21Dec08

Bazin Season BY COLIN MACCABE

André Bazin has a curious status in intellectual life. He is everywhere admitted as the founding father of film criticism and theory in general. The magazine he created in the 1950s, Cahiers du cinéma, has good claim to be the most influential film magazine ever published. And yet at the same time, he has been curiously neglected. He died at the young age of forty, in 1958, just before the “structuralist turn,” and film theory, more influenced by this turn than any other discipline, more or less comprehensively rejected him in the seventies. Equally, within general French intellectual culture, he has been barely acknowledged, let alone as a major thinker.

For some time now, however, particularly in the work of Serge Daney, Bazin has been making something of a comeback, and a double conference—“Opening Bazin”—held in late November at the Université Paris Diderot and early December at Yale University, looks likely to lead to a comprehensive reevaluation of this remarkable thinker. The Yale event was extraordinary not simply for the eminence of the critics gathered, both from France and America, but for the striking fact that almost all of them had done considerable original research for the event, many in the archive of Bazin’s complete writings that Dudley Andrew has established at Yale. The picture that emerged at the conference was of a thinker whose fundamental engagement with the nature of cinema makes him an essential reference point as the cinema finds new forms, both in museums and on the Internet, while remaining the key crystallization of value in the entertainment industry. Bazin lived through two crucial moments in the history of cinema—Rossellini and neorealism, which provided him with his most important theoretical and critical examples, and the birth of the New Wave, which in the films of Godard and Truffaut, Rohmer and Rivette, would live out his ideas.

The 400 Blows

The 400 Blows

François Truffaut

1959

99 min

2.35:1

Breathless

Breathless

Jean-Luc Godard

1960

90 min

Black and White

1.33:1

The Flowers of St. Francis

The Flowers of St. Francis

Roberto Rossellini

1950

87 min

Black and White

1.33:1

Categories: Dispatches

3 Comments

Wed 24 Dec at 04:55 AM

Lance Lubelski

Bazin is certainly important, especially with Cahiers du Cinema, but because he died before the early films of Godard and Truffaut were made and released, he today seems more an example of “just missed it” than of a critic who both anticipated AND saw to fruition a new moment in the cinema and the language of the cinema. However, his influence on Godard at least is without doubt. I would even suggest that Bazin and Brecht influenced Godard more than any other thinkers.

Wed 24 Dec at 07:04 PM

Tyler Austin

Bazin is most defenitely the most innovative and influential of all film theorists and critics, advocating a new cinema that was not so much a destruction of the cinema of the past, but rather an artistic and emotional fulfilment and perfection of it. He dreamed of a true cinema, a cinema of humanity and nature and purity. It’s a shame more people don’t see or feel film art the same as he did.

Fri 26 Dec at 01:46 AM

Wes Cueto

I learned of Bazin during my first year of film school. We were taught about how he served as the spiritual and creative father (in fact he had adopted the adolescent Truffaut) of the French New Wave. I feel from my own experience that the level of awareness and appreciation for Bazin and his invaluable contributions to the cinema are only beginning to grow as the medium itself.

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