Abstract
The paper examines the figuration of sounds in the first film of Lucrecia Martel, La Ciénaga (The Swamp, 2001), with a particular emphasis on the interpretation of the figural dynamics of the film’s last scene. It argues that the idea of sonic cinema by Gregg Hainge is relevant for the figural analysis developed by Nicole Brenez since Hainge shows that the sonic realm is a privileged sphere to grasp the figuration of the filmic material. This means also that the essential dynamism of cinema can be clearly revealed through the mapping of sonic operations and through the understanding of sonic plasticity. This paper tries to map the operations of this kind in Lucrecia Martel’s film through the isolation of sonic figures and the description of their transfiguration. The analysis reveals that this film develops a figural relationship (in the sense established by Erich Auerbach) between sounds and the source of sounds, between ambiguous signifier and clear signified, between sensory impression and trancendental experience. Martel’s film uses the very base of filmic material – the connection and disconnection of sound and image – for a metaphisical interpretation of the human experience.
Publisher
Universitatea Sapientia din municipiul Cluj-Napoca
Reference21 articles.
1. "1. Auerbach, Erich. [1959] 1984. Scenes from the Drama of European Literature. Minneapolis: University of Minnesota Press.
2. 2. Baldassari, Lorenzo. 2015. Interview with Philippe Grandrieux. Lo specchio scuro, 22 September. http://specchioscuro.it/interview-philippe-grandrieux-intervista-grandrieux/. Last accessed 6. 06. 2024.
3. 3. Brenez, Nicole. 1998. De la figure en général et du corps en particulier: L'invention figurative au cinéma. Paris, Bruxelles: De Boeck.
4. 4. Brophy, Philip. ed. 1999. Cinesonic: The World of Sound in Film. North Ryde: Australian Film Television and Radio School.
5. 5. Brown, Royal S. 1994. Overtones and Undertones: Reading Film Music. Berkeley, Los Angeles, London: University of California Press.