The Shadow and Its Shadow: Surrealist Writings on the Cinema

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Writing between 1918 and 1977, the essayists include such names as André Breton, Louis Aragon, Robert Desnos, Salvador Dalí, Luis Buñuel, and man Ray, as well as many of the less famous though equally fascinating figures of the movement. Paul Hammond's introduction limns the history of Surrealist cinemania, highlighting how these revolutionary poets, artists, and philosophers sifted the silt of commercial-often Hollywood-cinema for the odd fleck of gold, the windfall movie that, somehow slipping past the censor, questioned the dominant order. Such prospecting pivoted around the notion of lyrical behavior-as depicted on the screen and as lived in the movie house. The representation of such behavior led the Surrealists to valorize the manifest content of such denigrated genres as silent and sound comedy, romantic melodrama, film noir, horror movies. As to lived experience, moviegoing Surrealists looked to the spectacle's latent meaning, reading films as the unwitting providers of redemptive sequences that could be mentally clipped out of their narrative context and inserted into daily life-there, to provoke new adventures. "Hammond's book is a reminder of the wealth and range of surrealist writings on the cinema. . . . [T]he work represented here is still challenging and genuinely eccentric, locating itself in an 'ethic' of love, reverie and revolt." --Sight & Sound "Hammond, who is the author of the invaluable anthology The Shadow and its Shadow: Surrealist Writing on the Cinema (1978), writes about cinema independently of the changing academic and cultural fashions of film theory and abhors the dogmas of contemporary border-patrol thought. His magnetically appealing free-wheeling form of erudite film-critical writing is recognisable for its iconoclastic humour, non-authoritarian verve and playful witty discursivity." --John Conomos, Senses of Cinema Paul Hammond is a writer, editor, and translator living in Barcelona. He is the author of Constellations of Miró, Breton which was published by City Lights.

Author(s): Paul Hammond
Edition: Third ed., revised and expanded
Publisher: City Lights Book
Year: 2000

Language: English
Pages: 225
City: San Francisco
Tags: Surrealism, Film Studies, Cultural Studies

Contents
Available light
Some surrealist advice
War letter
On decor
Cinema U.S.A.
Battlegrounds and commonplaces
Against commercial cinema
Buster Keaton's College
Abstract of a critical history of the cinema
The marvelous is popular
As in a wood
Picture palaces
Plan for a cinema at the bottom of a lake
The lights go up
Surrealism and cinema
Introduction to black-and-white magic
Crossing the bridge
Sorcery and cinema
The screen's prestige
Remarks on cinematic oneirism
The cinema, instrument of poetry
Malombra, aura of absolute love
Data toward the irrational enlargement of a film:The Shanghai Gesture
The film and I
Cinemage
Another kind of cinema
Intention and surprise
The ideal summa
Turkey broth and unlabeled love potions
The fantastic - the marvelous
Concerning King Kong
Larry Semon's message
Hands off love
Chaplin, the copper's nark
Manifesto of the Surrealists concerning L'Age d'or
Zaroff; or, The prosperities of vice
Eroticism
Eroticism = love
Au repas des guerrieres
Female x film = fetish
Mae Murray
"Enchanted wanderer": excerpt from a journey album for Hedy Lamarr
Iron in the wound
Pornographers & Co.
Selected films made by Surrealists
A parting shot