Kitchener/Berlin: Or How
One Becomes Two (Or None) by Steve Reinke
I know it's
a hollow rhetorical ploy, a cliché even, an excuse for a certain kind of
sloppiness, dispreparedness, but I mean it sincerely:
I have given up on the essay I meant to write. Instead I submit these pathetic
notes in the form of a letter asking for forgiveness. By now I should be used
to my failure as a critic. I continually back away from planned essays, taking
refuge in the literary: the aphorism, the satiric manifesto, the autobiographical
anecdote. But this retreat is more disappointing than most. When I watched Kitchener-Berlin again (I hadn't seen it
in many years) I was struck by its rightness, its perfection. It seemed to me
exemplary. Trebly exemplary: to (or as) the work of Hoffman, to Canadian
cinema, and to experimental film. The film surely merits close textual analyses
from a variety of approaches. Moreover, it seemed to me, however paradoxically,
that these analyses would constitute a more general discussion of experimental
film as an endeavor.
Apology
Sure, art
is long and life is short, but I am not troubled by this condition. What
bothers me is that art is complex and I am simple, though conflicted: stupid.
Art makes retards of us all. Writing about it is a clumsy thing, doomed to
always miss what is most significant and instead gloss the petty. Criticism
becomes an act of contrition, an extended apology. I am sorry, and sorry that
this is the case.
Film Contra
Video
Experimental
video is centered around the voice: an individual
talking, rhetorically deploying a particular subjectivity in relation to a
certain construction of consciousness. Video is willfully interior: its
relation to the world is never direct, but processed through a particular
subjectivity. It is doubly mediated, there is no
direct perception, no immediate apprehension of the world. One cannot speak of
phenomenology in relation to video without undue strain. Experimental film has
a completely different relation to voice and the world. There is no such thing
as a 'personal' film. The voice in film always aspires to be the voice of God.
Film is singly mediated,
self-consciously authored by authors who retreat behind subjectivity to become merely
thinking, perceiving bodies. Interiority is impossible,
the world itself impinges too strongly. Experimental video proceeds through a
process of talking to one's self as if one had a self; experimental film
through a process of swallowing or incorporating the world into a self which is
no longer human, but an author, a hollow signature attempting to structure
perception.
Deleuze
This season
it's all about Deleuze's cinema books. I keep reading
these books because his distinction between the time-image and movement-image
seems a fertile jumping-off point for a discussion of experimental film. But
the only films people seem to discuss are Hitchcock's (when Zizek
via Lacan should have silenced them all, at least
long enough so these hacks could take a break in which to think a little bit
harder). I asked Laura Marks—one of the few academics who has applied Deleuzian theory to artists' film and video—why this would
be the case. She said because artists such as Hoffman are applying Deleuze's insights directly (whether or not they have any
knowledge of his writing) the need is not so great. This is probably true, but
still I am not satisfied, and regret I am not able to supply such an analysis
at this time. But here is what I have learned from Deleuze:
that there is a kind of vertiginous ecstasy to be always on the verge of
coherency, to endlessly defer sense in the hope that what one approaches is
something that had been previously unfathomable.
Dream
I dreamt
last night that I came across a book called Kitchener-Berlin
and it was a really big book—lots of words, hardly any pictures, a few
diagrams—something between an encyclopedia and an autobiography. It contained
all the information about the images in the film, where they came from and what
they mean. This dream is partly a response to my hermeneutic anxiety—a feeling
that I can't write about the film without a greater level of mastery,
specifically the ability to form a reading which would proceed from an
extensive knowledge of what is depicted in individual shots. So while I
continue to remain firm that Kitchener-Berlin
does not call for that kind of interpretation (that is, will not constructively
yield to a directly hermeneutical approach), perhaps its dream book does (and
would). Perhaps this dream book is a bible situated between the artist and the
film and ready, in its encyclopedic detail, to tell us everything. We would
study the book endlessly in order to derive increasingly accurate
interpretations of the film. And the film itself—the hermetic, incorruptible
art object—could sink into the background, as pure and coyly mysterious as the
Mona Lisa.