FCJ-176 A Skeuomorphic Cinema: Film Form, Content and Criticism in the ‘Post-Analogue’ Era

Adopting an archaeological approach to digital cinema that helps us to recognise both the old in the new, and the new in the old, this article argues that a 'skewed' critical concept of the 'skeuomorph' can help us move beyond notions of remediation, convergence, and simulacra to...

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Main Authors: David H. Fleming, William Brown
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Open Humanities Press 2015-06-01
Series:Fibreculture Journal
Subjects:
Online Access:http://twentyfour.fibreculturejournal.org/2015/06/04/fcj-176/
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spelling doaj-b2dbd5950d7d43189f28bd05acdf54702020-11-24T23:11:39ZengOpen Humanities PressFibreculture Journal1449-14431449-14432015-06-0124FCJ-176 A Skeuomorphic Cinema: Film Form, Content and Criticism in the ‘Post-Analogue’ EraDavid H. Fleming0William Brown1University of Nottingham Ningbo, ChinaUniversity of Roehampton, LondonAdopting an archaeological approach to digital cinema that helps us to recognise both the old in the new, and the new in the old, this article argues that a 'skewed' critical concept of the 'skeuomorph' can help us move beyond notions of remediation, convergence, and simulacra to better understand the complex entanglement of the familiar and the novel that currently defines contemporary cinematic form, content, and criticism. Using different examples to make our case, we maintain that audiences and filmmakers alike have not yet fully adapted to best read or understand the newly emerging digital forms, and are thus consequentially 'not quite seeing them for what they are, and always unconsciously trying to understand them in terms of the old and familiar' (Gessler 1998). By drawing attention to several contemporary blind spots, our detoured notion of the skeuomorph aims to make the new and novel features of digital film palpable.http://twentyfour.fibreculturejournal.org/2015/06/04/fcj-176/SkeuomorphMedia archaeologyDigital cinemaDigital film theoryDigital film form
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author David H. Fleming
William Brown
spellingShingle David H. Fleming
William Brown
FCJ-176 A Skeuomorphic Cinema: Film Form, Content and Criticism in the ‘Post-Analogue’ Era
Fibreculture Journal
Skeuomorph
Media archaeology
Digital cinema
Digital film theory
Digital film form
author_facet David H. Fleming
William Brown
author_sort David H. Fleming
title FCJ-176 A Skeuomorphic Cinema: Film Form, Content and Criticism in the ‘Post-Analogue’ Era
title_short FCJ-176 A Skeuomorphic Cinema: Film Form, Content and Criticism in the ‘Post-Analogue’ Era
title_full FCJ-176 A Skeuomorphic Cinema: Film Form, Content and Criticism in the ‘Post-Analogue’ Era
title_fullStr FCJ-176 A Skeuomorphic Cinema: Film Form, Content and Criticism in the ‘Post-Analogue’ Era
title_full_unstemmed FCJ-176 A Skeuomorphic Cinema: Film Form, Content and Criticism in the ‘Post-Analogue’ Era
title_sort fcj-176 a skeuomorphic cinema: film form, content and criticism in the ‘post-analogue’ era
publisher Open Humanities Press
series Fibreculture Journal
issn 1449-1443
1449-1443
publishDate 2015-06-01
description Adopting an archaeological approach to digital cinema that helps us to recognise both the old in the new, and the new in the old, this article argues that a 'skewed' critical concept of the 'skeuomorph' can help us move beyond notions of remediation, convergence, and simulacra to better understand the complex entanglement of the familiar and the novel that currently defines contemporary cinematic form, content, and criticism. Using different examples to make our case, we maintain that audiences and filmmakers alike have not yet fully adapted to best read or understand the newly emerging digital forms, and are thus consequentially 'not quite seeing them for what they are, and always unconsciously trying to understand them in terms of the old and familiar' (Gessler 1998). By drawing attention to several contemporary blind spots, our detoured notion of the skeuomorph aims to make the new and novel features of digital film palpable.
topic Skeuomorph
Media archaeology
Digital cinema
Digital film theory
Digital film form
url http://twentyfour.fibreculturejournal.org/2015/06/04/fcj-176/
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