Inf(l)ection of the medium: Sándor Kardos’s films in between eye and hand

"Slitfilm (Résfilm, 2005) and The Gravedigger (A sírásó, 2010) are two Hungarian experimental films made using a slit camera. The director/photographer Sándor Kardos’s adaptations of Ryūnosuke Akutagawa’s short story “The Handkerchief” and of Rainer Maria Rilke’s “The Gravedigger” expose a part...

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Main Author: Mónika Dánél
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: University College Cork 2015-10-01
Series:Alphaville: Journal of Film and Screen Media
Subjects:
eye
Online Access:http://www.alphavillejournal.com/Issue9/HTML/ArticleDanel.html
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spelling doaj-0fc33a9ddf594f8ea34df7c50e90a6172021-08-19T10:05:27ZengUniversity College CorkAlphaville: Journal of Film and Screen Media2009-40782015-10-0193857https://doi.org/10.33178/alpha.9.03Inf(l)ection of the medium: Sándor Kardos’s films in between eye and handMónika Dánél0https://orcid.org/0000-0003-0760-7959Eötvös Loránd University"Slitfilm (Résfilm, 2005) and The Gravedigger (A sírásó, 2010) are two Hungarian experimental films made using a slit camera. The director/photographer Sándor Kardos’s adaptations of Ryūnosuke Akutagawa’s short story “The Handkerchief” and of Rainer Maria Rilke’s “The Gravedigger” expose a particular “physiognomy” of the filmic medium through the use of this technique. Likewise, the face as the privileged medial surface for emotion becomes an uncanny, stretched painting with grotesque associations, similar to Francis Bacon’s paintings. The sharp, clear narrator’s voice, layering the literary texts “onto” the moving image further emphasises the colour-stained plasticity of the visible. Both films attempt to articulate a liminal experience: the cultural differences between the East and the West that are inherent in expressing and concealing emotions (Slitfilm) or the questions relating to life and death, the speakable/conceivable and the unspeakable/inconceivable (The Gravedigger) that are embedded in the communicative modalities of social interaction. Through the elastic flow of images, the face and the hand become two uncovered, visible, corporeal surfaces engaged in a rhythmic, chromatic relationship (due to the similar skin tones of face and hand), and thus gradually uncover the medium of the film as a palpable skin surface or violated, wounded flesh. The article approaches the fluid, sensuous imagery that displaces the human towards the inhuman uncanny of the unrecognisable flesh through Deleuzian concepts of fold and inflection.http://www.alphavillejournal.com/Issue9/HTML/ArticleDanel.htmlhungarian experimental filmslit cameraskineyehandslitfilmthe gravedigger
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Mónika Dánél
spellingShingle Mónika Dánél
Inf(l)ection of the medium: Sándor Kardos’s films in between eye and hand
Alphaville: Journal of Film and Screen Media
hungarian experimental film
slit camera
skin
eye
hand
slitfilm
the gravedigger
author_facet Mónika Dánél
author_sort Mónika Dánél
title Inf(l)ection of the medium: Sándor Kardos’s films in between eye and hand
title_short Inf(l)ection of the medium: Sándor Kardos’s films in between eye and hand
title_full Inf(l)ection of the medium: Sándor Kardos’s films in between eye and hand
title_fullStr Inf(l)ection of the medium: Sándor Kardos’s films in between eye and hand
title_full_unstemmed Inf(l)ection of the medium: Sándor Kardos’s films in between eye and hand
title_sort inf(l)ection of the medium: sándor kardos’s films in between eye and hand
publisher University College Cork
series Alphaville: Journal of Film and Screen Media
issn 2009-4078
publishDate 2015-10-01
description "Slitfilm (Résfilm, 2005) and The Gravedigger (A sírásó, 2010) are two Hungarian experimental films made using a slit camera. The director/photographer Sándor Kardos’s adaptations of Ryūnosuke Akutagawa’s short story “The Handkerchief” and of Rainer Maria Rilke’s “The Gravedigger” expose a particular “physiognomy” of the filmic medium through the use of this technique. Likewise, the face as the privileged medial surface for emotion becomes an uncanny, stretched painting with grotesque associations, similar to Francis Bacon’s paintings. The sharp, clear narrator’s voice, layering the literary texts “onto” the moving image further emphasises the colour-stained plasticity of the visible. Both films attempt to articulate a liminal experience: the cultural differences between the East and the West that are inherent in expressing and concealing emotions (Slitfilm) or the questions relating to life and death, the speakable/conceivable and the unspeakable/inconceivable (The Gravedigger) that are embedded in the communicative modalities of social interaction. Through the elastic flow of images, the face and the hand become two uncovered, visible, corporeal surfaces engaged in a rhythmic, chromatic relationship (due to the similar skin tones of face and hand), and thus gradually uncover the medium of the film as a palpable skin surface or violated, wounded flesh. The article approaches the fluid, sensuous imagery that displaces the human towards the inhuman uncanny of the unrecognisable flesh through Deleuzian concepts of fold and inflection.
topic hungarian experimental film
slit camera
skin
eye
hand
slitfilm
the gravedigger
url http://www.alphavillejournal.com/Issue9/HTML/ArticleDanel.html
work_keys_str_mv AT monikadanel inflectionofthemediumsandorkardossfilmsinbetweeneyeandhand
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