. Kline, 33, links the myth to the French tale “Beauty and the Beast” (and in passing adduces Jean Cocteau’s film Beauty and the Beast of 1946) and both to Vigo’s film. Kline, 33, connects L’Atalante to Ovid by a process of tortured (il-)logic and wordplays on French pomme (“apple”) and poème (“poem”). The glib vagueness of his chapter title betrays in advance the shallowness of its content. According to Kline, 30, the traveling salesman who attempts to seduce the wife in L’Atalante echoes Ovid’s Orpheus because he sings “hypnotic (almost Orphic) songs, and, like his bestial double, dances around wildly.” Readers of Ovid will note the silliness of this. Kline’s other mention of Ovid’s Metamorphoses (156, on Pygmalion) is equally unconvincing but fortunately briefer. Friends of Ovid may hope that the title of his book (Unraveling …) is not intended as an allusion to Ovid’s Ariadne. Earlier, Kline had adduced Atalanta, Pygmalion, and Orpheus (Kline Reference Kline2006: 367–369) and even placed Vigo in the “Pantheon of Ovidian filmmakers” (369).

50 So reported by Fuller Reference Fuller2012: 40.

51 But contrast the brief mention of Ovid by Coelho Reference Coelho2017: 41. Another Atalante in French cinema is Jean Grémillon’s silent La croisière de l’Atalante (“The Cruise of the Atalante,” 1926). Today the name is still associated with travel and boats.

52 Ovid, Amores 1.8.43: casta est quam nemo rogavit.

53 Neither Sturges Reference Sturges1990 nor Jacobs Reference Jacobs1992 lists Ovid in her index.

54 Information and quotations from Ziolkowski Reference Ziolkowski2008: 54. On the poem see now Marczyk Reference Marczyk, Bru, Baetens, Hjartarson, Nicholls, Ørum and van den Berg2009: 192–194 (section titled “A Dionysian Feast”). The poem is available in English, accompanied by some surviving still images from the film, in Themerson and Horovitz Reference Themerson and Horovitz1962. This is the source of the quotation by Stern, here taken from Ziolkowski.

55 Neither work is generally accessible. Quotations and other information are from Krieger Reference Krieger2001.

Figure 0

I. Black Orpheus. The film’s title card, with Orpheus and Eurydice on a Roman copy of a Greek relief sculpture.

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  • Cinemetamorphosis
  • Martin M. Winkler, George Mason University, Virginia
  • Book: Ovid on Screen
  • Online publication: 27 January 2020
  • Chapter DOI: https://doi.org/10.1017/9781108756891.001
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  • Cinemetamorphosis
  • Martin M. Winkler, George Mason University, Virginia
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  • Chapter DOI: https://doi.org/10.1017/9781108756891.001
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  • Cinemetamorphosis
  • Martin M. Winkler, George Mason University, Virginia
  • Book: Ovid on Screen
  • Online publication: 27 January 2020
  • Chapter DOI: https://doi.org/10.1017/9781108756891.001
Available formats
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