CCC 1967-2020 by auteur


CCC 1967-2020 par auteur UNSPOKEN CINEMA
Films made by 22 recurrent Contemporary Contemplative Cinema figureheads since 1967
[
Google sheet]

It's time to update the CCC timeline 2008, I hastly put together 12 years ago, at the origin of this blog.
I had omitted back then Peter Hutton, Franco Piavoli, Tacita Dean, Elia Suleiman, Nikolaus Geyrhalter, Sergei Loznitsa & Kazuhiro Soda, who I didn't know, as well as most of James Benning's output. But a few also don't make the cut this time around (Omirbaev, Kore-eda, Costa, Ceylan, JZK, GVS, Martin, Escalante, Serra) for various reasons (too few CCC films, too "speechy"/narrative in comparison to the other main figureheads, but it doesn't mean they are not contemplative, just they are not part of the chosen few CCC role models)... in order to paint a clear picture, more radical, of this new narrative cohort.

One thing did change : the year of debut of this narrative mode, now 1967 instead of 1970. In restrospect, we can see clearly now the years between 2002 and 2007 showed a solid production at its peak (the most dot density on the grid of this chart). Which marked the start of the first CCC blogathon in 2007. Followed by the weakest year in 2008 with only 7 films out of the 22 masters.

Starting in 1967 with the earliest CCC master : Frederick Wiseman's Titicut Follies. (USA) opening a continuous series of immersive documentaries without narrator. 

In 1970 it's The Bread and the Alley by Abbas Kiarostami (Iran) who was making wordless educational documentaries at the Kanun, but he would make his first feature length fiction film in 1974 (The Passenger). And from 1971, Chantal Akerman (Belgium) was making experimental short films in NYC, until she directed her CCC masterpiece Jeanne Dielman (1976). In the Seventies, it was only Wiseman, Kiarostami and Akerman, joined by Peter Hutton (USA) in 1979 with silent Black & White documentaries.

The Eighties brought forth Franco Piavoli (Italy) since 1982, joined by Aleksander Sokurov (Russia) in 1986 with a streak of documentaries and film essays (He singlehandedly produced 35 CCC films between 1987 and 2011 without counting the short films!). Here we note a thin spot between 1979 and 1985, when fewer CCC films were made by the early CCC auteurs. With zero films at all in 1985. What is the socio-economic explanation there? You tell me...

In the Nineties, 7 more auteurs emerge (or get to make CCC films from then on) : Sharunas Bartas (Lithuania), Tsai Ming liang (Taiwan), Béla Tarr (Hungary), Tacita Dean (UK), Elia Suleiman (Palestine), James Benning (USA), & Nikolaus Geyrhalter (Austria).

By the beginning of the 21st century, between the years 2000 and 2003, the next 8 figureheads appeared : Apichatpong Weerasethakul (Thailand), Roy Andersson (Sweden), Lav Diaz (The Philippines), Lisandro Alonso (Argentina), Wang Bing (China), Sergei Loznitsa (Russia), Carlos Reygadas (Mexico) and Benedek Fliegauf (Hungary). Which added an unprecedented complement of 10 more auteurs within 4 years (between 1999 and 2003), and doubled the number of figureheads on this chart in this short period.
Finally in 2007 Kazuhiro Soda (Japan) switched gear and began doing "Observational Films". For the rest of the first decades of the new millenium, it was a flurry of young CCC directors who made less than 5 films so far, but might become longstanding figureheads in the future... 

Most people believe that CCC initiated in the 2000s when this narrative family became visible in numbers. But by looking at this chart, it's easy to overlook quality for quantity. By 2000 major CCC masterpieces defining this narrative mode had been produced and shown in festivals, even if some of them are quite obscure : 
  • 3/5 of Wiseman oeuvre, 
  • Jeanne Dielman (1976), 
  • The Blue Planet (1982), 
  • Where is the Friend's House (1987), 
  • Damnation (1988), 
  • Three Days (1991), 
  • D'Est (1993), 
  • Satantango (1994), 
  • Vive l'Amour (1994), 
  • Spiritual Voices (1995), 
  • Few of Us (1996), 
  • Chronicle of a Disappearance (1996), 
  • Voices Through Time (1996), 
  • Disappearance at Sea (1996),
  • The River (1997), 
  • A Humble Life (1997), 
  • Mother and Son (1997)...

Tragically, we also lost the great Chantal Akerman (1950-2015), Abbas Kiarostami (1940-2016) and Peter Hutton (1944-2016). Noted by an asterisk.
It was also the start of an indefinite hiatus for feature fiction films by Tarr (2011) who went into teaching and museum installations, Tsai (2013) who went for personnal documentaries, and Weerasethakul (2015) who delved fully into art installations.


This graph shows the population of films by auteurs in one glance, it also tells us the hiatus between each new production. There are prolific auteurs who make one or more films each year (like Wiseman, Sokurov, Benning, Diaz). And there are other auteurs who struggle to find fundings for their projects (like Piavoli, Tarr, Suleiman, Geyrhalter, Andersson, Alonso, Reygadas).


It is interesting to note that 12 out of these 22 figureheads are documentarians (either exclusively or in parallel to a fiction oeuvre). Thus defining the CCC family with a strong anchoring in the documentary image : experimental, wordless, elegiac, essayistic, observational... Its fiction counterpart is never far from a documentary process either because the frontier between documentary and fiction is blurred more than ever within the bounderies of this family.



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Comments

BenoitRouilly said…
Adding Sharon LOCKHART to the 22 examplary CCC masters