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Showing posts with label slowness. Show all posts
Showing posts with label slowness. Show all posts

Saturday, June 30, 2018

How boredom can lead to your most brilliant ideas | Manoush Zomorodi

How boredom can lead to your most brilliant ideas | Manoush Zomorodi (TED Talk; April 2017; Vancouver BC) 16'
Do you sometimes have your most creative ideas while folding laundry, washing dishes or doing nothing in particular? It's because when your body goes on autopilot, your brain gets busy forming new neural connections that connect ideas and solve problems. Learn to love being bored as Manoush Zomorodi explains the connection between spacing out and creativity.


Related :



Tuesday, June 26, 2018

Slow Cinema video essay & Kaili Blues

What Is Duration? Understanding Slow Cinema Through KAILI BLUES
A video bricolage-essay by Ryan Swen (YouTube 29 May 2018) 9'15"
A mix between a straightforward video essay and a more abstract collage, this video briefly delves into the loose movement known as slow cinema, using the 2015 Chinese film KAILI BLUES, directed by Bi Gan, as a focusing lens. Equal emphasis is given to analysis and creation of a mood befitting the subject matter.
Source :




'Kaili Blues' Q&A | Bi Gan | New Directors/New Films 2016 (YouTube 33')

Director Bi Gan discussed his film 'Kaili Blues' after its screening at New Directors/New Films 2016, co-presented by the Film Society of Lincoln Center and the Museum of Modern Art. A multiple prizewinner at the Locarno Film Festival and one of the most audacious and innovative debuts of recent years, Bi Gan’s endlessly surprising shape-shifter comes to assume the uncanny quality of a waking dream as it poetically and mysteriously interweaves the past, present, and future. Chen Sheng, a country doctor in the Guizhou province who has served time in prison, is concerned for the well-being of his nephew, Weiwei, whom he believes his thug brother Crazy Face intends to sell. Weiwei soon vanishes, and Chen sets out to find him, embarking on a mystical quest that takes him to the riverside city of Kaili and the town of Dang Mai. Through a remarkable arsenal of stylistic techniques, the film develops into a one-of-a-kind road movie, at once magical and materialist, traversing both space and time. A Grasshopper Film release.


Sunday, June 03, 2018

Rethinking Transcendental Style in Film | Paul Schrader




Paul Schrader : "Tarkovsky's films mark a deviding point in the history of Durational Cinema. Before Tarkovsky, the use of withholding and distancing devices which Deleuze calls "Time Image", took place in the context of commercial theatrical cinema. Transcendental Style falls into this category.
After Tarkovsky the use of these devices became increasingly exagerated, and their films fell into the domain of film festivals and art museums. The 3 sec Bresson's shot of a door became a 10 min static view of traffic. Transcendental Style had morphed into the hydra-headed monster we call "Slow Cinema". Without going into length, I'd just say that Slow Cinema refers to films of considerable length where very little happens. [...] This is why I say it's outside the perview of commercial cinema. Cinema in my opinion is inherantly narrative."

Paul Schrader : "To me when movies move away from their narrative nucleus, they vector in one of three directions. And all three are dead endpoints. One is the Surveillance Camera, another is the Art Gallery and the third is the Mandala."



N.B. Thanks to Nadin Mai for posting Schrader's chart on Twitter.

Check out my Durational Cinema Map (from Schrader's)

Related :


Tuesday, December 26, 2017

(Ap)prendre le temps ? Il faut savourer l'ennui (France Culture)

Il faut savourer l'ennui (Conférences France Culture; 26 dec 2017) 57'

Mardi des Bernardins du 14 juin 2016 au Collège des Bernardins (Vimeo)

« Notre territoire s’élargit, notre calendrier rétrécit ; l’horizon recule, la profondeur s’annule ; et les nouvelles générations circulent sur le Web plus facilement que dans la chronologie »
Régis Debray, Modernes catacombes, 2013
(Ap)prendre le temps ? - Les mardis des Bernardins from Collège des Bernardins on Vimeo.

Travail de mémoire, dictature de l’instant, présent omniprésent ou présentisme…

La terminologie du temps s’étend à l’infini. Question de vitesse ou de rythme, d’accélération du temps ou d’essor de l’urgence… à quoi fait-on référence ? Où sont passés les chaînons de la continuité ? Comment réintroduire du temps long notamment dans le temps médiatique ? Peut-on aménager le temps comme on aménage l’espace ? Alors que sous le nom de présent, le contemporain tend à devenir un impératif social et politique, le temps fléché instauré par la transcendance judéo-chrétienne perd la direction ultime qui lui donne sens : l’espérance…


Intervenants
  • Jean-François Clervoy, Astronaute à l’Agence Spatiale Européenne
  • Chantal Delsol, Philosophe
  • Gilles Vernet, réalisateur de "Tout s'accélère", 2016
Débat animé par David Abiker



Saturday, December 23, 2017

Desert Films (Gala Hernández)

From the Best Video Essay of 2017 list in Sight & Sound (dec 2017) :


Films desiertos: por una geopoética del desierto cinematográfico (6'04") Gala Hernández

Films desiertos: por una geopoética del desierto cinematográfico from Gala Hernández on Vimeo

Contemplative Films cited (in order):
  1. Gerry (Gus Van Sant, 2002)
  2. Freedom (Sharunas Bartas, 2000)
  3. El Cant dels Ocells (Albert Serra, 2008)
  4. La Région Centrale (Michael Snow, 1971)
  5. Proximity (Inger Lise Hansen, 2006)
  6. Cobra Mist (Emily Richardson, 2008)
  7. BNSF (James Benning, 2013)
  8. Fata Morgana (Werner Herzog, 1971)
  9. Desert (Stan Brakhage, 1976)
  10. Chott-el-Djerid: a portrait in light and heat (Bill Viola, 1979)

Sunday, December 17, 2017

Contemplative Spectatorship (Zen)

"Ensō" (=Circle in Japanese, Emptiness in Zen)

This thread is for all the Zen proverbs and aphorisms relating to the Contemplative Cinema, its making or its spectatorship. How to be a contemplative viewer?

I will post them in this place, in the comment section, as I find them. Feel free to post your own findings in the comments, or to comment your favourites.

Tuesday, December 12, 2017

Angel's Egg (1985/Oshii)


Pre-credit sequence (shot for shot; 5min48s) :
  1. Two hands in close up, one vanishes, the other one clench its fist.
  2. A translucent egg mounted on a wire pedestal, against dark clouds.
  3. Close up of the bird's eye that was inside the egg. The eyelashes twitch.
  4. Medium shot of the Man carrying a weapon on his shoulder, against a red sky with mechanical machinery behind him.
  5. Panning laterally over an empty sky with red clouds.
  6. Static shot of mechanical machinery pointing all toward the top right corner.
  7. Panning vertically over an empty sky with red clouds until an eyeball-looking spaceship slowly descends in the frame.
  8. Rows and rows of statuesque bodies standing on the surface of the ship.
  9. Close up a row of statues.
  10. Organ pipes steam machinery in a canted angle.
  11. Close up of the pipes blowing steam.
  12. Wide shot of the ship landing on the sea, with the Man turning his back to us watching it in the middle ground. Mechanical machinery in the foreground. As the landing disperses white vapor, the silhouette of the Man clashes with its cape blowing in the wind.
  13. Close medium shot of the Man facing us. "Who are you?"
  14. Rows of statues inside. 
  15. Rows of statues outside.
  16. Black screen. With a siren blowing.
  17. Close up of the Girl waking up.
  18. She gets out of bed dragging the sheet with her, revealing a big egg underneath.
  19. Overlooking shot of a stone bed surrounded by giant astronomical instruments.
  20. Low-angle shot of Her climbing stairs to exit.
  21. She appears through a round occulus. Wind in the hair.
  22. Landscape shot of a coastal city in the distance. Red clouds.
  23. Profile of the pensive Girl.
  24. Black screen. Credits.
24 shots in 348sec that's an ASL of 14,5 sec for the prologue alone. (see a list of ASL here) That's an editing style that lands between In The Mood For Love (2001) and Old Joy (2005)

This opening sequence is less perplexing than the film itself, and only introduces the two lone protagonists. First the enigmatic Man. Secondly, the little Girl and her egg. They are in separate locations, but it forebodes their eventual meet-up as the only spoken words are a flash-forward of the little Girl asking the Man who he is (which he will answer by the same question). Otherwise this introduction uses purely visual imagery and a musical score (or simply silence and diegetic sounds) to install the story.
A simple accumulation of wordless images to create an atmosphere of mystery and enchantment like a fairy tale. The environment seems a bit out of context, without any lively presence, without a population (except the fishermen and the tanks later on in the anime), without any sign of an outside world. And the final shot of the film (a homage to Tarkovsky's Solyaris; 1972 final shot), confirms it's a small world closed on itself.

The powerful symbols are all present from the beginning: The egg with the fetus-like chick embryo inside, symbol of fecundity. The Man with a big stick, a cross, symbol of virility and death. The eye-ball ship symbol of Noah's ark. The little innocent Girl, symbol of purity and faith. And the steam-punk environment, symbol of a decadent industrial world.
The first image might appear cryptic with the two hands becoming one which crushes onto itself. That could be interpreted as a summary of the film : two protagonists meeting with a distance between them. One vanishes and the other is crushed by force (the egg of the Girl).


Not much more is happening in the film, yet it is a fascinating journey through stylistic drawings, barely mobile, and a longing choir of laments. Mamoru Oshii enjoys animating this world, especially to move the attached white hair of the Man and the long white hair of the Girl. There are exquisite shots of strands of hair filling the screen, in an Art Nouveau style from the 1900s. Angel's Egg is Oshii's Ghost in the Shell's contemplative younger sibling.


How to review a contemplative film? How to write a contemplative text?

We could start by a run down of the opening sequence, but that's not a given. It's always a good start though, as the thorough description accompanies the entry into the review like the film does. With as much and as little information as is shown on the images themselves. The reader gets a sense of the universe encompassing this film and gets introduced to key elements (that might be metaphoric, meaning symbolic, or metonymic, a part for the whole). The elements are key to the prologue, but not necessarily key to the story. Because re-telling a "story" with plot-points and articulations is denaturing the natural flow of time between these elements. It doesn't make sense to summarize such a film, because it's a redactorial process that excerpts key-frames where something is happening and eludes all the dead-times where the pace of the film is pulsing its distinctive aura. Contemplative films don't fare well with pitch, abstract, summary, blurb unless it's contemplative writing that doesn't try to simplify its contemplative mode of narration. For instance, a haiku is a short poem that eschews explanation and describes elusively. That could be a potent blurb for a contemplative film. But generally the long form is more appropriate, in order to match the long sentences with the long takes, to take your time describing as the film takes its time recording images. Just to put the readers in the right atmospherical mood and not press them in a race to the finish line, zapping from one reveal to the next, telling the ending, devising some politics... A contemplative film is not a book. It's not reduced to its character study, its psychology, it's dialogue, its plot points, it's moral. And like a piece of cinema it must be reviewed in images and sounds, which corresponds to its mode of storytelling, paced and attentive.

What we ought not do when reviewing a contemplative film is precisely what I'm doing right now : explaining how to do it, or making its structure self-conscious.

We must not talk about the boredom to watch it, or any other negative aspects that detractors would oppose to the film, leave that for the unbelievers. A contemplative review must be positive and embracing the project of the filmmaker. "Ennui" is a metaphysical state described for Modern Cinema by the Existentialists. It's not a negative trope anymore, the 60ies conquered it, so CCC (Contemporary Contemplative Cinema : post 1994) shouldn't have to defend its legacy. I know Angel's Egg is from 1985, much earlier than the emergence of the contemporary iteration of Contemplative Cinema. It's more of a precursor that still uses a musical score. But it's also a fantasy world that doesn't match the more reality-grounded work of pure Contemplative filmmakers.


A list of recurrent details that punctuate the work (and not a list of most significant items, plot points, lines of dialogue...) is a legitimate descriptor of the contemplative mode. This is a way to present the accumulation of "pillow shots", that are pauses in the narration, also signifiers of an environment hardly developed otherwise.


Oshii likes to show water under its many forms : stagnant, ripples, drops or flow running down a fountain, the sea. As well as painting the reflections in the mobile water, undulating, waving, distorted, reflection of the light bouncing off of water onto the Girl. We see the water plants swaying underwater like in a Tarkovsky film. And all this is extra hard work for an animation, while a documentary or a live fiction only get to record water itself.

Water seems to be important for the Girl, even though her environment isn't particularly arid or deprived of access to water. Fountains, water tap are running with clear water, lakes and rivers are full of drinkable water, rain is pouring down. But the Girl seems obsessed with seeking water points and filling a glass jar everyday. This is her daily routine. That and caring for her large egg.

The European, say Parisian, architecture is a decorative but empty vessel. Nobody lives behind its many windows, nobody fills the street. The small lanes, the chimneys and rooftops, the cobble stones pavement, the street lights... compose the theater where the protagonists cross path, meet and wander. Yet the Girl, living on her own, doesn't seem lost, alarmed or desperate. She feels at home and knows the littlest passages like the back of her hand. Everything is monochromatic, dark and sinister like a street from a Bela Tarr film (Werckmeister Harmonies), but feels haunting like a folks tale.

The episode of the shadow-fishes (Coelacanth) turns this anime into a world of faery, the air becomes an invisible water, the invisible fishes are only seen projected on the facades or on the street as a two-dimensional shadow, and fishermen chase after these illusions throwing their spears in vain. The shadow-fishes slide against the facades but the windows don't carry their shadows, the fishes seem to glide underneath the windows, as if it was a vaporous black ink that printed only onto walls.


It is useless to re-tell in the review the monologues of the Man on the tree and on Noah's ark, it's for the viewers to discover during the film, and to start making their own interpretation like numerous are found online. But I will break the ideal model of a contemplative review to make a Freudian analysis of the story.
Some say the egg is symbol of blind faith. But the Girl carries it under her garments in place of a pregnant belly. An egg is itself a symbol of fecundity, whether it is fertilized or not. The chick embryo is also an image of the human embryo. When she holds the egg against her ear to listen to breathing sounds, she has an out-of-body experience where she is able to listen to her own pregnant belly. She protects the egg against the Man who wants to know what's inside. She wonders also. She imagines it's a bird or an angel, like a mother. There is a struggle between the Man and the Girl about this egg, like the father and the mother of a baby. Who knows best? The feminine intuition or the masculine reflection?


The Girl is of course too young to be pregnant, but this egg seems to be a proxy-pregnancy. And the Girl is intentionally younger to represent the innocence and purity of a woman before pregnancy. After the egg is broken by the Man (with his cross), she cries and jumps into the water to her death. As she hits the water surface, the moment is suspended in time and she can look at her reflection like in a mirror, except she sees herself as a grown woman (after pregnancy). The death of her innocence causes dozens of smaller eggs to resurface. It's not clear what are the intentions of the Man in finding out what's inside the egg, as if he wanted an abortion. In the end she is present on the eye-ball ship, amongst all the statues, as a sacred figure of the Virgin Mary (with an egg on her lap, instead of a baby Jesus) young as before, as she will always be remembered. Mary being the symbol of the miracle pregnancy, and mother of an angel, or rather a God.

That's all I will say about the film (I have already revealed too much with the psychoanalytic interpretation), to leave something to the imagination, so that readers could be tempted to become viewers and piece together the puzzle of impressions I just laid out, without explanation. (This wonderful anime can be seen on YouTube)

Saturday, December 09, 2017

Scholarly Contemplative Cinema

Here are some books, magazines or PhD thesis on slow cinema/contemplative cinema available online (latest addition to the Bibliography page):


Feel free to add more if you found others


Thursday, December 07, 2017

Makala (2017/Emmanuel Gras)



Opening sequence:

The back of a man walking across a village, carrying one tool on each shoulder. The camera follows him, staring at his nape like a Dardenne film. His body shakes at each step, moving up and down. We only see the tool handles hanging in his back. The camera overtakes her subject and pans to the right to show his profile. We discover his face, closed, focused on walking, and the end of one of the tools. It's an axe, which blade is hooked around his shoulder. A voice off screen says "Hello, you're already awake?" This must be quite early in the morning. And the camera pans towards this villager after seeing the face of our protagonist lighten up, the camera pans back toward the path he's walking on.
The film cuts several times during the progression through the bushes, pasting together several stages of this journey. Until he arrives at the foot of a big tree. The camera contemplates the summit of the foliage. Off screen we hear the impact of the axe that has already started to cut the trunk. The camera is spinning around the tree, slowly panning up and down as the loop around the tree comes to an end. This is when we see the origin of the sounds, he's cutting down the tree. The size of the trunk is too big for a man alone, yet he hits the tree relentlessly, opening a gap that will eventually fell down the tree and its high-reaching branches to the ground.



This opening sequence reminds me of Lisandro Alonso's La Libertad (2001). Whereas Misael in Alonso's film cut down trees and sold them as long pillars to a buyer who came on site with a truck, Kabwita in Gras' film makes charcoal out of the branches and go sell them to the nearest city, 50km away, in equilibrium on a rickety bike. What the opening sequence doesn't tell us is that Kabwita lives in Congo and that "makala" is charcoal in Swahili.
The episode with the traditional charcoal oven made out of dirt is reminiscent of Michelangelo Frammartino's Le Quattro Volte (2010) (analysis here). Smoke lifts off from places on the dirt mount, for a couple of weeks, to burn down the timber without oxygen and turn out cristal-sounding pieces of black wood.
But the longest part of this film is the road between his village and the city. He leaves in the dark of dawn and spends 2 or 3 days pushing this bike stuffed with dozen of charcoal bags, day and night. The night shots are only illuminated by the headlights of incoming traffic, backlit when the car is behind the bike, and shining on the bike when the car arrives behind the camera.
This journey is unbearable, not to mention the hard-hitting sun. Soon he joins other sellers who also slowly push their bike. They are stopped by a few men who demand baksheesh for permission to pass on a road, at a random point. The camera stays far back and watches the transaction from afar as if it was forbidden to film. Kabwita begs but gives up one bag of charcoal to pay the ransom.
This film is labeled a documentary, but the credits list Emmanuel Gras as the director, writer and cinematographer. So the film is written, staged, rehearsed and mis-en-scène. It's more a drama with non-actors acting under their own names, than a real documentary of real slices of life. And the camera viewpoint is indeed different, more aesthetic like a fiction, and less spontaneous like a documentary.



Les Cahiers du Cinéma deal with it like a pure documentary and blame the filmmaker for being a selfish bystander at the sight of a struggling man, pushing a mountain of charcoal under the sun. But it's a fiction based on this man's life, the scenes we see are fabricated and the trip is abbreviated.
I much preferred his first documentary called Bovines (2012), which, as I remember, was more contemplative with less cuts and longer shots, without human voices, only with shots of cows. Nothing like this 8h long documentary on sheep (which is strangely post-synch with ubiquitous sheep noises): BAA BAA LAND (2017)
Makala received the Grand Prix of La Semaine de la Critique in Cannes 2017.




Monday, December 04, 2017

The Art(s) of Slow Cinema

Here is a website (the only one) dedicated to "Slow films":




"(...) Slow Cinema, a limited, and hence debated term, has become the catch word of the last decade. It is often characterised by the use of long-takes, little use of dialogue and/or music, the use of non-professional actors playing empty and/or lonely characters, and – in some cases – by the sheer description of “this is boring”.
To me, Slow Cinema is more an experiential film form. Finding a definition is exceptionally difficult. This is perhaps mostly because “slow” is relative, so Slow Cinema is relative, too. What slow means to one person, may in fact be fast to another. I’m now very used to slow films. It is difficult for me to still see the slowness in there. For me, it has become “normal”.(...)"
Nadin Mai, the author of this great website, did her PhD thesis on "Slow Cinema" in 2015:
 The representation of absence and duration in the post-trauma cinema of Lav Diaz.
and she also translated a Lav Diaz film subtitles for the Berlinale.
The website focuses on "slowness" rather than "contemplative" (we had this debate in 2010) but there is a long list of recommended viewing and an extensive bibliography. Plus it doubles as a distribution platform for "slow films".
Listen to her participation to the podcast FlixWise on Tiexi Qu: West of Tracks (by Wang Bing), contemplative film par excellence, which is 202 on the Sight & Sound poll of Greatest Films of All Time (august 2017)

Tuesday, September 30, 2014

I always liked it slow (Leonard Cohen)

I’m slowing down the tune
I never liked it fast
You want to get there soon
I want to get there last

It’s not because I’m old
It’s not the life I led
I always liked it slow
That’s what my momma said

I’m lacing up my shoe
But I don’t want to run
I’ll get here when I do
Don’t need no starting gun

It’s not because I’m old
It’s not what dying does
I always liked it slow
Slow is in my blood

I always liked it slow:
I never liked it fast
With you it’s got to go:
With me it’s got to last

It’s not because I’m old
It’s not because I’m dead
I always liked it slow
That’s what my momma said

All your moves are swift
All your turns are tight
Let me catch my breath
I thought we had all night

I like to take my time
I like to linger as it flies
A weekend on your lips
A lifetime in your eyes

I always liked it slow...

I’m slowing down the tune
I never liked it fast
You want to get there soon
I want to get there last

So baby let me go
You’re wanted back in town
In case they want to know
I’m just trying to slow it down



Slow, Leonard Cohen, in album : "Popular Problems" 2014

Tuesday, April 15, 2014

Tokyo Reverse (SlowTV)


Tokyo Reverse (1st April 2014, France4, France Télévision) full 9h video on YT
9 hours of SlowTV from 15h00 to 24h00

Shot in separate portions around Tokyo, in various places (this is a fake "live and continuous" plan sequence patched up together afterward), the camera records in forward motion with the man walking backward in the street. During broadcasting the footage is played in reverse and appears to make all bystanders and cars to go backward in the city. Because of this "trick", the contemplation isn't "pure". The artificial concept adds a cerebral meaning to the actual footage, therefore turning a contemplative promenade into a filmic experience more complex, formally more sophisticated, with a comedic touch. But if we ignore this peculiar contraption (dispositif), we could look at this as a contemplative immersion, like the original SlowTV experiment it is based on : the  7h½ train ride, and the 134h cruise ship ride in Norway (see previous post : Contemplative TV Cruise)
On broadcast, the experience for the viewers was made more interactive, #tokyoreverse, with the Twitter account of the walking man (in fact the film director @SimonBouisson) being updated "live" (in hindsight) to show his thoughts when he appears to text on his phone, or publish his photos when he takes photos on the video with a passerby.
However, the spectacle wasn't nearly as successful in France, on national TV, as it was in Norway. Scoring an audience average of 29,000  (0.2% of TV audience for this timeslot).

Wednesday, March 05, 2014

Minuscule : la vallée des fourmis perdues

Minuscule : la vallée des fourmis perdues
(2013/Hélène Giraud et Thomas Szabo/France) Animation

Contemplative animation for kids, no dialogue and all sound FX, a narrative that tells itself with images and self-explanatory situations. Insects are animated onto real-world footage of natural landscape.

Wednesday, July 24, 2013

Friday, March 01, 2013

Changement philosophique (Riquier)

Philosophie : Le changement (France, 2012, 26mn) ARTE France

Raphaël Enthoven explore le changement avec Camille Riquier, spécialiste de Bergson.
Faut-il que quelque chose demeure pour que le reste change ? Comment se fait-il que toutes les campagnes électorales, depuis que le président de la République est élu au suffrage universel, aient en commun de vanter le "changement" ? Qu'y a-t-il d'immuable dans le changement ? En quoi l'idée qu'il y a toujours, sous le changement un élément stable nous donne en réalité une fausse idée du changement ?

Tuesday, February 12, 2013

Le temps philosophique (Etienne Klein)



Raphaël Enthoven s'aventure à la lisière de l'existence, avec le physicien Étienne Klein. L'origine renvoie au fondement, à la cause, à la source, au berceau, à la création ou encore à la naissance. Mais c'est aussi un paradoxe absolu puisqu'elle prétend se situer dans un temps qui précède le temps lui-même. Raphaël Enthoven explore l'origine du monde en compagnie de son invité, le physicien Étienne Klein. (France, 2011, 26mn) ARTE France

Bibliographie :
  • “L'intuition de l'instant” (Gaston Bachelard, 1931) 
  • “La Pensée et le mouvant” (Henri Bergson, 1934) [PDF]
  • Maurice Blanchot, L'attente, l'oubli (1962)
  • “Du temps. Eléments d'une philosophie du vivre” (Etienne Klein, 2001)

Voir aussi : 

Saturday, February 02, 2013

Contemplation is beyond extroverts

  The Power of Introverts - Ep 1 (27 Nov 2012) 7'03"
This is a video series about introverts based on the book "Quiet" by Susan Cain. Read more about the subject at: http://www.thepowerofintroverts.com/
Created and Narrated by Daniel Widfeldt Lomas
Animated by Petri Ljatif
Music by Daniel Bayard

1 out 3 people (in North America) is introvert, and the other 2 people think that they are too SLOW, BORING, LAZY, STUPID...
Extroverts do not comprehend the "introvert mode" of world apprehension, they are incapable to engage in "contemplation", reflective thinking, quietude, silence, and need to recharge their battery by socializing and babbling randomly...

* * * 


Leading@Google: Susan Cain (8 Feb 2012) 43'49"
At least one-third of the people we know are introverts. They are the ones who prefer listening to speaking, reading to partying; who innovate and create but dislike self-promotion; who favor working on their own over brainstorming in teams. Although they are often labeled "quiet," it is to introverts that we owe many of the great contributions to society--from van Gogh's sunflowers to the invention of the personal computer. Passionately argued, impressively researched, and filled with indelible stories of real people, Quiet shows how dramatically we undervalue introverts, and how much we lose in doing so. Taking the reader on a journey from Dale Carnegie's birthplace to Harvard Business School, from a Tony Robbins seminar to an evangelical megachurch, Susan Cain charts the rise of the Extrovert Ideal in the twentieth century and explores its far-reaching effects. She talks to Asian-American students who feel alienated from the brash, backslapping atmosphere of American schools. She questions the dominant values of American business culture, where forced collaboration can stand in the way of innovation, and where the leadership potential of introverts is often overlooked. And she draws on cutting-edge research in psychology and neuroscience to reveal the surprising differences between extroverts and introverts. Perhaps most inspiring, she introduces us to successful introverts--from a witty, high-octane public speaker who recharges in solitude after his talks, to a record-breaking salesman who quietly taps into the power of questions. Finally, she offers invaluable advice on everything from how to better negotiate differences in introvert-extrovert relationships to how to empower an introverted child to when it makes sense to be a "pretend extrovert." This extraordinary book has the power to permanently change how we see introverts and, equally important, how introverts see themselves.



Feb 2012 (TEDtalks) 19'04"
In a culture where being social and outgoing are prized above all else, it can be difficult, even shameful, to be an introvert. But, as Susan Cain argues in this passionate talk, introverts bring extraordinary talents and abilities to the world, and should be encouraged and celebrated.
Our world prizes extroverts -- but Susan Cain makes a case for the quiet and contemplative.


Related :

Tuesday, October 16, 2012

L'attente philosophique (Arte)

Philosophie : L'attente (ARTE France; 14 Oct 2012) 26' [YouTube]
Les philosophes Nicolas Grimaldi et Raphaël Enthoven prennent leur mal en patience.
"Veuillez patienter..." A-t-on seulement le temps d'attendre ? Et quelle différence entre n'avoir plus rien à attendre et disparaître ? Avec le philosophe Nicolas Grimaldi, Raphaël Enthoven explore nos propensions à l'attente, dans l'espoir d'être plus tard ce qu'on voudrait être ici et maintenant.

Filmographie suggérée du Cinéma Contemplatif Contemporain :
  • Le moindre geste (1971/Deligny/Manenti/France)
  • Jeanne Dielman (1976/Akerman/Belgique)
  • D'est (1993/Akerman/Belgique)
  • A Humble Life (1997/Sokurov/Japan/Russia)
  • Mother and Son (1997/Sokurov/Russia)
  • La blessure (2004/Klotz/Belgique)
  • Hamaca Paraguaya (2006/Encina/Paraguay)
  • Fantasma (2006/Alonso/Argentina)
  • Colossal Youth (2006/Costa/Portugal)
  • El Cants dels Ocells (2008/Serra/Spain)
  • Uncle Boonmee who Can Recall His Past Lives (2010/Weerasethakul/Thailand)
  • Bal (2010/Kaplanoglu/Turkey)
  • The turin Horse (2011/Tarr/Hungary)
  • Hurtigruten (2011/NRK/Norway)



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Sunday, September 30, 2012

Comparative Cinematics : Jancsó & Tarr (Kevin B. Lee)


Keyframe: Mapping the Long Take (Tarr Béla, Jancsó Miklós) 5'49"
By Kevin B. Lee from Fandor

[..] Comparing this one shot from The Turin Horse (2011) with the one that we just watched [The Red and The White], you can see how Bela Tarr‘s use of the long take both incorporates and rejects different elements of Jancso’s camerawork. Here the camera is less active and elaborate, and the staging is less busy. Instead, there’s a greater emphasis on physicality. [..] The moments where the camera is static let us focus on the material, tactile qualities of the visuals: stone, wood and dirt. [..]
Bela Tarr uses [long take] to convey the palpable sensations of a lived experience, one of harsh, grueling exertion. Like the Jancso scene, there’s a pendulum-like rhythm to the camera movement as it moves back and both between two poles of activity. Like Jancso, though to a lesser degree, Tarr is able to use off-screen space to economize activity: Notice how by the time the camera returns to the house, the woman has almost finished packing the wagon. [..]



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