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These are the user uploaded subtitles that are being translated: 1 00:00:00,000 --> 00:00:04,328 At the end of the 1800s a new art form flickered into live. 2 00:00:06,679 --> 00:00:09,374 It looked like our dreams. 3 00:00:16,475 --> 00:00:20,342 Movies are multi-billion dollar global entertainment industry now. 4 00:00:20,966 --> 00:00:24,988 But what drives them isn't box-office or showbiz. 5 00:00:25,692 --> 00:00:28,271 It's passion, innovation! 6 00:00:29,629 --> 00:00:34,007 So let's travel the world to find this innovation for ourselves. 7 00:00:35,775 --> 00:00:38,926 To discover it in this man, Stanley Donen, 8 00:00:38,951 --> 00:00:40,252 who made Singing in the Rain. 9 00:00:41,244 --> 00:00:43,502 And in Jane Campion in Australia. 10 00:00:44,510 --> 00:00:46,361 And in the films of Ky�ko Kagawa 11 00:00:46,386 --> 00:00:49,087 who was in perhaps the greatest movie ever made. 12 00:00:50,999 --> 00:00:54,697 And Amitabh Bachchan, the most famous actor in the world. 13 00:00:55,226 --> 00:00:58,435 And in the movies of Martin Scorcese and Spike Lee, 14 00:00:58,460 --> 00:01:00,664 Lars Von Trier and Akira Kurosawa. 15 00:01:02,022 --> 00:01:05,597 Welcome to the story of film, an odyssey. 16 00:01:05,630 --> 00:01:09,240 An epic tale of innovation across twelve decades, 17 00:01:09,265 --> 00:01:12,458 six continents and a thousand films. 18 00:01:25,916 --> 00:01:28,275 In this chapter we travel around the world, 19 00:01:28,300 --> 00:01:31,466 discover the beauty of Andrei Tarkovsky's movies 20 00:01:31,491 --> 00:01:36,329 and the daring new American films Psycho and Easy Rider. 21 00:01:41,840 --> 00:01:46,414 In Paris, in the '50s and '60s, movie lovers sat in caf�s like these 22 00:01:46,438 --> 00:01:48,136 and rethought cinema. 23 00:01:48,739 --> 00:01:52,198 They felt at the center of the movie world, 24 00:01:52,222 --> 00:01:53,836 but they weren't. 25 00:01:58,402 --> 00:02:02,729 Film making went global in the '60s for the first time, 26 00:02:02,753 --> 00:02:04,981 its energy was exhilarating. 27 00:02:05,966 --> 00:02:09,717 To tell its story, we have to travel around the world. 28 00:02:15,774 --> 00:02:20,813 Let's start here, in eastern Europe, behind the Berlin wall. 29 00:02:22,231 --> 00:02:25,767 Movie-makers here had far more about which to be defiant 30 00:02:25,791 --> 00:02:27,645 than their Parisian colleagues. 31 00:02:28,364 --> 00:02:32,185 In Poland, Hungary, Czechoslovakia and the Soviet Union, 32 00:02:32,210 --> 00:02:35,314 directors bravely made modern, personal films, 33 00:02:35,338 --> 00:02:39,244 that drove the medium forward and stood up to their governments. 34 00:02:39,268 --> 00:02:43,745 As a result, some of the movie-makers were stopped in their tracks, or imprisoned 35 00:02:43,769 --> 00:02:46,255 and many of the films were banned. 36 00:02:47,775 --> 00:02:50,596 The story starts in Poland. 37 00:02:51,708 --> 00:02:56,714 Take this scene in Andrzej Wajda's, Ashes and Diamonds [Popi�l i diament]." 38 00:02:56,738 --> 00:02:58,839 A young man and a woman flirt. 39 00:03:11,987 --> 00:03:15,219 It's the first day of peace after World War II, 40 00:03:15,243 --> 00:03:18,046 Poland has been torn apart. 41 00:03:18,070 --> 00:03:21,356 The man, Maciek, has been in the Warsaw uprising 42 00:03:21,380 --> 00:03:25,061 against the Nazis, but now the communists are coming 43 00:03:25,085 --> 00:03:26,857 and he hates them too. 44 00:03:28,013 --> 00:03:32,366 He wears dark glasses, not, like James Dean, because they're cool, 45 00:03:32,390 --> 00:03:36,780 but because he spent ages underground, in the sewers of Warsaw. 46 00:03:36,804 --> 00:03:39,443 He's a rebel with a cause. 47 00:03:45,901 --> 00:03:50,206 Like the great British film The third man, partially set in sewers, 48 00:03:50,230 --> 00:03:54,042 Ashes and Diamonds, is Wellesian, expressionist. 49 00:03:54,066 --> 00:03:57,793 Full of symbols of the world turned upside down. 50 00:04:00,033 --> 00:04:04,591 Andrzej Wajda's films are distinctive because, in a very Polish way, 51 00:04:04,615 --> 00:04:08,517 he disguises meaning by encoding it in symbols. 52 00:04:14,566 --> 00:04:16,182 Wajda was a shrinking violet 53 00:04:16,206 --> 00:04:19,231 compared to this Polish director Roman Polanski, 54 00:04:19,255 --> 00:04:22,177 who became one of the most famous filmmakers in the world. 55 00:04:23,242 --> 00:04:27,275 He cuts fast, to the jazzy, double-bass drumming. 56 00:04:27,299 --> 00:04:31,195 He played a small part in the short film Two Men and a Wardrobe. 57 00:04:31,220 --> 00:04:35,961 Fresh faced, cocky, beating up on a decent guy. 58 00:04:35,985 --> 00:04:39,007 Polanski was Jewish. 59 00:04:39,066 --> 00:04:43,573 During the war, he saw Poles defecate on German soldiers, 60 00:04:43,598 --> 00:04:46,225 his mother was murdered in Auschwitz-Birkenau. 61 00:04:46,860 --> 00:04:51,260 As a child he loved not color films or escapist musicals, 62 00:04:51,284 --> 00:04:55,048 but this British film, Laurence Olivier's Hamlet. 63 00:04:57,470 --> 00:04:59,322 He loved the way the camera tracked 64 00:04:59,346 --> 00:05:03,857 through the mysterious spaces of the castle, and its claustrophobia. 65 00:05:03,881 --> 00:05:06,501 Castles would recur in his own work. 66 00:05:09,025 --> 00:05:11,815 Polanski's first feature film, Knife in the Water [N�z w wodzie], 67 00:05:11,839 --> 00:05:14,854 is one of the most claustrophobic ever made. 68 00:05:15,381 --> 00:05:18,624 We're on a small boat, on the right is a husband, 69 00:05:18,649 --> 00:05:22,565 who owns the boat, swimming in the distance is his wife. 70 00:05:22,590 --> 00:05:24,707 Very deep focus photography. 71 00:05:25,160 --> 00:05:28,824 On the left is a student they've invited onto their boat, 72 00:05:28,849 --> 00:05:32,462 the wife fancies the student, a love triangle. 73 00:05:32,464 --> 00:05:35,752 The husband's arm literally forms a triangle. 74 00:05:36,422 --> 00:05:40,150 The husband resents the student, the student knows this 75 00:05:40,174 --> 00:05:45,420 and plays power games, the humiliation of getting too close. 76 00:05:59,652 --> 00:06:02,663 Unlike most Polish films of the time, Knife in the Water 77 00:06:02,687 --> 00:06:06,617 didn't deal with war, a sign that society and history 78 00:06:06,642 --> 00:06:12,321 would be less interesting for Polanski than, in this case, the human triangle. 79 00:06:13,547 --> 00:06:16,223 Knife in the Water was called "art for art's sake." 80 00:06:16,247 --> 00:06:18,763 The very definition of modernism 81 00:06:18,787 --> 00:06:22,898 and was condemned by the authorities because it wasn't social enough. 82 00:06:23,488 --> 00:06:29,197 And so Polanski left social realist Poland and took his modernism with him. 83 00:06:29,221 --> 00:06:36,066 In 1967, Polanski released this gorgeous spoof horror movie, one of his best films. 84 00:06:36,090 --> 00:06:40,011 As you can see, it's set in a winter wonderland, shot in a studio. 85 00:06:40,036 --> 00:06:42,407 Again, cut off from society. 86 00:06:42,431 --> 00:06:46,543 A beautiful widescreen vision of Jewish, middle Europe. 87 00:06:46,567 --> 00:06:51,855 Like a Mark Chagall painting. Polanski here plays a dopey apprentice. 88 00:06:51,879 --> 00:06:57,214 Opposite him, his producer cast a beautiful young actress, Sharon Tate. 89 00:06:57,238 --> 00:07:01,758 She and Polanski took LSD together, fell in love, and conceived a child. 90 00:07:01,782 --> 00:07:05,883 They set up home in Hollywood, Polanski's dream would soon end. 91 00:07:05,907 --> 00:07:11,138 His wife, unborn child, and friends were murdered by the Manson family. 92 00:07:12,836 --> 00:07:14,683 If Polanski had taken a train 93 00:07:14,707 --> 00:07:18,531 south from Poland to Czechoslavakia in the late '50s and '60s, 94 00:07:18,555 --> 00:07:22,193 he'd have come across a movie world not a million miles away from his own. 95 00:07:24,366 --> 00:07:30,649 Czechoslovakian cinema was, in these days, specializing in animation and puppetry. 96 00:07:30,673 --> 00:07:34,664 Jiri Trnka was its figurehead. 97 00:07:34,688 --> 00:07:37,613 Trnka's famous 1965 film, The Hand [Ruka], 98 00:07:37,638 --> 00:07:41,857 is one of the most hauntingly symbolic movies in the story of film. 99 00:07:43,069 --> 00:07:47,053 A fun loving little man is disturbed in his home by a hand, 100 00:07:47,077 --> 00:07:51,737 Trnka uses live action for the hand but stop motion for the man. 101 00:07:51,761 --> 00:07:54,052 The hand sends him a TV set, 102 00:07:54,077 --> 00:07:58,409 a reminder of Douglas Sirk's film All that heaven allows. 103 00:08:03,169 --> 00:08:08,915 The TV shows him images of power, Trnka uses paper cut outs. 104 00:08:17,357 --> 00:08:22,033 The hand indoctrinates the man, makes him sculpt a giant effigy. 105 00:08:25,106 --> 00:08:27,873 But then he tries to resist the indoctrination, 106 00:08:27,897 --> 00:08:30,538 but his attempts prove fatal. 107 00:08:36,029 --> 00:08:40,351 A sound like a bomb and suddenly we're outside the puppet theatre. 108 00:08:46,880 --> 00:08:49,472 Where Trnka's film was about a haunted life, 109 00:08:49,496 --> 00:08:54,673 his fellow Czech, Milos Forman, saw life as comic, almost absurd. 110 00:08:55,192 --> 00:08:59,049 Forman's start in life was similar to Polanski's. 111 00:08:59,073 --> 00:09:02,600 He was Jewish, both parents were killed by the Nazis, 112 00:09:02,624 --> 00:09:04,473 and he was a film school graduate. 113 00:09:04,963 --> 00:09:06,843 Firemen were supposed to be portrayed 114 00:09:06,867 --> 00:09:09,926 as heroic public servants in the communist world, 115 00:09:09,950 --> 00:09:13,016 but in Forman's very funny film, The fireman's Ball, 116 00:09:13,040 --> 00:09:18,111 they're incompetent and immature, clueless like Laurel and Hardy. 117 00:09:18,297 --> 00:09:21,630 They're staging a beauty contest, but they couldn't organize 118 00:09:21,654 --> 00:09:23,176 a piss up in a brewery. 119 00:10:04,054 --> 00:10:07,991 Foreman has his movie filmed without gloss, almost like a documentary, 120 00:10:08,015 --> 00:10:09,766 a Cassavetes film. 121 00:10:14,270 --> 00:10:17,214 The most innovative director in Czechoslovakia at the time 122 00:10:17,238 --> 00:10:19,051 was Vera Chytilov�. 123 00:10:19,075 --> 00:10:21,882 This is the first scene in her film Daisies. [Sedmikr�sky] 124 00:10:21,906 --> 00:10:26,690 Two women, Marie one and Marie two, squeak like dolls. 125 00:10:38,567 --> 00:10:42,493 It's as if they're puppets being worked by the hand from Trnka's film. 126 00:10:44,292 --> 00:10:47,193 There are astonishing sequences like this. 127 00:10:50,072 --> 00:10:53,853 Trippy, like the Lumi�re brothers on acid. 128 00:10:56,519 --> 00:10:59,315 And then, in a sequence like this... 129 00:11:05,641 --> 00:11:09,316 We're in the world of pop art, of Andy Warhol. 130 00:11:10,943 --> 00:11:14,177 The authorities hated Daisies of course and, 131 00:11:14,201 --> 00:11:18,124 after the Soviet Union clamped down on Czechoslovakia in 1968, 132 00:11:18,148 --> 00:11:23,656 Chytilov�, because of her modernism, was banned from working for six years. 133 00:11:25,664 --> 00:11:28,530 In Czechoslovakia's neighboring country, Hungary, 134 00:11:28,554 --> 00:11:32,686 movie making entered its innovative golden age in the '60s. 135 00:11:34,585 --> 00:11:38,656 Take this early scene in Mikl�s Jancs�'s, The red and the white. 136 00:11:38,662 --> 00:11:43,382 We're in Russia in 1918, revolutionaries, reds, 137 00:11:43,407 --> 00:11:46,343 clash with counter-revolutionaries, whites. 138 00:11:46,351 --> 00:11:48,688 A red soldier hides behind a bush 139 00:11:48,712 --> 00:11:52,418 as white guards on horseback capture his friend. 140 00:11:52,626 --> 00:11:57,362 Jancs� shows this in a single, roving 3-minute shot, 141 00:11:57,387 --> 00:12:00,759 ten camera moves without a single cut. 142 00:12:00,766 --> 00:12:04,970 Whereas '60s Czech cinema was interested in lightness and mockery, 143 00:12:04,995 --> 00:12:09,789 Jancs� used the highly planned tracking shots favored by Mizoguchi in Japan, 144 00:12:09,813 --> 00:12:15,528 or Hitchcock in America, to create tension, a sense of breath being held. 145 00:12:16,198 --> 00:12:21,131 Like Mizoguchi, he doesn't get close to his characters' faces. 146 00:12:21,133 --> 00:12:23,455 The detached control of Jancs�'s camera 147 00:12:23,479 --> 00:12:27,621 is like the detached control of the white infantrymen. 148 00:12:28,047 --> 00:12:32,129 Form echoing content, a very modern idea. 149 00:12:34,302 --> 00:12:37,070 At the end of the film, this happens. 150 00:12:37,094 --> 00:12:41,519 Finally, a near close-up, a soldier looks to camera. 151 00:12:47,639 --> 00:12:53,830 Humanity at last crashes into Jancs�'s icy universe of control and despair. 152 00:12:54,633 --> 00:12:58,966 No one in the story of film used long takes better to evoke suffering. 153 00:13:00,270 --> 00:13:04,043 The influence of Jancs� on the '90s Hungarian director, 154 00:13:04,067 --> 00:13:06,615 Bela Tarr, was profound. 155 00:13:15,569 --> 00:13:19,300 And then we get to the Soviet Union itself in the '60s. 156 00:13:19,302 --> 00:13:23,273 Its socialist dreams had been calcified or turned to kitsch. 157 00:13:25,856 --> 00:13:28,975 But even here, filmmakers managed to be highly personal 158 00:13:28,999 --> 00:13:31,081 and push the boundaries of the medium. 159 00:13:31,105 --> 00:13:35,346 This is the greatest Soviet director of these times, Andrei Tarkovsky. 160 00:13:36,647 --> 00:13:38,868 Loving the moment of lining up a shot, 161 00:13:38,892 --> 00:13:43,404 filmed with the sort of tracking camera that he himself often used. 162 00:13:46,199 --> 00:13:48,734 He taught this man, Alexandr Sokurov, 163 00:13:48,758 --> 00:13:51,943 the greatest Russian director of modern times. 164 00:13:55,380 --> 00:13:57,652 The essence of Tarkovsky's innovation 165 00:13:57,676 --> 00:14:01,250 is that in a materialist society like the Soviet Union, 166 00:14:01,274 --> 00:14:04,299 he made films about non-material things. 167 00:14:04,323 --> 00:14:07,949 The elevation of the human soul, transcendence. 168 00:14:08,750 --> 00:14:14,488 Look at the very opening of his early film, Andrei Rublev, the year 1400. 169 00:14:14,511 --> 00:14:19,102 We're in a bell tower, a peasant ties himself to something. 170 00:14:19,127 --> 00:14:21,613 Crisp black and white photography. 171 00:14:27,456 --> 00:14:30,150 A balloon made of skins. 172 00:14:33,390 --> 00:14:36,601 It takes off and we look down. 173 00:14:36,625 --> 00:14:40,161 The wide angle lens makes the perspective plunge, 174 00:14:40,185 --> 00:14:42,060 ballooning space. 175 00:14:43,902 --> 00:14:47,382 Tarkovsky's cinema has taken off. 176 00:14:51,259 --> 00:14:55,339 The film was banned for 6 years because it was religious. 177 00:14:57,839 --> 00:15:01,359 This is the camera that Andrei Rublev was shot with. 178 00:15:02,840 --> 00:15:07,069 Tarkovsky's movies would be about the human spirit soaring from now on. 179 00:15:08,576 --> 00:15:13,290 In The Mirror [Zerkalo], as a man dies, a bird flies from his hand, 180 00:15:13,314 --> 00:15:17,252 like the Christian idea of the holy ghost. 181 00:15:25,332 --> 00:15:28,397 The astonishing endings of his films show 182 00:15:28,420 --> 00:15:32,704 that they are what he called: "Directors of the absolute." 183 00:15:32,729 --> 00:15:34,831 Have you ever seen anything like this ending 184 00:15:34,855 --> 00:15:36,853 of Tarkovsky's film Stalker? 185 00:15:38,071 --> 00:15:43,669 For more than two hours we've followed three men to a numinous place: The zone. 186 00:15:43,693 --> 00:15:47,110 Then we meet this girl, the daughter of one of the men. 187 00:15:47,895 --> 00:15:50,665 There's steam from hot water in a glass. 188 00:15:52,430 --> 00:15:57,346 The camera creeps backwards, the colors are muted sepia. 189 00:15:57,370 --> 00:16:00,473 Dandelion seeds float in the air. 190 00:16:00,497 --> 00:16:06,046 We hear a train... 191 00:16:06,071 --> 00:16:08,082 and then suddenly this. 192 00:16:20,390 --> 00:16:22,091 A kind of miracle. 193 00:16:22,116 --> 00:16:24,535 An off-screen dog yelps 194 00:16:24,559 --> 00:16:27,739 as if it's been scared by the ghostly event. 195 00:16:40,442 --> 00:16:43,799 Is the girl moving the glass with her mind? 196 00:16:47,038 --> 00:16:50,897 If so, the train's vibrations shake the glass too. 197 00:16:50,899 --> 00:16:57,106 So the physical and the metaphysical combine, an exaltation. 198 00:17:10,493 --> 00:17:14,126 And then there's the ending of Tarkovsky's film Nostalghia. 199 00:17:14,128 --> 00:17:15,871 We've followed this man and his dog 200 00:17:15,895 --> 00:17:18,363 throughout the film and seen his house, 201 00:17:18,387 --> 00:17:20,120 which is in the background. 202 00:17:20,144 --> 00:17:23,006 The camera pulls out and we see reflections 203 00:17:23,030 --> 00:17:24,793 in the pool in the foreground. 204 00:17:30,068 --> 00:17:33,734 Only gradually do we see what is reflected. 205 00:17:44,878 --> 00:17:46,597 A ruined cathedral. 206 00:17:46,621 --> 00:17:50,254 The whole world of the story seems to be contained in it. 207 00:18:17,511 --> 00:18:21,224 And then it snows. Rapture. 208 00:18:21,764 --> 00:18:27,424 Not so much modern as ancient, but startlingly new in cinema. 209 00:18:29,806 --> 00:18:32,230 Tarkovsky wrote that imagery contains 210 00:18:32,254 --> 00:18:36,980 "an awareness of the infinite, the spiritual within matter." 211 00:18:37,343 --> 00:18:41,207 Carl Theodore Dryer and Robert Bresson would have agreed, 212 00:18:41,231 --> 00:18:44,824 but neither produced imagery this remarkable. 213 00:18:52,393 --> 00:18:56,625 Another Soviet director, even more against his times suffered 214 00:18:56,650 --> 00:19:00,498 more than any other filmmaker in the story of film so far. 215 00:19:00,791 --> 00:19:04,359 Sergei Parajanov loved the music, painting, and folklore 216 00:19:04,383 --> 00:19:07,369 of the times before the Soviet Union. 217 00:19:09,032 --> 00:19:12,587 His sixth film Shadows of our forgotten Ancestors [Tini zabutykh predkiv] 218 00:19:12,611 --> 00:19:14,629 shows that Parajanov also adored 219 00:19:14,653 --> 00:19:19,295 the poetic cinema of '20s master Alexander Dovzhenko. 220 00:19:20,867 --> 00:19:26,817 The film begins with this breathtaking point of view shot of a falling tree. 221 00:19:35,166 --> 00:19:39,625 Later, there's this shot from under a Daisy, looking up. 222 00:19:44,595 --> 00:19:47,720 Paradajanov's camera is seldom at eye level. 223 00:19:51,576 --> 00:19:55,467 No filmmaker since Orson Welles used foreground more. 224 00:19:56,680 --> 00:19:59,838 The story of the film is like Romeo and Juliet. 225 00:20:01,145 --> 00:20:04,591 Here Parajanov films the lovers from under water. 226 00:20:04,615 --> 00:20:08,171 Then we go to this amazing dream sequence. 227 00:20:11,826 --> 00:20:16,186 The girl seems to have died. We're in this silver forest. 228 00:20:16,210 --> 00:20:19,138 The lovers are searching for each other. 229 00:20:19,161 --> 00:20:23,008 They float as if they're mounted on the camera. 230 00:20:23,033 --> 00:20:28,917 Their faces painted the color of the trees, like they're spirits of the forest. 231 00:20:33,964 --> 00:20:36,516 Not since Fellini or even Jean Cocteau 232 00:20:36,540 --> 00:20:41,966 has such a magical and personal visual world been created in cinema. 233 00:20:43,838 --> 00:20:48,714 "After I made this film, tragedy struck," said Parajanov. 234 00:20:48,738 --> 00:20:53,518 Shadows of our forgotten Ancestors was everything the Soviet realists hated. 235 00:20:53,542 --> 00:20:57,814 Personal, sexual, in their word: decadent. 236 00:20:58,855 --> 00:21:03,417 Parajanov, who's directing on set here like he's conducting an orchestra, 237 00:21:03,446 --> 00:21:08,289 was imprisoned on charges of incitement to suicide and homosexuality. 238 00:21:09,814 --> 00:21:14,525 Filmmakers around the world protested and he was released 4 years later. 239 00:21:19,867 --> 00:21:25,735 It's already clear then that the new waves, modern cinema in the '60s, took many forms. 240 00:21:25,759 --> 00:21:30,239 Personal, self-aware, comic, spiritual. 241 00:21:39,542 --> 00:21:44,193 Here in Japan in the '60s, modernism was in angry mode, 242 00:21:44,217 --> 00:21:46,350 furious, in fact. 243 00:21:48,067 --> 00:21:53,369 Since the defeat in World War II, Japanese movies had been mostly sociological. 244 00:21:54,663 --> 00:21:57,559 About trauma and humiliation. 245 00:22:01,902 --> 00:22:07,041 But then came this man, Nagisa �shima. 246 00:22:10,300 --> 00:22:13,258 This is �shima's film, Boy. [Sh�nen] 247 00:22:13,260 --> 00:22:16,475 A composition using the full widescreen. 248 00:22:16,477 --> 00:22:19,821 On the extreme left stands a 10-year-old boy. 249 00:22:19,845 --> 00:22:23,047 On the right in blue, is his stepmother. 250 00:22:24,868 --> 00:22:28,899 She seems worried that he'll get hurt crossing the road. 251 00:22:28,923 --> 00:22:33,906 But she's not worried, because they're about to fake an accident. 252 00:22:48,896 --> 00:22:52,243 The boy pretends to get run over. 253 00:22:52,267 --> 00:22:54,966 His step-mum blackmails the driver. 254 00:22:57,748 --> 00:23:02,638 Oshima's showing us the cynicism of modern Japan, its greed. 255 00:23:07,980 --> 00:23:10,906 Despite its bleak view of life, Boy was a hit, 256 00:23:10,930 --> 00:23:15,179 and the profits funded another even more bitter �shima film, 257 00:23:15,204 --> 00:23:18,034 this one, In the Realm of the Senses. [Ai no kor�da] 258 00:23:18,477 --> 00:23:21,650 The film, based on a true story, starts gently, 259 00:23:21,674 --> 00:23:23,725 almost like a Mizoguchi movie. 260 00:23:24,272 --> 00:23:27,368 It's about a geisha and is set in the 1930s. 261 00:23:27,392 --> 00:23:33,374 But within minutes this happens, an old man humiliated by kids, 262 00:23:33,398 --> 00:23:37,454 poked at intimately with the Japanese flag. 263 00:23:48,601 --> 00:23:52,686 A provocation against Japanese propriety, modesty, 264 00:23:52,710 --> 00:23:56,876 what's left of its nationalism and respect for elders. 265 00:23:57,391 --> 00:24:04,479 The geisha becomes obsessed by a client, and, finally, castrates and strangles him. 266 00:24:04,503 --> 00:24:10,164 Blood red imagery and near silence make the strangulation haunting. 267 00:24:32,544 --> 00:24:37,087 In real life, the woman served just 5 years for second-degree murder. 268 00:24:37,111 --> 00:24:44,090 This is her, Abe Sade, nodding respectfully in the Japanese way. 269 00:24:45,207 --> 00:24:47,370 Conservatively dressed. 270 00:24:48,294 --> 00:24:51,038 Oshima saw her not so much as a feminist martyr 271 00:24:51,062 --> 00:24:54,137 as someone whose unglamorous story blew apart 272 00:24:54,161 --> 00:24:57,322 the mystique of geishas, and of Japan. 273 00:24:59,362 --> 00:25:03,927 But this man was even bolder in his portrayal of women and modern Japan. 274 00:25:03,933 --> 00:25:07,894 Sh�hei Imamura worked with the world's most serene filmmaker, 275 00:25:07,918 --> 00:25:10,191 Yasujiro Ozu, 276 00:25:10,216 --> 00:25:13,708 but came out of that apprenticeship like a bullet out of a gun. 277 00:25:15,027 --> 00:25:19,061 This documentary frames him, as he often framed his films, 278 00:25:19,085 --> 00:25:21,540 in a window, without a focus edges. 279 00:25:21,692 --> 00:25:26,226 A woman cuts his hair, his films are often about women. 280 00:25:27,530 --> 00:25:31,214 In this opening scene from one of Imamura's early masterpieces, 281 00:25:31,215 --> 00:25:34,445 The insect woman [Nippon konch�k], he films this insect 282 00:25:34,470 --> 00:25:40,893 as a no nonsense metaphor for human beings, struggling over life's rough terrain. 283 00:25:43,332 --> 00:25:49,537 Then he cuts to a woman, Tome, in Japan in the 1910s, struggling too. 284 00:25:49,561 --> 00:25:54,589 She's raped, and has a daughter, works on the farm with her father. 285 00:25:54,613 --> 00:25:58,152 Even, in this scene, suckles the father. 286 00:25:59,462 --> 00:26:03,283 Imamura the rebel would have loved the shock of this moment. 287 00:26:06,336 --> 00:26:10,762 Tome leaves the child with her father, then goes to work in a factory. 288 00:26:10,786 --> 00:26:17,426 Imamura and the cameraman, Shinsaku Himeda, used this widescreen space exquisitely. 289 00:26:17,450 --> 00:26:18,690 Look at this scene. 290 00:26:18,714 --> 00:26:25,020 The foreground out of focus looms, create a deep space in focus window. 291 00:26:25,044 --> 00:26:31,946 An image as confident, as dynamic, as this one in Orson Welles's Citizen Kane. 292 00:26:33,604 --> 00:26:37,769 Again a key character framed in the far distance. 293 00:26:41,030 --> 00:26:43,926 Then, Tome becomes housemaid for a Japanese woman 294 00:26:43,950 --> 00:26:47,416 who's had a child with an American GI. 295 00:26:47,440 --> 00:26:50,634 In this scene, the child's in the background, out of focus, 296 00:26:50,658 --> 00:26:52,385 Tome's in focus. 297 00:26:52,409 --> 00:26:55,587 We hear the woman and the American making love. 298 00:27:00,614 --> 00:27:03,139 Tome's distracted by this. 299 00:27:03,163 --> 00:27:04,593 But look at the child. 300 00:27:04,621 --> 00:27:07,850 She suddenly spills boiling food over herself. 301 00:27:08,484 --> 00:27:11,924 Imamura stages the scene in just two shots. 302 00:27:11,948 --> 00:27:15,106 The second is even better than the first. 303 00:27:15,130 --> 00:27:17,800 The flame in the foreground, its heat shimmer. 304 00:27:17,824 --> 00:27:19,857 Parts of the scalded child. 305 00:27:20,264 --> 00:27:24,475 Economic storytelling, brilliant use of widescreen. 306 00:27:28,847 --> 00:27:34,498 But if you think Tome is tough as old boots, meet this woman, madame Omboro. 307 00:27:34,522 --> 00:27:36,710 She's a bar hostess. 308 00:27:36,734 --> 00:27:39,857 Imamura made this brilliant documentary about her. 309 00:27:39,881 --> 00:27:43,872 Here he interviews her in an airport as she's about to fly to America 310 00:27:43,896 --> 00:27:46,370 with her new GI husband and child. 311 00:27:46,939 --> 00:27:50,498 She's astonishingly frank. 312 00:28:18,558 --> 00:28:21,675 And then we realize that her husband's just over her shoulder, 313 00:28:21,699 --> 00:28:23,403 sitting at the bar. 314 00:28:25,914 --> 00:28:28,351 Imamura loved women like Omboro. 315 00:28:28,353 --> 00:28:31,466 He said that the gutsy themes of his films are, 316 00:28:31,490 --> 00:28:36,435 "the lower part of the human body and the lower part of the social structure," 317 00:28:36,460 --> 00:28:39,287 i.e. sex and class. 318 00:28:43,411 --> 00:28:46,498 If madame Omboro had taken her plane to India in the '60s, 319 00:28:46,500 --> 00:28:50,704 rather than America, she would have found filmmakers as radical as �shima 320 00:28:50,729 --> 00:28:54,206 and Imamura, but even more modern and determined 321 00:28:54,231 --> 00:28:56,368 to challenge film language. 322 00:28:57,213 --> 00:29:02,710 The greatest Indian director of the late '50s and '60s was this man, Ritwik Ghatak. 323 00:29:02,716 --> 00:29:06,467 Passionate, drunken, wildly talented. 324 00:29:06,491 --> 00:29:10,964 He inspired a generation of filmmakers, including this one, Mani Kaul. 325 00:29:13,010 --> 00:29:18,265 This scene in Ghatak's, Ajantrik, shows the first thing we notice about his movies. 326 00:29:18,289 --> 00:29:24,780 Their heightened emotions, a little boy playing with a car horn. 327 00:29:26,227 --> 00:29:28,933 Lovely framing, natural light. 328 00:29:28,957 --> 00:29:30,425 Cut to a man in close up, 329 00:29:30,449 --> 00:29:35,463 moved to tears because the horn is all that's left of his beloved old car, 330 00:29:35,487 --> 00:29:39,679 his taxi, his income that he had for decades. 331 00:29:39,703 --> 00:29:42,276 We see the realization on the man's face 332 00:29:42,300 --> 00:29:46,149 that life goes on and at least the child is getting pleasure 333 00:29:46,173 --> 00:29:48,692 from the fragment of his car. 334 00:29:51,028 --> 00:29:53,339 A classic Indian melodrama. 335 00:29:53,844 --> 00:29:57,908 Well, I couldn't reconcile with the melodrama of his work. 336 00:29:57,932 --> 00:30:01,436 Only slowly I understood, you know, like, at the end of his life 337 00:30:01,461 --> 00:30:03,204 I think I began to understand. 338 00:30:03,228 --> 00:30:06,353 What he did, and people don't realize that, you know, 339 00:30:06,378 --> 00:30:09,854 I think, is that he opened that idea of melodrama 340 00:30:09,878 --> 00:30:12,659 to the pain of history, you know? 341 00:30:13,276 --> 00:30:17,476 Kaul means that Ghatak's melodramas weren't just about personal emotions. 342 00:30:17,501 --> 00:30:19,600 They were about the emotions of history. 343 00:30:19,624 --> 00:30:22,850 For Ghatak, the great emotion in recent Indian history 344 00:30:22,874 --> 00:30:27,029 was the partition of the country in which 1/2 million died 345 00:30:27,053 --> 00:30:29,837 and 15 million were forced to move. 346 00:30:29,861 --> 00:30:32,568 He called it India's original sin. 347 00:30:33,518 --> 00:30:36,585 This film was about that original sin. 348 00:30:36,609 --> 00:30:40,409 We start with this splendid shot of a majestic Avenue of trees, 349 00:30:40,433 --> 00:30:43,649 as old as history, filmed at dawn. 350 00:30:43,673 --> 00:30:47,748 Our lead character, Nita, walks from them to us. 351 00:30:47,772 --> 00:30:51,873 She's from a refugee Bengali family, forced by partition, 352 00:30:51,898 --> 00:30:54,514 to live on the outskirts of Calcutta. 353 00:30:54,539 --> 00:30:56,838 She tries to hold her family together. 354 00:30:56,862 --> 00:30:58,428 Cut to this shot. 355 00:30:58,452 --> 00:31:02,495 This is her ineffectual brother who just sits around and sings. 356 00:31:02,519 --> 00:31:05,945 But in the background of this brilliant widescreen composition 357 00:31:05,969 --> 00:31:11,515 a train passes, as misty as the tree, beautiful in its way, 358 00:31:11,540 --> 00:31:15,217 but slicing through the horizon like a knife. 359 00:31:15,242 --> 00:31:19,682 Ghatak's visionary film showed the family sliced by history. 360 00:31:21,938 --> 00:31:24,776 And Ghatak wasn't only daring with the story, 361 00:31:24,800 --> 00:31:28,664 he was wildly experimental in his use of sound. 362 00:31:28,688 --> 00:31:33,379 Here he acts in Jukti, Takko Aar Gappo, and distorts the sound 363 00:31:33,403 --> 00:31:35,922 as if the film is a Sci-Fi movie. 364 00:31:46,902 --> 00:31:51,574 He was very impressed by the statement on sound made by... 365 00:31:51,599 --> 00:31:52,604 and who's the third one? 366 00:31:52,925 --> 00:31:56,054 ...that the counter point... with sound, you know, 367 00:31:56,078 --> 00:31:57,290 the counter point, you know? 368 00:31:58,225 --> 00:32:02,696 As much as he was, you know, in calculating a new kind of cinema, 369 00:32:02,720 --> 00:32:08,074 he was also very forcefully condemning, you know, the commercial work here. 370 00:32:08,098 --> 00:32:12,688 The kind of work which is just very disinterested and decadent for him. 371 00:32:17,858 --> 00:32:22,243 In the mid-'60s, Mani Kaul himself became a modernist filmmaker. 372 00:32:23,810 --> 00:32:27,605 This is his great experimental film, Uski Roti. 373 00:32:27,606 --> 00:32:31,273 The man is about to throw a stone at a guava in a tree 374 00:32:31,298 --> 00:32:34,686 to make it fall, so that he can give it to his woman. 375 00:32:34,710 --> 00:32:37,870 But look at the way Mani Kaul paces the action. 376 00:32:43,606 --> 00:32:45,146 He throws. 377 00:32:45,170 --> 00:32:48,775 One, two, three. 378 00:32:48,799 --> 00:32:52,951 One, two, three, four. 379 00:32:52,975 --> 00:32:56,440 One, two, three, four. 380 00:32:59,616 --> 00:33:03,873 Not exactly the rapid fall of Isaac Newton's apple. 381 00:33:05,854 --> 00:33:08,271 I always felt like Godard was making films 382 00:33:08,295 --> 00:33:11,460 that are like faster than I am experiencing in normal life 383 00:33:11,484 --> 00:33:14,316 and I needed to go slower than that, you know? 384 00:33:14,340 --> 00:33:16,644 I just needed to go slower. 385 00:33:16,668 --> 00:33:18,653 I suppose I set a static goer 386 00:33:18,678 --> 00:33:20,664 on a static table, and the camera is static 387 00:33:20,688 --> 00:33:22,985 and the only thing that is functioning there is time. 388 00:33:23,595 --> 00:33:27,892 The moment there is a movement, the idea of time is alienated. 389 00:33:27,916 --> 00:33:31,294 So this whole idea of long take, or evoking time, 390 00:33:31,318 --> 00:33:35,613 disjointed and everything, coincides with the idea of waiting. 391 00:33:36,819 --> 00:33:40,653 And in waiting, of course, the whole world is created mentally, 392 00:33:40,678 --> 00:33:43,781 you know, like as you wait, you create a whole world. 393 00:33:43,805 --> 00:33:46,718 What is known as self in our philosophy, in a way, 394 00:33:46,742 --> 00:33:49,488 not as self as understood in psychology, 395 00:33:49,512 --> 00:33:53,225 it's something that the mind cannot perceive, you know. 396 00:33:53,874 --> 00:34:01,099 And the Upanishads in all, ..., in a different way. 397 00:34:01,105 --> 00:34:09,124 There is... The self is described as indescribable, unreachable, unknowable. 398 00:34:09,149 --> 00:34:11,300 Unavailable defenses. 399 00:34:11,324 --> 00:34:15,906 So it was never experienced, but it's always there. 400 00:34:15,930 --> 00:34:20,469 This affects very deeply the question of art, you know. 401 00:34:20,493 --> 00:34:27,235 That you really cannot make that self as a subject, you know, of filmmaking. 402 00:34:27,260 --> 00:34:30,279 It is in fact, the one who's making the film, you know. 403 00:34:32,098 --> 00:34:35,439 And Kaul's Indian idea that the person making the film 404 00:34:35,463 --> 00:34:40,388 is the subject of the film, is the very definition of modernism. 405 00:34:47,685 --> 00:34:52,298 And like the turning of the earth, the modern new waves kept on coming. 406 00:34:53,625 --> 00:34:58,592 In Brazil in the '60s, film was at its most inventive yet. 407 00:35:00,450 --> 00:35:03,969 The most innovative movie in what became known as "cinema novo" 408 00:35:03,993 --> 00:35:09,664 was directed by the writer and theoretician, Glauber Rocha, when he was just 25. 409 00:35:09,688 --> 00:35:12,495 Here's the climax of the film, 410 00:35:12,519 --> 00:35:16,338 this cowboy has killed his greedy, exploitative boss. 411 00:35:16,362 --> 00:35:18,880 As a result, he's become an outlaw. 412 00:35:18,904 --> 00:35:22,356 Rocha filmed in the intense heat of the pure, northeast of Brazil, 413 00:35:22,380 --> 00:35:23,697 where he was born. 414 00:35:24,252 --> 00:35:29,523 This is the cowboy's wife, she turns in bewilderment and despair. 415 00:35:29,547 --> 00:35:33,847 The opposite of the happy dancing characters in the musical carnival films 416 00:35:33,871 --> 00:35:37,405 of Brazil's commercial movie industry. 417 00:35:37,429 --> 00:35:41,743 The cowboy and his woman follow a strange, black Christian preacher 418 00:35:41,767 --> 00:35:44,347 who preaches revolution. 419 00:35:44,371 --> 00:35:48,128 They follow the preacher, praising the promised land. 420 00:35:50,985 --> 00:35:53,747 Suddenly, the preacher's followers are shot. 421 00:35:53,771 --> 00:35:56,473 The scene's edited like an Eisenstein movie. 422 00:36:02,147 --> 00:36:07,013 The killer is Antonio das Mortes, a symbol of vengeance. 423 00:36:11,803 --> 00:36:18,732 And at the end, a troubadour sings: a world badly divided cannot produce good. 424 00:36:18,756 --> 00:36:23,162 The earth belongs to man, not god or devil. 425 00:36:23,186 --> 00:36:27,521 Rocha wrote that, "violence is normal when people are starving." 426 00:36:28,613 --> 00:36:31,822 He'd find a way of combining innovative film style 427 00:36:31,846 --> 00:36:34,703 with fiercely, anti-colonialist ideas. 428 00:36:35,111 --> 00:36:39,429 Cinema novo inspired filmmakers throughout the third world. 429 00:36:42,293 --> 00:36:44,915 One of those places was the island of Cuba. 430 00:36:44,939 --> 00:36:52,557 It had a revolution in 1959, after which, its films hummed with fervor and form. 431 00:36:52,581 --> 00:36:55,723 This is the film I am Cuba, and was actually rejected 432 00:36:55,747 --> 00:36:57,618 by many Cuban filmmakers. 433 00:36:57,642 --> 00:37:01,508 A student revolutionary has been killed by the right-wing authorities. 434 00:37:02,160 --> 00:37:04,472 The camera seems to levitate. 435 00:37:04,496 --> 00:37:08,977 Wide angle lens, handheld, beautiful exposure, slow motion. 436 00:37:11,713 --> 00:37:14,679 It's a prayer for the dead student. 437 00:37:14,703 --> 00:37:18,470 The camera climbs a building, a crane shot so beautiful, 438 00:37:18,494 --> 00:37:22,966 that in the '90s, after years of I am Cuba being forgotten in America, 439 00:37:22,991 --> 00:37:25,468 it was shown at the Telluride film festival, 440 00:37:25,492 --> 00:37:28,161 impressed Martin Scorsese and Francis Coppola, 441 00:37:28,185 --> 00:37:29,627 and was re-released. 442 00:37:30,181 --> 00:37:35,674 But then the camera crosses the street, still no cut. 443 00:37:44,644 --> 00:37:46,747 It moves to the end of this room. 444 00:37:46,804 --> 00:37:53,761 A flag's unfurled and we glimpse two wires in the sky. 445 00:37:53,785 --> 00:37:58,508 The camera is attached to those wires, then floats out, over the funeral, 446 00:37:58,532 --> 00:38:01,364 down the canyon of a Havana street. 447 00:38:01,542 --> 00:38:05,660 Where Brazilian films of the '60s often used pared down minimalism 448 00:38:05,684 --> 00:38:10,414 to express their anger in politics, this Russian Cuban film believes 449 00:38:10,438 --> 00:38:13,663 that the beauty of a shot like this, a camera on wings, 450 00:38:13,687 --> 00:38:16,874 the soul of a dead student, will make the idea 451 00:38:16,898 --> 00:38:19,364 of the revolution, itself, beautiful. 452 00:38:27,649 --> 00:38:29,480 And if we now move to the middle east, 453 00:38:29,504 --> 00:38:33,281 we find that '60s modern cinema became richer still. 454 00:38:35,035 --> 00:38:40,729 In Iran, revolution wouldn't come until 1979, and then problematically. 455 00:38:40,753 --> 00:38:47,344 But in 1962, its first great film was made, and its director was a woman. 456 00:38:47,368 --> 00:38:52,982 Iran's the only country in the world where the founding film-make father is a mother. 457 00:38:55,945 --> 00:38:58,900 We're in a colony of people with leprosy. 458 00:38:58,924 --> 00:39:02,591 Director Forugh Farrokhzad, who was 27 when she made the film, 459 00:39:02,615 --> 00:39:04,691 shot in black and white. 460 00:39:06,311 --> 00:39:09,405 What still amazes is the film's sincerity. 461 00:39:09,405 --> 00:39:12,779 Its attempt to move beyond simple description. 462 00:39:12,803 --> 00:39:16,625 The people in the film are thankful for their lives. 463 00:39:25,724 --> 00:39:28,469 And look at Farrokhzad's filmmaking techniques. 464 00:39:28,493 --> 00:39:31,940 The little girl's wheelbarrow ride is intercut with scenes 465 00:39:31,965 --> 00:39:33,555 from the lives of the people. 466 00:39:43,488 --> 00:39:48,073 Then the squeak of the wheel seems to compel the editing to speed up. 467 00:39:51,936 --> 00:39:57,778 This isn't impressionism or expressionism or Soviet, 1+1=3. 468 00:39:57,802 --> 00:40:02,925 It's a shot as a unit of poetry rhyming with another shot. 469 00:40:02,949 --> 00:40:06,084 The movement of the wheelbarrow rhymes with the apparent movement 470 00:40:06,108 --> 00:40:08,766 of the reflection on water. 471 00:40:12,085 --> 00:40:16,527 Farough died in a car accident aged just 32. 472 00:40:16,551 --> 00:40:21,049 This glimpse of her captures her flare, how '60s she was. 473 00:40:21,073 --> 00:40:23,902 As we'll see, her film was a huge influence 474 00:40:23,926 --> 00:40:28,127 on this great Iranian director of the '90s, Samira Makhmalbaf. 475 00:40:36,381 --> 00:40:38,605 Four years after The house is black, 476 00:40:38,629 --> 00:40:42,299 another country started filming itself innovatively. 477 00:40:43,183 --> 00:40:47,482 Senegal in West Africa had been colonized by the French. 478 00:40:48,106 --> 00:40:54,089 When it became independent in 1960, its first president, the poet Leopold Senghor, 479 00:40:54,113 --> 00:40:56,274 funded culture heavily. 480 00:40:56,857 --> 00:41:00,745 Out of this moment came black Africa's first innovative feature film, 481 00:41:00,769 --> 00:41:02,254 the Black Girl. 482 00:41:02,905 --> 00:41:06,709 It's about a young black woman who works for this white French family, 483 00:41:06,733 --> 00:41:08,339 looking after their kids. 484 00:41:09,178 --> 00:41:12,638 She gives the family an African mask as a present. 485 00:41:15,099 --> 00:41:19,240 She's impressed by luxuries like a sprinkler to water the garden. 486 00:41:21,212 --> 00:41:25,447 Sembene filmed in rich parts of Dakar, Senegal's capital. 487 00:41:27,322 --> 00:41:31,355 Sembene himself had been a bricklayer, studied film in Moscow, 488 00:41:31,379 --> 00:41:33,187 joined the communist party. 489 00:41:33,261 --> 00:41:36,376 So his film cares about work, its dignity. 490 00:41:39,069 --> 00:41:42,791 In France with the family, the girl's work becomes drudgery. 491 00:41:42,815 --> 00:41:46,094 She's treated as a slave. 492 00:41:46,119 --> 00:41:50,165 Finally, unable to cope, the girl commits suicide. 493 00:41:50,189 --> 00:41:55,234 The scene is starkly black and white, almost like '60s pop art. 494 00:41:59,584 --> 00:42:03,332 Shaken and guilty, the French husband returns the mask 495 00:42:03,357 --> 00:42:06,220 to the poor part of Dakar where the girl lived. 496 00:42:08,584 --> 00:42:11,308 The girl's younger brother follows the man. 497 00:42:11,332 --> 00:42:14,992 Sembene films simply, like a John Ford western. 498 00:42:24,563 --> 00:42:26,884 The boy is haunting. 499 00:42:31,036 --> 00:42:36,238 The mask, a gift in the spirit of hope, has become a death mask, 500 00:42:36,263 --> 00:42:39,417 a guilt mask, a weapon. 501 00:42:44,403 --> 00:42:49,048 Decolonization asked the question: What sort of films do we, 502 00:42:49,072 --> 00:42:51,394 black Africans, want to make? 503 00:42:51,418 --> 00:42:56,730 Sembene's answer is this: Contemporary films, about modern society, 504 00:42:56,755 --> 00:43:02,397 in which Marxism and gender are linked, and which are laced with symbols. 505 00:43:02,421 --> 00:43:05,231 As we'll see, Sembene, the founding father 506 00:43:05,255 --> 00:43:09,076 of black African cinema, inspired the great African films 507 00:43:09,076 --> 00:43:11,566 of the '70s and since. 508 00:43:16,297 --> 00:43:21,132 And even in the English speaking world in the '60s, revolution was in the air. 509 00:43:21,156 --> 00:43:23,961 In Britain, which last appeared in the story of film 510 00:43:23,985 --> 00:43:26,647 with the movies of David Lean and Lindsay Anderson, 511 00:43:26,671 --> 00:43:30,031 films were getting more aware of social class. 512 00:43:32,005 --> 00:43:35,129 Saturday night and Sunday morning wasn't set here in London, 513 00:43:35,153 --> 00:43:38,789 but here in the working class Midlands of England. 514 00:43:40,711 --> 00:43:45,400 Shot in black and white, on real streets, no exterior lights. 515 00:43:46,819 --> 00:43:48,947 It's about this factory worker. 516 00:43:48,971 --> 00:43:51,879 He still lives in an ordinary two-up-two-down house 517 00:43:51,903 --> 00:43:53,066 with his mom and dad. 518 00:43:53,316 --> 00:43:55,435 A cramped front room. 519 00:43:55,459 --> 00:43:57,722 Dad's haircut's from the '30s. 520 00:43:57,746 --> 00:44:00,885 Son's got a touch of rock and roll about him. 521 00:44:00,909 --> 00:44:04,395 He gets a girl pregnant, she has to have an abortion. 522 00:44:04,419 --> 00:44:07,355 All this seemed new to audiences. 523 00:44:08,773 --> 00:44:13,498 But British director Ken Loach didn't feel that such films were really new. 524 00:44:13,504 --> 00:44:17,941 They seemed to us to be an advance, 525 00:44:17,966 --> 00:44:22,185 but they were basically taking established... 526 00:44:22,210 --> 00:44:25,463 the established film industry and the established actors 527 00:44:25,472 --> 00:44:31,044 to the north, and saying, "these people are a fit subject 528 00:44:31,069 --> 00:44:33,197 for films and for drama," 529 00:44:33,221 --> 00:44:37,146 but imposing a kind of a west end pattern onto them. 530 00:44:39,865 --> 00:44:45,423 We hadn't had Thatcher. You know? We hadn't had that calamity of '79. 531 00:44:45,447 --> 00:44:48,262 And, you know, "there was no such thing as society." 532 00:44:48,286 --> 00:44:49,854 We still had society. 533 00:44:50,866 --> 00:44:56,289 This film, "Kes," about a bullied boy who finds solace in training a kestrel 534 00:44:56,313 --> 00:44:59,435 shows how Loach turned his sense of collective experience 535 00:44:59,459 --> 00:45:02,403 into an honest and direct film style. 536 00:45:04,117 --> 00:45:08,329 We tried to echo the style of the Czech films, 537 00:45:08,354 --> 00:45:12,647 which was naturalistic light, a certain range of lenses 538 00:45:12,671 --> 00:45:17,633 which kept the camera away from the performers, 539 00:45:17,658 --> 00:45:19,718 the people in the film, so they weren't inhibited 540 00:45:19,742 --> 00:45:22,589 by an overbearing camera presence. 541 00:45:29,746 --> 00:45:33,244 And editing, not editing before a person spoke, 542 00:45:33,269 --> 00:45:37,239 but editing when your eye would naturally go to that person, 543 00:45:37,264 --> 00:45:40,549 which generally follows when they speak. 544 00:45:40,573 --> 00:45:43,951 And I remember an old editor saying, no, you've always got to cut 545 00:45:43,976 --> 00:45:46,299 two or three frames before they speak 546 00:45:46,323 --> 00:45:50,108 and I thought this is ridiculous, no, if I'm in a room and they are speaking, 547 00:45:50,132 --> 00:45:52,184 I'll hear you and then I'll look. 548 00:45:52,792 --> 00:45:55,884 Such techniques reveal a key theme in the story of film: 549 00:45:55,907 --> 00:45:59,835 That there's a connection between film style and politics. 550 00:45:59,860 --> 00:46:03,766 Because it's your... It's knowing that you are speaking that makes me look. 551 00:46:06,312 --> 00:46:08,973 The kitchen sink dramas and the Ken Loach films 552 00:46:08,997 --> 00:46:11,812 were naturalist in style, but then London 553 00:46:11,837 --> 00:46:15,992 and its Soho district became sexy. 554 00:46:16,252 --> 00:46:18,813 The music and fashion capital of Europe. 555 00:46:19,921 --> 00:46:23,698 British cinema became all about this youth buzz. 556 00:46:27,411 --> 00:46:31,472 This film about the Beatles starts relatively conventionally. 557 00:46:31,496 --> 00:46:33,456 But then speeds up. 558 00:46:35,386 --> 00:46:37,643 We cut to a shot from a helicopter. 559 00:46:37,667 --> 00:46:40,321 The Beatles run, dance, goof. 560 00:46:40,345 --> 00:46:45,600 Director Richard Lester wanted to show how joyous the youth rebellion was, 561 00:46:45,624 --> 00:46:47,687 so he kept in camera shake. 562 00:46:47,711 --> 00:46:51,316 Filmed without sound so that the camera could be thrown around, 563 00:46:51,340 --> 00:46:53,388 improvised with dancing. 564 00:46:54,152 --> 00:46:58,158 It's like the Beatles are wee boys or on a stag weekend. 565 00:46:58,182 --> 00:47:01,424 The film is like a stag weekend. 566 00:47:02,673 --> 00:47:05,925 This sort of imagery is commonplace in music videos now, 567 00:47:05,950 --> 00:47:09,286 but then it was liberating, funny, fresh, 568 00:47:09,311 --> 00:47:12,319 like Truffaut or Milos Foreman. 569 00:47:20,333 --> 00:47:25,115 We end this tour of world cinema in the modernist '60s in America. 570 00:47:26,348 --> 00:47:31,617 Just as the radical filmmakers of Japan, Brazil, Cuba, Senegal, Iran, 571 00:47:31,642 --> 00:47:34,833 and the UK in the '60s challenged the fact 572 00:47:34,858 --> 00:47:38,595 that movies were made by rich people or colonizers, 573 00:47:38,607 --> 00:47:42,457 even in America, radical voices were being heard. 574 00:47:47,648 --> 00:47:51,455 President John Kennedy was assassinated in 1963. 575 00:47:51,479 --> 00:47:55,390 Malcolm X was gunned down in '65. 576 00:47:55,414 --> 00:48:01,245 Protests against a war in Vietnam, where a million civilians died, grew. 577 00:48:02,686 --> 00:48:05,972 And in cinema, box office continued to tumble. 578 00:48:07,243 --> 00:48:09,940 People stayed at home to watch TV. 579 00:48:11,043 --> 00:48:15,605 The biggest movie hits of the time were Ben Hur and The sound of music. 580 00:48:15,629 --> 00:48:20,177 But the fervent, the innovation came from filmmakers who were again training 581 00:48:20,201 --> 00:48:22,154 their eyes on the real world. 582 00:48:23,515 --> 00:48:29,238 In 1959, a group of filmmakers made Primary, a new type of documentary. 583 00:48:30,337 --> 00:48:32,626 Primary got very risky. 584 00:48:32,650 --> 00:48:35,542 But my judgement is I never would have been nominated 585 00:48:35,567 --> 00:48:36,748 if I hadn't run in primary. 586 00:48:36,773 --> 00:48:38,158 So I'm taking the risk. But I would say 587 00:48:38,183 --> 00:48:40,560 you have to keep coming up sevens. 588 00:48:42,499 --> 00:48:45,774 The filmmakers didn't stage scenes as Robert Flaherty did 589 00:48:45,798 --> 00:48:47,324 in Nanook of the North. 590 00:48:47,806 --> 00:48:50,448 Theirs wasn't the poetics of Humphrey Jennings 591 00:48:50,472 --> 00:48:53,115 or the operatics of Leni Riefenstahl. 592 00:48:53,695 --> 00:48:57,404 They didn't do interviews or use hidden camera techniques. 593 00:48:57,428 --> 00:48:58,761 So what was left? 594 00:48:59,422 --> 00:49:02,205 What became known as "fly on the wall." 595 00:49:06,429 --> 00:49:09,850 Here, Robert Drew follows John Kennedy where he goes, 596 00:49:09,874 --> 00:49:12,477 regardless of focus or pretty lighting. 597 00:49:13,592 --> 00:49:16,017 How modern, how free! 598 00:49:17,288 --> 00:49:21,750 It would take nearly three decades and the invention of small video cameras 599 00:49:21,774 --> 00:49:24,750 before documentary improved on this freedom. 600 00:49:29,716 --> 00:49:32,594 The influence of films like Primary was immediate. 601 00:49:32,618 --> 00:49:36,093 In his film, Shadows, New York director John Cassavetes 602 00:49:36,117 --> 00:49:38,974 followed three fictional African American siblings 603 00:49:38,998 --> 00:49:41,449 just as Drew had followed Kennedy: 604 00:49:44,297 --> 00:49:46,869 On the streets, constant movement. 605 00:49:48,055 --> 00:49:51,186 The influence of Italian Neo-realism came into play too, 606 00:49:51,210 --> 00:49:55,012 and the new acting methods of Marlon Brando and Montgomery Clift. 607 00:49:55,552 --> 00:49:57,548 Hey Benny, you got the loot? The boys are waiting. 608 00:49:57,573 --> 00:49:58,092 Yeah, I got the money,... 609 00:49:58,094 --> 00:49:59,086 but you ain't coming... 610 00:49:59,111 --> 00:49:59,775 Ah Billy! 611 00:49:59,800 --> 00:50:01,898 Hey baby, I got the money, I got the bread. 612 00:50:02,340 --> 00:50:04,796 "Shadows" can now be seen as one of the first films 613 00:50:04,820 --> 00:50:08,778 in a movement that came to be known as new American cinema. 614 00:50:14,826 --> 00:50:18,805 The imagery of Primary and Shadows was so new, so direct, 615 00:50:18,830 --> 00:50:22,369 that it made Hollywood cinema look stale and conservative. 616 00:50:22,912 --> 00:50:25,757 One of Hollywood's greatest directors, Alfred Hitchcock, 617 00:50:25,781 --> 00:50:29,011 the master of color and sheen, realized this. 618 00:50:30,005 --> 00:50:33,360 He wanted his next film, about an ordinary woman who's stabbed 619 00:50:33,385 --> 00:50:38,651 while having a shower, to be as convincing, as of the moment, as possible 620 00:50:38,676 --> 00:50:42,959 and so he shot the film in black and white, TV style. 621 00:50:46,841 --> 00:50:52,050 He had actress Janet Leigh wear plain clothes from ordinary shops. 622 00:50:52,074 --> 00:50:54,579 He said that the film was an experiment. 623 00:50:54,603 --> 00:50:56,393 It was called Psycho. 624 00:50:57,625 --> 00:51:02,428 The woman has stolen money but decides to return it. 625 00:51:02,452 --> 00:51:05,693 Relieved, she takes a shower, to feel clean again, 626 00:51:05,717 --> 00:51:08,533 to wash away the worries and the moral dirt. 627 00:51:15,923 --> 00:51:22,050 At this moment, what had been a spare, almost austere film, splinters into shards. 628 00:51:38,234 --> 00:51:39,764 The cutting of Eisenstein 629 00:51:39,788 --> 00:51:42,566 but, also, Abel Gance in La roue. 630 00:51:43,498 --> 00:51:47,571 A horrific experience felt in expressionist flashes. 631 00:51:47,595 --> 00:51:52,895 Seventy different camera angles for just forty-five seconds of film. 632 00:52:07,288 --> 00:52:11,820 Still in America, from New York's art underworld in the early '60s, 633 00:52:11,844 --> 00:52:14,547 this artist emerged. 634 00:52:14,571 --> 00:52:19,009 Andy Warhol pushed the directness of modern filmmaking as far as it could go. 635 00:52:19,033 --> 00:52:23,487 Here he just eats a hamburger, no feeling, no emotion, no expression. 636 00:52:23,511 --> 00:52:25,584 Static shot, flat lighting. 637 00:52:25,806 --> 00:52:28,720 The blankness of the here and now. 638 00:52:30,600 --> 00:52:33,360 He was fascinated by things like this... 639 00:52:39,994 --> 00:52:41,376 And this... 640 00:52:46,504 --> 00:52:52,506 When Warhol took to cinema in 1963, his approach was as radical as Bresson's. 641 00:52:53,379 --> 00:52:57,186 He stripped it of all of its expressive elements. 642 00:52:57,210 --> 00:53:02,823 His early film, Blow job, for example, is nothing but the close up of a man's face 643 00:53:02,847 --> 00:53:06,625 as, we presume from the title, he's receiving oral sex. 644 00:53:06,649 --> 00:53:11,546 No dialogue, no sound of any sort, no camera moves or story. 645 00:53:13,036 --> 00:53:17,086 Bresson minus any attempt at spirituality. 646 00:53:20,743 --> 00:53:24,348 Blow job, together with the work of Jean Cocteau and Kenneth Anger 647 00:53:24,372 --> 00:53:29,530 led the way for what became known as new queer cinema of the 1990s. 648 00:53:34,483 --> 00:53:36,688 In the '60s, cinematographer 649 00:53:36,712 --> 00:53:40,656 Haskell Wexler helped change the look of Hollywood studio movies 650 00:53:40,681 --> 00:53:44,084 by filming one of the great stars, Elizabeth Taylor, 651 00:53:44,108 --> 00:53:50,477 daringly realistically in black and white, make up smudged, harsh lighting. 652 00:53:53,651 --> 00:53:57,035 When he came to direct, he made a movie: Medium cool, 653 00:53:57,059 --> 00:54:00,542 which pushed the relationship between documentary TV 654 00:54:00,566 --> 00:54:04,578 and American fiction cinema, as far as it could go. 655 00:54:04,602 --> 00:54:06,765 It's about this TV cameraman. 656 00:54:06,789 --> 00:54:09,457 Here he watches a Martin Luther King speech 657 00:54:09,481 --> 00:54:11,042 and feels fired up. 658 00:54:12,562 --> 00:54:14,981 Jesus, I love to shoot film! 659 00:54:16,097 --> 00:54:23,365 I think he says that because he has a sensory feeling about images. 660 00:54:23,389 --> 00:54:30,366 But I also think that he says that because it protects him... 661 00:54:30,390 --> 00:54:36,716 it gives him an idea of putting things within a frame. 662 00:54:36,740 --> 00:54:42,469 It gives him an idea of being detached, being an observer. 663 00:54:42,493 --> 00:54:48,758 And then being an observer absolves him from being a participant. 664 00:54:48,782 --> 00:54:54,419 Those are the... those are some, some of the gut things, 665 00:54:54,444 --> 00:55:02,742 you may as a camera person been in place where, say, I have to put the camera down. 666 00:55:02,766 --> 00:55:07,503 Those are critical times in a person's development 667 00:55:07,528 --> 00:55:11,243 as the relationship to what we call our "art." 668 00:55:11,434 --> 00:55:14,654 And in trying to analyze these ethical issues about filming, 669 00:55:14,678 --> 00:55:17,885 Wexler drew on the ideas of Jean-Luc Godard. 670 00:55:19,043 --> 00:55:22,808 I saw every Goddard film and when... 671 00:55:22,832 --> 00:55:30,748 And I also, when I lived in Hollywood, he stayed... at my house in Hollywood, 672 00:55:30,749 --> 00:55:38,286 and I don't think he said four words to me at all, all that time. 673 00:55:38,310 --> 00:55:46,282 In Medium Cool most of the filming ideas are stolen directly from Godard. 674 00:55:46,435 --> 00:55:49,088 In this ending, in which the cameraman's killed, 675 00:55:49,112 --> 00:55:54,196 no edit is more than four frames, inserted black frames. 676 00:55:54,220 --> 00:55:56,679 The camera tossed around. 677 00:55:59,990 --> 00:56:03,062 All along the cameraman has been the voyeur. 678 00:56:04,296 --> 00:56:07,223 But now he's the center of the voyeurism. 679 00:56:10,143 --> 00:56:13,446 Wexler turns the camera directly on the audience. 680 00:56:13,470 --> 00:56:15,692 As if we are being filmed. 681 00:56:15,716 --> 00:56:18,307 To make us think about how we're represented 682 00:56:18,332 --> 00:56:20,885 and about the politics of filming itself. 683 00:56:22,063 --> 00:56:30,553 The whole world is watching. 684 00:56:38,842 --> 00:56:43,410 The films made by Wexler and his generation made old Hollywood look outdated. 685 00:56:43,435 --> 00:56:46,898 And so the studios were bought or closed. 686 00:56:50,436 --> 00:56:54,973 Warner brothers was bought by a company that owned car parks and funeral parlors. 687 00:56:56,419 --> 00:57:01,365 This studio, that used to be Columbia, the studio of Cary Grant and Rita Hayworth, 688 00:57:01,389 --> 00:57:03,269 was bought by Coca Cola. 689 00:57:08,903 --> 00:57:11,933 Amongst all these endings, new things happened. 690 00:57:12,893 --> 00:57:19,322 No less than 1,500 film courses were now being taught throughout America. 691 00:57:19,328 --> 00:57:21,945 The film school generation was on its way. 692 00:57:23,598 --> 00:57:26,900 A lot of the new film people: Francis Coppola, John Sayles, 693 00:57:26,924 --> 00:57:31,147 Martin Scorsese, Dennis Hopper, Brian De Palma, Robert De Niro, 694 00:57:31,171 --> 00:57:34,748 Jack Nicholson, Jonathan Demme and Peter Bogdanovich, 695 00:57:34,772 --> 00:57:39,462 cut their teeth on b-movies produced here by Roger Corman. 696 00:57:39,486 --> 00:57:43,385 They made horror movies, prison pictures, and biker flicks 697 00:57:43,409 --> 00:57:46,255 with lots of nudity, politics, and style. 698 00:57:46,476 --> 00:57:51,608 The mother of all the biker flicks of the time was this one: Easy Rider. 699 00:57:55,336 --> 00:57:59,193 Writer-director-actor Dennis Hopper, who'd worked for Corman, 700 00:57:59,217 --> 00:58:02,799 made this road movie that defined its era. 701 00:58:02,823 --> 00:58:09,833 A rock soundtrack, wind in your hair, cool sunglasses, the open road, long lenses. 702 00:58:09,857 --> 00:58:13,324 He captured the carefreeness of the hippy days. 703 00:58:14,109 --> 00:58:17,934 Hopper hurled modern techniques at his film. 704 00:58:19,425 --> 00:58:23,181 He moved from one scene to the next by cutting to it, then back, 705 00:58:23,205 --> 00:58:25,467 then, to it, then back again. 706 00:58:25,951 --> 00:58:28,688 No mainstream film had previously mucked around 707 00:58:28,712 --> 00:58:31,328 with the grammar of editing as much. 708 00:58:34,835 --> 00:58:37,420 Why was Easy Rider a box office sensation? 709 00:58:38,792 --> 00:58:43,170 Because young people were impatient with the old style conformist filmmaking. 710 00:58:43,714 --> 00:58:47,956 Because the movie was about endings: Peter Fonda foresees 711 00:58:47,980 --> 00:58:50,041 that their journey won't last forever. 712 00:58:51,313 --> 00:58:54,957 They're killed by conservative duck-hunters. 713 00:58:54,981 --> 00:58:57,567 Middle America gets its own back. 714 00:59:03,899 --> 00:59:08,629 Liberal moviegoers somehow saw Martin Luther King, Bobby Kennedy 715 00:59:08,653 --> 00:59:13,927 and, later, Jimi Hendrix and Janis Joplin in the tragic ending. 716 00:59:24,212 --> 00:59:28,474 One final film of the '60s was so astonishing, so ambitious, 717 00:59:28,498 --> 00:59:32,983 that it seemed to try to top all the stylistic boldness of the age. 718 00:59:35,610 --> 00:59:40,336 2001: A space odyssey was directed by this man, Stanley Kubrick. 719 00:59:41,308 --> 00:59:44,053 Kubrick started in stills photography, 720 00:59:44,077 --> 00:59:47,818 and as this footage shot on the set of The shining shows, 721 00:59:47,842 --> 00:59:50,793 camera positioning was central to his art. 722 00:59:50,817 --> 00:59:53,266 He'd often film from below. 723 00:59:53,290 --> 00:59:58,179 Like Orson Welles and Buster Keaton, he was an inventive, confident realizer 724 00:59:58,203 --> 01:00:00,844 of physical worlds onscreen. 725 01:00:01,901 --> 01:00:05,124 2001 shows this supremely. 726 01:00:07,792 --> 01:00:11,043 Editing in film usually cuts out time. 727 01:00:11,763 --> 01:00:18,646 This famous cut from pre-human life to the time of space travel, 728 01:00:18,670 --> 01:00:23,734 cuts out more time than any other edit in movie history. 729 01:00:26,464 --> 01:00:32,129 In this scene, Kubrick attached the camera to the set and moved both simultaneously 730 01:00:32,153 --> 01:00:35,820 in a grand rotation to give a sense that in space 731 01:00:35,844 --> 01:00:38,889 no particular direction is upside down. 732 01:00:39,793 --> 01:00:42,165 This is what actually happened on the set. 733 01:00:45,782 --> 01:00:50,939 The actress walks upright, on the spot, as everything else turns around her. 734 01:00:55,575 --> 01:01:00,710 A space ship is taking astronauts to investigate a mysterious black monolith. 735 01:01:00,734 --> 01:01:03,168 In doing so they seem to travel through time 736 01:01:03,192 --> 01:01:06,062 and have mind-altering experiences. 737 01:01:09,665 --> 01:01:12,456 Kubrick has these pictured abstractly. 738 01:01:15,379 --> 01:01:21,178 The hallucinated effect of this sequence resembled the '20s films of Walter Ruttman. 739 01:01:24,385 --> 01:01:26,710 There was nothing political about this scene 740 01:01:26,734 --> 01:01:32,335 but if modernism was also about self-loss, ambiguity, the emptiness of lives, 741 01:01:32,359 --> 01:01:36,071 this sequence seemed to be its greatest movie moment. 742 01:01:38,933 --> 01:01:42,775 Overall, cinema in the '60s felt like space travel. 743 01:01:42,799 --> 01:01:46,536 Movies were everywhere, including Africa and Iran. 744 01:01:48,101 --> 01:01:50,495 Large numbers of directors accepted that film 745 01:01:50,519 --> 01:01:54,511 wasn't just a window through which you saw characters and stories. 746 01:01:55,913 --> 01:01:58,738 It was a language and way of thinking in itself. 747 01:02:00,451 --> 01:02:06,371 Related to space, color, shape, and this was the biggie, time. 748 01:02:07,497 --> 01:02:09,458 Would this be a permanent change? 749 01:02:09,460 --> 01:02:11,790 Would directors from now on always think 750 01:02:11,814 --> 01:02:16,521 in terms of time and abstraction as well as story and character? 751 01:02:17,278 --> 01:02:22,303 The answer, of course, was no. The '70s were coming. 752 01:02:22,327 --> 01:02:27,797 Old fashioned entertainment, romantic cinema would soon be back. 753 01:02:31,266 --> 01:02:34,744 Synced and corrected by job0@whatkeepsmebusy.today 69005

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