字幕列表 影片播放 列印英文字幕 Hi my name is Tony and[br]this is Every Frame a Painting. When I say a film is poetic,[br]what pops into your head? Do you think it's slow?[br]Pretentious? Plotless? "Is she gonna wake up and do something?" These are the clichés.[br]-"No." But to me, poetry in cinema is when[br]I can ignore the plot and just appreciate the picture and[br]the sound doing something unique. Scorsese: "The films that I constantly[br]revisited or saw repeatedly... ...held up longer for me over the years[br]not because of plot... ...but because of character... and a very different approach to story." "The Wrong Man, for example. I talked[br]about the paranoid camera moves the feelings of threat, the fear,[br]the anxiety, the paranoia it’s all done through the camera[br]and the person’s face." -"It is the same." Lynne Ramsay’s work[br]has this same quality. Everything is conveyed through the[br]camera, the person’s face & the details "Some things I shoot are very controlled[br]I know exactly why I want them... ...I will spend ages to get that exactly[br]right and it’s because for me... ...the details in that are saying[br]everything about the scene." But what can we learn from a detail? Here’s an example. In this scene, a son[br]taunts his mother by misbehaving just before his father… -"Hey guys." -"Hey dad, how was work?[br]Take any cool pictures?" Notice that the father is placed[br]just on the edge of the frame, because while he’s around,[br]he doesn’t really pay attention. Later on,[br]when he tries to ignore her fears -"He’s a sweet little boy.[br]That’s what boys do." We still don't see his face.[br]Instead, we get this shot. What does this detail tell us? Literally[br]they haven’t cleaned up the mess and it's gotten worse.[br]But what about metaphorically? What does this say about[br]them and their son? What’s interesting about[br]Lynne Ramsay’s work is that the entire story is implied[br]through these detail shots. And she doesn’t get this effect[br]by putting lots of stuff in the frame but by taking things out, so that[br]you focus on one detail at a time. "I think that Robert Bresson had a[br]really good quote about that... It was something like... 'When the image is doing everything,[br]don’t have any sound.' “And when the sound’s doing everything,[br]don’t have any image." I mean, don’t do something[br]too fancy with image." This is one thing film is great at:[br]evoking a state of mind purely through image and sound. When you work like this[br]everything depends on the framing, the person’s face,[br]and the repetition of details. So let's go one by one.[br]First, the framing. Ramsay often frames so that important[br]information is cut off from the viewer. Notice here,[br]we never see the woman’s eyes. Meanwhile here, we have a character[br]who’s literally cut in half by a door. In all of these shots,[br]you can guess what someone is feeling but the frame doesn’t let you[br]see them in full. "There's no place like home.[br]No place like home." So as an audience, you’re never told[br]what to feel about these people. There’s something mysterious about them. Which brings us to #2: faces. I don’t know why, but some people just[br]look right when you put them onscreen. Even when they aren’t professionals. In most of her work, Ramsay mixes[br]professional and non-professional actors until the two are indistinguishable. "The best actors for me are the people[br]who are like non-professional actors... ...You can’t tell where the film[br]ends or begins... ...As if they were the same offscreen.[br]They just feel real." And she picks people who can convey[br]what’s going on inside their head without any dialogue. "He's the double of my Ryan, innit he?[br]The same eyes." And #3, there’s[br]the repetition of certain details. When you’re watching one of these films,[br]pay attention how & when images repeat For instance, notice how mother and son[br]imitate each other’s body language. And in the next shot, they do the[br]exact same thing, ten years later. At one point, the son[br]does this with his fingernails While later in the film, his mother[br]does the same thing with eggshells. A more conventional film might[br]explain the meaning of this but here, all we get is one image.[br]And then another. And we have to work out[br]the connection for ourselves. So let’s consider all this over[br]the course of a single short film. This is Gasman, made in 1997. I’m not going to tell you the[br]big plot point. I’m just going to show some details from before and after.[br]See if you can guess what’s happening. "Gonna lift me up, daddy?" At the beginning of the film, Lynne and[br]her father meet a girl on the tracks. A girl she doesn't know. Before the event, they bond over[br]her dress and hold hands. Notice this shot chops off their heads. After the event, we see them[br]holding hands again, but this time... -"What’s the matter?"[br]-"She’s hurting me." To appease them, Lynne’s father[br]picks them up and does this. Which mirrors the beginning of the film,[br]when he did the same with just Lynne. At the end, the other girl[br]rejoins her mother. And we’re left on the tracks,[br]watching the back of Lynne’s head. Can you infer what’s going on? What if I showed you this? Get it now? A film like this is basically a before[br]and after portrait of one kid’s mind presented through parallel images[br]and situations. In other words, it’s indirect.[br]Poetic filmmaking. It might not hit you while you watch it[br]but it can linger long afterwards. -"So then what you're saying,[br]it's the eye that's going to captivate-" -"The vision, the vision that he puts[br]on the film, which I… the vision... meaning the actual picture in the frame[br]and what he puts in the film." -"Which is, I imagine,[br]the way a painter would... ...in terms of his aesthetic."[br]-"Exactly." -"Ow!" -"For God's sake,[br]look at the state of my curtain." -"Because it opens up every possibility[br]for sound, for sight, for form." Exactly.[br]There aren’t many films like this and they teach us a very[br]different way of making movies. Instead of going big, they go small. They focus on details. They show us less instead of more. And through simplicity,[br]they find poetry. And if anybody ever asks you[br]what poetry means… I don’t know, make something up. Subtitles by the Amara.org community
A2 初級 美國腔 林恩-拉姆斯--《細節的詩意 》。 (Lynne Ramsay - The Poetry of Details) 106 6 呂敏如 發佈於 2021 年 01 月 14 日 更多分享 分享 收藏 回報 影片單字