Beteiligte: | |
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In: | Journal of British Cinema and Television, 13, 2016, 2, S. 262-277 |
veröffentlicht: |
Edinburgh University Press
|
Medientyp: | Artikel, E-Artikel |
Umfang: | 262-277 |
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ISSN: |
1743-4521
1755-1714 |
DOI: | 10.3366/jbctv.2016.0312 |
veröffentlicht in: | Journal of British Cinema and Television |
Sprache: | Englisch |
Schlagwörter: | |
Kollektion: | Edinburgh University Press (CrossRef) |
<jats:p>It could be said that the films of the director Peter Strickland are in many ways exemplars of a rich strain of twenty-first-century British art cinema. Like work by Andrea Arnold, Steve McQueen, Jonathan Glazer, Lynne Ramsay, Ben Wheatley and Sam Taylor-Wood, among others, Strickland's three feature-length films to date are thought-provoking, well-crafted, prestigious, quality productions. But in this article I show that while Strickland's second feature-length film, Berberian Sound Studio, conforms to some of the commonly held understandings of the key traits of British art cinema – especially through its specific history of production and exhibition, its characterisation, its narrative structure, and its evidencing of the vision of an auteur – ultimately it does not sit comfortably within most extant histories of British national cinema or film genre, including art cinema. More than this, though, I argue that in its challenge to such extant critical traditions, Berberian Sound Studio effectively operates as ‘art film as alternative film history’. I demonstrate that it does this through the foregrounding of Strickland's cine-literacy, which notices and in turn foregrounds the historically transnational nature of cinema, and, at the same time, playfully and knowingly disrupts well-established cultural categories and coherent, homogenous histories of cinema.</jats:p> |