Wednesday, 28 March 2012

André Breton: Manifeste du Surréalisme / Manifesto of Surrealism (1924)

You can read an on-line transcript of the Manifesto of Surrealism ... here


Fritz Lang: Metropolis (1926)


Click image above for reviews or to buy the restored 'definitive' version of this influential movie masterpiece

In 1926, film, as an artform in itself, was still new and represented a marriage between technology and art. An alchemical process – involving metal oxides, light and incandescent arcs – the ‘magic lantern’ could be used to ‘realise’ the imagination into a visible, shareable commonality. Since the dawn of human language, society has sought ways to share its dreams. Film is merely the most recent and effective method that has, generally, superseded all other forms of dream-sharing employed by all tribal communities, particularly throughout western culture.

As David Annan observed in his book, Cinema of Mystery and Fantasy, “Metropolis is the bridge between ancient myth and the machine world of mass man.” Lang’s masterpiece was based upon the novel by Thea Von Harbou, though he drew heavily from Wagnerian themes and his own fascination with folklore and myth – which was to reveal itself throughout the German mass-persona over the following decades. Indeed, Metropolis is a chillingly prophetic reflection of the national social trends of its day, all be it viewed through the artistic lens of speculative science fiction.

The central plot of the film deals with a split in society. There is an underground city of the workers, who maintain the giant machines and feed the furnaces that drive the overground city of the privileged citizens. It is a cautionary tale of mass industrialisation and automation leading to the enslavement of humanity, echoing the sentiments expressed by British poet, William Blake, who had warned at the dawn of the industrial revolution that reliance on mechanisation would lead to the workers and traditional artisans becoming thought of merely as a resource that serves the machines. In effect, reducing the craftspeople and workers to the same level as machine components within “Dark Satanic Mills.”

In the extreme scenario of Metropolis, there is nothing but the city, above and below, both equally hellish in their own way. The workers enslaved by machinery, the citizens trapped by empty decadent lifestyles. The result is inevitable revolution which finally re-unites society.

The magician-alchemist, Rotwang, is the catalyst for the events that bring about profound change. He represents the past, the city’s forgotten heritage – the craft of magic denied by modern thought. His house is a dark mediaeval building still standing in the heart of the city, dwarfed by the sky-scraping erections of girders and glass. The events that lead to the machines stopping and the underground city being flooded begin in the dark interior of the ‘mad professor’s’ house and, fittingly, reach final culmination on the roof of the great cathedral, which is the only other Gothic structure still standing.

The film employs rich Gothic imagery throughout… The entrance to the chambers of the great machines resembles a giant Molochian effigy, devouring its workers at the start of their shift and spitting them out when they are spent. The image of Death is glimpsed fleetingly, playing his dance on a hollow human thigh bone. Ancient symbols empower Rotwang’s environment and the famous android he constructs and animates using a blend of technology and magic echoes many myths, from the Golem to Frankenstein’s monster and embodies much of the Futurist ideology.

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These themes are discussed further in this article I wrote for The Scrawl: Futuregoth... What the Hell is it?

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