Sonic Sociabilities and Stranger Relations in Arnaud des Pallières’ Adieu (2004)

This article addresses the way noise has been deployed within the sonic practice of French filmmaker Arnaud des Pallières in his film Adieu (2004). According to des Pallières, the politics of his filmmaking resides in the way his films reflect on experiences of which he has no lived experience. With...

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Main Author: Emilija Talijan
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: University College Cork 2019-12-01
Series:Alphaville: Journal of Film and Screen Media
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.alphavillejournal.com/Issue18/HTML/ArticleTalijan.html
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spelling doaj-40005f9614b14bbc89f7b973f07f600d2021-04-01T09:54:19ZengUniversity College CorkAlphaville: Journal of Film and Screen Media2009-40782019-12-0118243710.33178/alpha.18.03Sonic Sociabilities and Stranger Relations in Arnaud des Pallières’ Adieu (2004) Emilija TalijanThis article addresses the way noise has been deployed within the sonic practice of French filmmaker Arnaud des Pallières in his film Adieu (2004). According to des Pallières, the politics of his filmmaking resides in the way his films reflect on experiences of which he has no lived experience. With Adieu, des Pallières considers the experience of migration purposefully obliquely. The article examines how this indirect approach is achieved through noise that is harnessed to a political agenda, one that implicates spectators through the film’s own indirect address to listening in spectatorship. Through asynchronicity, the film tunes us to noises that continually arrive from an elsewhere, annoying our sense of place and integrating us within a world of strangers. Through a close reading of this film’s use of migratory noise, feedback and soundscaping, I show how des Pallières’ rigorous and singular approach to noise in Adieu is uniquely placed to open up questions about how we relate to sound and cinema’s address to listening in spectatorship. This consideration offers wider possibilities for understanding how cinema instigates more distant and radical forms of encounter through noise.http://www.alphavillejournal.com/Issue18/HTML/ArticleTalijan.htmlsoundlisteningmigrationfrench cinemaalgeria
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Emilija Talijan
spellingShingle Emilija Talijan
Sonic Sociabilities and Stranger Relations in Arnaud des Pallières’ Adieu (2004)
Alphaville: Journal of Film and Screen Media
sound
listening
migration
french cinema
algeria
author_facet Emilija Talijan
author_sort Emilija Talijan
title Sonic Sociabilities and Stranger Relations in Arnaud des Pallières’ Adieu (2004)
title_short Sonic Sociabilities and Stranger Relations in Arnaud des Pallières’ Adieu (2004)
title_full Sonic Sociabilities and Stranger Relations in Arnaud des Pallières’ Adieu (2004)
title_fullStr Sonic Sociabilities and Stranger Relations in Arnaud des Pallières’ Adieu (2004)
title_full_unstemmed Sonic Sociabilities and Stranger Relations in Arnaud des Pallières’ Adieu (2004)
title_sort sonic sociabilities and stranger relations in arnaud des pallières’ adieu (2004)
publisher University College Cork
series Alphaville: Journal of Film and Screen Media
issn 2009-4078
publishDate 2019-12-01
description This article addresses the way noise has been deployed within the sonic practice of French filmmaker Arnaud des Pallières in his film Adieu (2004). According to des Pallières, the politics of his filmmaking resides in the way his films reflect on experiences of which he has no lived experience. With Adieu, des Pallières considers the experience of migration purposefully obliquely. The article examines how this indirect approach is achieved through noise that is harnessed to a political agenda, one that implicates spectators through the film’s own indirect address to listening in spectatorship. Through asynchronicity, the film tunes us to noises that continually arrive from an elsewhere, annoying our sense of place and integrating us within a world of strangers. Through a close reading of this film’s use of migratory noise, feedback and soundscaping, I show how des Pallières’ rigorous and singular approach to noise in Adieu is uniquely placed to open up questions about how we relate to sound and cinema’s address to listening in spectatorship. This consideration offers wider possibilities for understanding how cinema instigates more distant and radical forms of encounter through noise.
topic sound
listening
migration
french cinema
algeria
url http://www.alphavillejournal.com/Issue18/HTML/ArticleTalijan.html
work_keys_str_mv AT emilijatalijan sonicsociabilitiesandstrangerrelationsinarnauddespallieresadieu2004
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