film - Film theory

Photograph by Amanda Truss /clashon Flickr.
He commented on the need for new ways of thinking about movement, and coined the terms the movement-image and the time-image . There has been a refocus onto celluloid film s ability to capture an indexical image of a moment in time by theorists like Mary Ann Doane, Philip Rosen and Laura Mulvey who was informed by psychoanalysis.
From a psychoanalytical perspective, after the Lacanian notion of the Real, Slavoj Žižek offered new aspects of the gaze extensively used in contemporary film analysis. It largely evolved from the works of directors like Germaine Dulac, Louis Delluc, Jean Epstein, Sergei Eisenstein, Lev Kuleshov, and Dziga Vertov and film theorists like Rudolf Arnheim, Béla Balázs and Siegfried Kracauer.
Nonetheless, decades later, in Cinéma I and Cinema II (1983-1985), the philosopher Gilles Deleuze took Matter and Memory as the basis of his philosophy of film and revisited Bergson s concepts, combining them with the semiotics of Charles Sanders Peirce. Early film theory arose in the silent era and was mostly concerned with defining the crucial elements of the medium. Film theory explores the essence of the cinema and provides conceptual frameworks for understanding film s relationship to reality, the other arts, individual viewers, and society at large.
There has also been a historical revisiting of early cinema screenings, practices and spectatorship modes by writers Tom Gunning, Miriam Hansen and Yuri Tsivian. . This term is not to be confused with general film criticism, which may, however, draw upon ideas from film theory. In some respects, French philosopher Henri Bergson s Matter and Memory anticipated the development of film theory at a time that the cinema was just being born as a new medium—the early 1900s.
