Showing posts with label Mikhail Kaufman. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Mikhail Kaufman. Show all posts

The Awakening of a Woman


Man With a Movie Camera, Mikhail Kaufman / Dziga Vertov


Awakening of a Woman, The Cinematic Orchestra

To watch, in order to see


Man with a Movie Camera

Vertov was one of the first to be able to find a mid-ground between a narrative media and a database form of media. He shot all the scenes separately, having no intention of making this film into a regular movie with a storyline. Instead, he took all the random clips and put it in a database, which Svilova later edited. The narrative part of this process was her job. She had to go into that random pool of clips that Vertov filmed, edit it, and put it in some kind of order. Vertov's purpose of all this was to break the mold of a linear film that the world was used to seeing in those days.
Vertov's message about the prevalence and unobtrusiveness of filming was not yet true—cameras might have been able to go anywhere, but not without being noticed; they were too large to be hidden easily, and too noisy to remain hidden anyway. To get footage using a hidden camera, Vertov and his brother Mikhail Kaufman (the film's co-author) had to distract the subject with something else even louder than the camera filming them.


Beauty #2, Andy Warhol