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[ecrea] New book: Performance in the Cinema of Hal Hartley
Mon Oct 03 14:19:31 GMT 2011
I'd like to draw your attention to the following book, recently
published by Cambria Press:
/Performance in the Cinema of Hal Hartley/ by Steven Rawle
ISBN: 9781604977455
http://www.cambriapress.com/cambriapress.cfm?template=4&bid=443
<http://www.cambriapress.com/cambriapress.cfm?template=4&bid=443>
Description:
Hal Hartley was one of the leading lights of the independent American
cinema boom of the late 1980s and 1990s. Although his work never
achieved the kind of crossover commercial success that other indie
directors experienced, his work exhibits one of the most distinctive
voices in recent American cinema. Combining wry, aphoristic dialogue
with stylized performances and a muted, minimalist palette, Hartley's
films challenge cinematic conventions, especially in performance, and
resist easy empathetic identification. His later work has carved out an
even more specific niche, and, since 1999, his work has often explored
extreme digital stylization.
Winner of the best screenplay award at the Cannes film festival in 1998
for Henry Fool, Hartley is best known for his films in the early-mid
1990s, including The Unbelievable Truth (1989), Trust (1990), Simple Men
(1992), and Amateur (1994). His subsequent work has become more
challenging, often examining the cultural role of the artist and the
role of the work of art in the information age, as in Flirt (1995) and
Henry Fool. Hartley has also experimented with digital video in his more
recent work, including The Book of Life (1999), The Girl from Monday
(2005), and Fay Grim (2006). Furthermore, he is well known as a prolific
short filmmaker, including Surviving Desire (1991), Ambition (1991),
Theory of Achievement (1991), The New Math(s) (1999) and two collections
of short works released under his Possible Films label (2006 & 2010).
The short films are experimental, formally challenging, and highly
self-reflexive, capturing Hartley's approach in its purest form.
While Hartley's contemporaries often exhibited similar concerns with
stylization and self-conscious narration, his work sits in an artistic
lineage rooted in the concerns of the French nouvelle vague and the
European arthouse tradition, following in the footsteps of Jean-Luc
Godard, Robert Bresson, and Chris Marker. His work engages in an ironic
critique of contemporary American culture, small town blue collar
Americana, problems with communication and, above all, the performance
traditions of cinema.
Despite his significant standing in mid-nineties indie cinema, Hartley's
work has never attracted a high-profile critical following. Often a
bewildering source of frustration for popular criticism, Hartley's
approach to cinema has never been fully grasped by film critics,
especially his films' distinctive use of performance and performers,
with reviews regularly lapsing into critical banalities, such as
"quirky." Perhaps as a consequence of this, and possibly as a response
to Hartley's lack of major crossover success, his work has never been
the focus of sustained scholarly analysis, despite academia's attention
to Hartley as a significant, although minor, figure in studies of
independent cinema's golden age in the 1980s and 1990s.
In many regards, it is Hartley's approach to performance that is a
critical blockage, both in terms of scholarly and popular criticism. His
work exhibits a minimalist, abstract and alienated mode of performance
that denies easy empathy or identification, and his screenplays often
utilize tropes of repetition that explore failures of communication and
problems of performance discipline.
Hartley is an uncompromising independent artist----he has never had an
agent and has run his own production company for twenty years----and,
while the independent sector was bought out and co-opted by Hollywood,
Hartley retained his independence, becoming a more marginal figure in
the process. As his profile has diminished, his work has become more
experimental, further rejecting conventional modes of performance and
realism, and exploring the social, political and cultural processes
behind performances and the constructions to which they testify.
With this first full-length critical study of Hal Hartley's work, Steven
Rawle examines the physical and cultural performance practices at play
in Hartley's work. Focusing on the critical emphasis on performance and
the performer in Hartley's work, the book charts the development of this
central facet of his films, from The Unbelievable Truth to the digital
features. Identifying the main critical approaches to performance that
illuminate this trend in his work, Rawle delves into the reasons why
Hartley's work has never gained popular recognition and explores why
critical reactions to his films have never fully grasped the complete
significance of performance. Part of this reason, Rawle argues, is the
lack of critical tools by which to explore film performance. This book
contributes to a growing body of work on film performance, taking this
formerly critically neglected figure as its central case study.
This book will be an important book for fans of Hartley's work as well
as scholars of independent American cinema and of film performance.
Dr. Steve Rawle
Lecturer in Film Studies
Faculty of Arts
York St John University
Lord Mayor's Walk
York
Y031 7EX
Tel: 01904 876584
(s.rawle /at/ yorksj.ac.uk) <mailto:(s.rawle /at/ yorksj.ac.uk)>
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