Philip
Hoffman’s Films by Gary Popovich
The
films of Philip Hoffman exemplify a process in which raw, amorphous experience
undergoes examination, whereupon the filmmaker's initial emotion and volition
are sublimated to a state of cognition. The filmmaking process acts as a catalyst
organizing nature, objects, people, events, film (and other media), memory,
and time into a comprehensible form for understanding experience. The phenomenological
(both that which is captured on film and that which is Lot captured on film)
is ordered into an ontological system by the act of filmmaking.
Nature,
or objects in nature, rarely stand for something else in Hoffman's films.
Buildings, dogs, vehicles, ponds, and beaches have a relationship to the past,
or conjure memories of the past, which stir the filmmaker to put the stories,
events, and memory fragments in relationship to the present. As experiential
images captured on film they open a context which demands questions from the
filmmaker during his editing: Where was I then? What happened? Why did I want
to remember it, to capture it on film? What is its relationship to the past,
and to similar older film footage? Was it the colour, or form which captured
my eye, or did it serve as a respite from the hectic interaction with people?
The inherent form, colour, or movement of a shot is reason enough for its
inclusion in his films. Objects are often allowed to perform purely cinematic
purposes, as opposed to symbolic purposes, so that the filmmaker predicates
the logistics of his personal cinematic memory as the sole means of structuring
his film.
In
his films Hoffman acknowledges the influence of the Beat poets, especially
of novelist Jack Kerouac; but I think Hoffman's form puts into practice the
theoretical work done by poet Charles Olson at least to the degree of success
attained by the so-called Beat filmmakers (Robert. Frank for example), if
not to a greater degree of success, using Olson's 'projective' or 'open' form.
Olson's poetics, even in the often idiosyncratic and abstruse language
he uses, do clearly strike to the root of Hoffman's
manner of formal organization:
if he (the poet) stays
inside himself, if he is contained
within his nature
as he is participant in the larger force,
he will
be able to listen, and his hearing through himself will give him secrets objects
share. And by an inverse law his
shapes
will make their own way. It is in this sense that the projective act, which
is the artist's act in the larger field of objects, leads to dimensions larger
than the man. For a man's problem, the moment he takes speech up in all its
fullness, is to give his work his seriousness, a seriousness sufficient to
cause the thing he makes to try to take its place alongside the things of
nature. ...breath is man's special qualification as animal. Sound is a dimension
he has extended. Language is one of his proudest acts. And when a poet rests
in these as they are in himself ... then he, if he chooses to speak from these
roots, works in that area where nature has given him size, projective size.1
I believe the references to language, speech,
and breath are applicable to Hoffman's films in terms of his relationship
to the camera. Repeatedly the camera is alluded to being an extension, or
inextricable part, of the filmmaker's body. The act of becoming one with the
camera, and one with nature, is exemplified in The Road Ended At The Beach
(1983) where Hoffman (as he is dancing over rocks in a stream, camera looking
at the rocks and water) concedes that the best time "is when I'm on my
own with the camera" or in Somewhere Between Jalostotitlan and Encarnacion
when he incorporates the breath, or duration of the spring wind, of the Bolex
camera (approximately 28 seconds) into the film as he would his own physical
and motor capacities for maneuvering with the camera.
Nature
is appreciated for what it is, and displayed as such; mountains or rivers,
people or objects, do not derive their significance as symbols but as elements
which the filmmaker must confront or through which he must pass. In The
Road Ended At The Beach confrontation leads to revelation as object or
event recalls a similar more pleasing moment in the past, so that cinematically
even the past and present confront each other, thereby manifesting the personal
visions, and memories of the filmmaker.
When
objects and nature are used in terms of symbols, Hoffman is less successful.
Freeze-Up (1979) is weakened by the predictability of movement from
the good, calm, bright, warmth of the country to the cold, dark, fast and
impersonal city. The images are less than inspired, as if Hoffman's heart
was not at one with the material, creating a coldly impersonal work that cries
out for his presence. His strongest work includes himself as a participant
in the action. This he has learned to do quite well with growing confidence
from On The Pond (1978) to The Road Ended At The Beach culminating
in his latest film Somewhere Between where he has learned how to remove
actual images of himself from his film while retaining a personal quality
through reference to the relationship between himself, his camera, and passing
events.
Freeze-Up
also suffers due to the restrictive reading of nature which is reduced to
a few probabilities rather than leaving it open, for the most part, as it
is in The Road Ended At The Beach and Somewhere Between. Vestiges
of restrictive signification of objects are still in evidence in The Road
Ended At The Beach (such as the 'Feeling Satisfied' sign which is a rather
trite comment upon the growing disenchantment of the travellers with their
journey) but these have disappeared in Somewhere Between. When Hoffman
does not take the elements he works with into himself, and resorts to the
imposition of foreign elements (whether they be resonant with understandable
symbolic cultural signification or not) the phenomenological remains in the
realm of phenomena and neither the audience nor the filmmaker has come any
closer in understanding the ontological relationship between the filmmaker
and his work. However, when Hoffman's bond with nature and his art is most
successfully manifested through the depiction of his vicissitudinous relationships
between people, events, and objects he, in a practical sense, captures the
essence of the theoretical definition of art proposed by Nietzsche in his
famous dictum* "art is not merely imitation of the reality of nature
but rather a metaphysical supplement of the reality of nature, placed beside
it for its overcoming."2
At
the same time Hoffman must ask himself in what way film, or the camera, gets
in the way; in what way does it restructure the manner in which we look at
experience by the nature of cinematic selectivity of shooting and editing?
The presence of the camera is repeatedly acknowledged; the filmmaker grapples
continually with the meaning of what he has recorded on film and what he would
have liked to record. In On The Pond snapshots and slides from the
filmmaker's childhood are buttressed against live action footage of a young
boy playing hockey and the filmmaker sifting through hockey memorabilia. The
old slides are thus instilled with an emotional quality which reaches the
audience, capturing, in their juxtaposition with live footage, quite successfully
the spirit of what was initially only of private value. For all its slides,
its periodic self references, and the opening slate, On The Pond is
not nearly as reflexive or self-consciously reflective as
The Road Ended
At The Beach. In this film a trip east documented by the filmmaker and
two friends is edited with film footage of previous trips to the east and
west coasts of Canada, with occasional references to trips undertaken by Conrad
Dube, a physically handicapped bicycle rider who has clocked 308,000 km. world-wide;
Rup Chand, an old Tibetan friend who inspires Hoffman to keep a journal after
talks about trips to the far east; and Kerouac and Cassidy, who seem to have
been the seminal influences of filmmaker-road traveller Hoffman. The film
is laden with photographs, old films, inter-titles, conversation about previous
films of Hoffman and his filmmaker friend Richard Kerr,3 conversation concerning
the present film, references to the camera, and shots of the filmmaker both
travelling and at work on the film.
The
trip, full of disappointment and frustration, is continually set in contrast
to more glorious or exotic trips in the past. This trek to the east coast,
having been consciously planned as a trip for documentation on film, by its
very nature is conducive to introspection and comparison by the filmmaker
and his art. His hopes may have been set too high in anticipation of dazzling
film footage of adventure. Pressed by his preconceived needs and the cost
of such an undertaking he feels the trip is failing to deliver that which
was expected; the result is a documentation of his own reflective thoughts
and cinematic perceptions concerning failure to measure up to the past, failure
to realize the idealized preconceptions one might have about a trip that would
seem to hold great promise, and failure to actually see the richness that
the present does hold (albeit hidden during the actual shooting) so that the
finished film is a rich mosaic that successfully captures the predilections
and artistic turmoils of the filmmaker in the midst of trying to understand
his artform.
A brilliant example
of this occurs through the use of a repeated
fragment of dialogue
over two shots that although formally similar, contextually reveal the filmmaker's
reflections on the disparity between. bright expectation at the beginning
and introspection towards the end. As the three friends set out in their van,
Hoffman gives us a shot from inside of the van looking out to the road ahead
(the characters in silhouette, the road ahead exposed for detail), while on
the soundtrack Jim, the driver, sings and comments about the "big last
run" of the van. After the meeting with Robert Frank (which is disturbingly
anti-climactic due to Frank's stand-offish manner) Hoffman cuts in shots of
the stern of a ferry and the wake behind it, ferry smoke stacks, a shot out
of a porthole which dissolves to red, then dissolves to a shot of himself
in a room listening to sound from the film, to a shot from inside the van
once again — this time with the view out of the van windshield over-exposed
while the interior of the van is exposed for detail. As we hear Jim repeat
"the big last run" Hoffman's voice comes on the soundtrack to says
"The trip begins again. Now I look inside the van." From 'this point
onward the shots of past trips come into disparaging collision with the present
due to their perceived banality and mundaneness, and especially due to Hoffman's
harsh interpolatory comments such as: "I recall more exotic trips ...
he (Jim) told me he'd rather be at home ... he (Richard Kerr) must have felt
imprisone1 by the van ... I expected adventure, but the road had
died since the first trip west with Jim ... the best time for me is when I'm
on my own with the camera." With shots through mirrors, looking back,
from an automobile speeding through the rain on a distant western trip and
some final disparaging remarks, the camera ends up on an eastern beach in
Newfoundland with no further to go. The camera itself seems to reflect on
how far it has come, looking incessantly at a large rock in the ocean, with
reflection, and the return, its only alternative.
Hoffman
appears in Somewhere Between only through the first person singular
'I' in the intertitles. Retaining its personal quality through the titles,
the film's images (gathered from various locations in Mexico; Boulder, Colorado;
and Toronto, Ontario) organize the phenomena of experience into a system that
attempts to understand the myriad of spiritual feelings and spiritual acts
in a universal sense. The text tells the story of a dead Mexican youth encountered
by the filmmaker "on the road." Among the visuals are Mexican street
scenes, pious worshippers in front of a church, children inside a church,
street bands, and a religious parade. The filmmaker, at this point in his
career, realizes the richness of documenting his own searching attempts to
bring together related experience. In one segment an artist is copying a painting
of Christ. Superimposed over the image of the artist is a close-up of his
hand and brush in motion; however, as the brush moves it seems to be tracing
the outline of, and painting, the artist himself, so as to say that as one
creates a work of art one is actually drawing oneself. The subject of much
of 20th century art involves artistic activity as a paradigm of experience
and free activity without prescribed norms. Hoffman himself seems to feel
that by making the process of filmmaking a large part of his subject, he can
best demonstrate the action of filmmaking and his relationship to it.
Along
with nature and reflexivity, children too figure prominently in Hoffman's
films. After a clapboard is removed from the shot, On The Pond begins
with an outdoor nighttime scene and a young boy's voice asking: "Are
we
going to do it tomorrow?" A voice, which we assume belongs to the filmmaker,
responds with a simple "yes." What they do the next day is both
shoot the film and play some hockey. The. boy plays a role similar to that
which we can imagine Hoffman to have played as a young boy fascinated with
hockey and
the ice skating pond.
In fact the boy acts as a means to manifest the filmmaker's own personal childhood
experiences and emotions. He captures the boy's joy, his preoccupation with,
and concentration on, hockey, as well as the attendant fears and embarrassments.
Intercut with this footage are slides projected off a screen, while on the
soundtrack the filmmaker's family provides a commentary.
In a wonderfully evocative scene we see an array
of old slides of
the
pond area is a young woman's voice says "I wanna go back." Hoffman
then dissolves from the slides to live action slow motion footage of the young
boy stick-handling a puck around his dog. He then inserts a.match
cut of pages flipping, then a match cut of the boy waving his scarf in the
direction of the dog and the camera while on the soundtrack we hear the growing
buzz of an arena crowd. As the boy, now stick-handling again, falls to the
ice, the soundtrack crossfades from a shouting crowd to the family laughing
loudly, whereupon Hoffman finally cuts to a slide of a bald headed boy (undoubtedly
Hoffman himself) standing out amongst other family members. The scene delineates
a complex relationship between the private and fragile self-conceptions of
childhood, and the often disquieting insouciance of the public (family included),
while Hoffman leaves no doubt that an adult filmmaker, too, is not immune
to this kind of suffzring.
In The Road Ended At The Beach Hoffman
begins by looking, as with
the eyes of a child,
back to his heroes in literature (Kerouac) and photography (Frank) and to
previous trips, soon finding himself asking what it means to confront their
stories with his own self-styled model of their journeys. They have become
older; their legends demystified, they have become part of mundane reality.
For Hoffman, action must be put on hold; the time for reflection ha come.
By the end of the film he has come to the edge of land and water where he
stares out at a large enigmatic rock in the ocean. On the soundtrack and
in front of the camera, children, oblivious to Hoffman, are able to transform
the distant rock into their personal plaything singing to the tune of "On
Top of Old Smokey." Hoffman stares at the rock trying to comprehend
after all the distance he has come; the children accept it as part of their
experience. The song recalls a similar scene in Robert Frank's film Pull
My Daisy in which a child interrupts the narrative track, which is otherwise
dominated by Jack Kerouac, by singing "Humpty Dumpty." The child's
nursery rhyme has as much validity as the musings of a wild poet. But where
this makes a rupture and sets the apartment confined poets in search of adventure
accompanied by Kerouac's musically phrased "let's go ... let's go!"
in Pull My Daisy, Hoffman, in The Road Ended At The Beach, seems
to say
'we've
been... let us stop now and examine where we have been ... let us try to comprehend.'
Realizing that it is his own personal journey that matters most, and that
some aspects of nature and existence can best be understood, or come to terms
with, through the imagination, Hoffman is able to work more confidently and
universally in scope in his next film.
Where
in The Road Ended At The Beach documentation on film seems to be the
pre-text for the journey, in Somewhere Between the journey serves as
a pre-text for the triangulation of simultaneous spiritual events (Toronto,
Boulder, and Mexico). Through the inter-titles we get the story of the dead
boy on the Mexican road; the images show us children playing in an empty church,
a child begging for money in front of a street band; a little girl playing
on a large sculptured model of a snail, and children dressed as angels in
celebration of the Feast of Fatima. A certain ambiguity arises from these
images in juxtaposition with the text. The last title tells us "the boy's
spirit left through its blue." In the visuals the children seem to be
cinematically orchestrated in concert for the redemption, safe passage, or
re-incarnation of the boy's spirit; but the film is full of walls. The camera
searches along them, over them, through doorways, but we can only get a glimpse
at what lies beyond due to interruptions such as a hesitant and shaky camera
or a deliberate cut away. Throughout the scene in which children parade as
angels and an artist copies a painting of Christ, Hoffman has superimposed
a blue wall. The camera's long look at the end of The Road Ended At
The Beach (the realization point) has superimposed its lesson over
much of Somewhere Between, so that barriers and the inability to-entirely
understand all experience is now accepted and the filmmaker is free to express
and orchestrate the feelings he has, upon seeing the dead boy, without attempting
an explanation.
The
manner in which time is used, in two of the three films discussed -here, is
a direct reflection of the difficulty in dealing with present
experience. Feeling the past encroaching upon each present moment, camera
in hand, Hoffman documents the apparent lack he feels. In both On The Pond
and The Road Ended At The Beach this is initiated by
memory, discovered and analyzed as he sifts through the past and present visual
and aural material .he has gathered, and communicated to an audience by means
of his editing. The film, as finished product, is the result of trying to
come to terms with the present.
In
Somewhere Between the present no longer intrudes upon the filmmaking.
The first title reads:
looking through the
lens at passing events
i recall what once
was
and consider what might be
Initially this would
seem to be the same approach employed in The Road Ended At The Beach;
however, the consideration of "what might be" is no longer predicated
upon a restrictive reading of a dichotomous past-present laden with inquietude.
Hoffman, having extricated himself from the obfuscatory fetters of time, is
now able to consider a harmony among pro-filmic events. The intertitles often
mix the past and present tenses in the same breath.5 The images have a timeless
quality; 6 while space is rendered ambiguous, inasmuch as one is
not sure whether—certain images were shot in Toronto, Boulder, or Mexico.
Two
clear aspects of time do emerges (1) Hoffman before the lens considering time,
and (2) the present time of sitting through the actual screening of the film;
all other aspects of time are emotional and spiritual. When a title announces:
the little girl
with big eyes,
waits by her dead brother
The corresponding
image is not from Mexico, not from the same time, but is emotionally connected
to the text — we see a young girl climbing and crawling upon a large sculptured
snail in Boulder. Her face, and backward glances toward the camera, suggest
numerous unanswerable questions which one could well imagine the dead boy's
sister posing — and the filmmaker no less. An immemorial tenor is suggested
that parallels Hoffman's superimpositions of the painter's brush strokes upon
himself, placing the camera in a long line of tradition which finds itself
pre-occupied with spiritual questions or spiritual imagery in an often secular
sense. It is secular to the extent that Hoffman's imagery is of the mundane,
of the quotidian, while the narrative text, delivered with white letters on
black, attempts to conjure a sense of the extra-mundane (such as in the final
title when "the boy's spirit left through its blue").
Up
to The Road Ended At The Beach Hoffman displayed a methodical structuring
of the interactions of various time elements; with The Road Ended At
The Beach he seems to have found synchronicity to be a fundamental, or
necessary, grounding to his work. Yet the ideas, feelings, and impressions
are more contiguous than they are synchronous. The contiguous past and present
elements form a dialectic through the editing, resulting in an asperous look
to the film akin to the image we might have of the filmmaker on his journey.
The counterpoint in Somewhere Between is of a deeper weave; the narrative
text suggestively imprints images on the mind (that endure in a manner similar
to the persistence of vision properties in viewing motion picture images)
forcing the viewer to juggle these images with the actual visual images in
the film, so that the film's structure resembles that of a musical fugue.
As opposed to distinguishing the two, if one allows both sets of images (the
filmic and the suggested) to come together as one, a preterite film image
tense co-existing with the past-present tense of the text creates a form of
preterite present tense (as articulated by the filmmaker in the opening
title) releasing the filmmaker and the viewer from the restrictions of time.
In effect, the viewer plays as much a hart in structuring the work as the
filmmaker has — choosing where, how,*and when to accent the two sets of complimentary
images. The intrusive and/or disjunctive editing style of The Road Ended
At The Beach has been replaced by a simplified form of cutting on the
breaths, or lengths of the Bolex camera's shot, alternating with an intertitle
so that the intrusions and/or disjunctions are within the shots not in their
juxtaposition.
In
The Road Ended At The Beach the camera "got in the way" between
Hoffman and his subjects; it prevented the filmmaker from realizing on film
his preconceived ideas of how the trip would unfold and how it would, or could,
be documented. In Somewhere Between an intertitle tells us:
on the
road dead, lies a mexican youth i put the camera down the cop car passed right
by
In
order to come closer to events, to get in tune with them, at times it is necessary
to lay the camera down, looking not through the pre-figured limitations of
a lens and with the sensibility that accompanies the act of filmmaking, but
to see with one's own eyes and to look for the existing relationships.? The
result is a feeling of synchronicity with objects, people, and events represented
by images from Toronto, Boulder, and various locales in Mexico (excepting
the area where the dead boy was encountered). The rough handheld camera searching
through a Mexican alleyway, the children wandering among the empty congregation
chairs framed between two solid church pillars with a large crucifix visible
in the background, the street bands in Mexico and Boulder, the religious festival
in Toronto replete with a large sculpture of the virgin and with children
parading as angels, the young girl on the snail, and the quiet stream are
a result of the sublimating of the initial emotion inspired by the dead child
and the power of willing initially foreign elements to move in harmony with
one another and with the narrative text. This attitude in the filmmaker is
arrived at through the persistent efforts to understand the phenomenological
in terms of his relationship to the art of filmmaking, but could only have
reached this state of fruition by the ongoing realization (through On The
Pond and The Road Ended At The Beach) that the form of a film suggests
itself if one is able to see clearly the relationships between seemingly disparate
elements (objects, events, and people), the camera, and the eye of the filmmaker.
So the somewhat unspecific 'somewhere' between Jalostotitlan and Encarnacion8
is rendered explicitly as everywhere between what one can see and what one
can imagine.
In relation to time,
and in its two states of liquid and solid, water plays an important role in
Hoffman's films. The water in On The Pond, in
_its frozen state,
is an arena of inward reflection that catalytically allows the filmmaker to
reach back in time to his own childhood. The juxtaposition of documented evidence
of the past (snapshots and slides) with the shots of Hoffman, as a filmmaker,
returning to the frozen pond reveal the disparity between what the slides
signify to an independent observer and Hoffman's
,own
personal feelings towards the frozen moment which only through his manipulation
can relay to the audience the same warmth and emotional depth he feels in
them. What has not changed, one senses, is Hoffman's emotional
relationship
to the public and private aspects of his chosen activity (the love of hockey
as a youth, and hockey and filmmaking as an adult) so that over the course
of time only the ability to articulate feelings has changed — it has become
more adroit.
The
Road Ended At The Beach begins and ends with the sounds of waves. What
surfaces through the course of the film is Hoffman's dissatisfaction and attempts
to come to terms with the shards of recalled time,- both in memory and on
film, that suggest that the present view of things is grossly at odds with
one's past idealized perceptions. The finished film, in effect, creates a
new past which, once examined by the filmmaker, has a validity and importance
which was not recognizable during the actual shooting of the film. This idea
is not reactionary in and of itself as the past is not so much romanticized
as it is misunderstood in its relationship to the present; so that the methodical
work of the filmmaker pushes forward his understanding and ability to deal
with the present tense of his filmmaking by taking into account his initially
unfocussed way of perceiving the past.
The waves and water
bracketing the film suggest that the problem is immemorial and is, of necessity,
a problem which Hoffman must deal with if he is to grow as a filmmaker.
Each
image in Somewhere Between begs a question, is a hypothetical response
to the story of the dead boy. From the questions he posed about time, his
frustrated ideals, the inability to communicate as effectively as he would
like, and tumultuous emotions he felt in The Road Ended At The Beach
Hoffman has learned not to expect concrete answers but to keep his camera
searching for the unity of experience and emotion which he feels is bound
to all that his camera chooses to record. The last image of the film, a serene
stream in the woods,9 with the saxophonist exhaling his final quiet breaths
into his instrument, predicates the value of the unanswerable questions concerning
life and death and the contradictory elements of existence with which the
filmmaker has now learned to live. Although tinged with a sense of regret
or helplessness, Hoffman, with the last title, draws us an image of pathetic
fallacy that both asserts the inexorable and oblivious march of time and his
own sense of the synchronicity of mundane elements:
big trucks spit black
smoke
clouds hung
the boy's spirit
left through its blue
The multi-media piece
The River, Hoffman's latest work, reflects his growing interest concerning
the reproduction of images and the representation of pro-filmic events on
both film and video, as well as dealing with motifs (such as nature, time,
and water) that have surfaced in previous films. The first piece of The
River is a 3 minute 16mm film showing a river and river bank from the
point of view of the cameraman on a boat. The film captures the glimmering
of the sun reflecting off the water, the. texture of the leaves on the trees,
and a three dimensional look which one has come to expect from realistically
represented images. The film is silent, so the movement of objects (dropping
of a bobber, splashing of a paddle) and the movement of the boat has an ethereal
quality.
The
next piece is on black and white video with sound. The images, although sharp
and crystal clear, look decidedly different from the film image in fact, the
water and reflections from the water have an abstract look about them. The
camera is often moved jarringly and the sound is harsh and it intrusively
accentuates the movement of the boat and the boat's objects which had all
been smooth and slick in the film. The boat scrapes by branches, and at one
point comes into collision with a fallen tree protruding from the shore. Nature,
in this video, is something to contend with; and appropriately we get shadows
and reflections of the cameraman (Hoffman) shooting his images, as well as
shots of the microphone being buffeted about by the gear on the boat during
a long camera pan. If the film portion exuded a seamless string of ethereal
images, the video portion undermines, by interruptions, the false serenity
of the original footage.
The final piece is the original 16mm film flipped on its horizontal axis, so that the image is reversed, and recorded onto video directly from a screen projection of the film. The 1/24 second flickers of the film are captured on video resulting in further abstraction; the three dimensional quality and the glossy look has disappeared. The sounds, including those of birds, seem louder and incommensurate with the images — as if they were overcompensating for the deterioration of the representational images.
A significant work
in images and representation, and the meaning
various processes
construct in relationship to pro-filmic and filmic events, The River
remains more of an exercise (albeit an important one) than a finished product.
The original film footage seems to have been shot prior to the intent of incorporation
into a larger multi-media piece — but Hoffman's most successful shooting has
always preceded the conscious conceptualization of a final form.
The
various forms of media, with which Hoffman has been preoccupied in his films
were in need of undergoing the type of examination that The River offers
— in fact more rigorous examination is still necessary. In making The Road
Ended At The Beach the filmmaker learned not only that the camera got
in the way, but how it got in the way; in Somewhere Between it was
learned how the filmmaker, the camera, and the pro-filmic events could be
rendered accordant. Using the process of filmmaking to order phenomenological
events into an understandable ontological system, Hoffman has documented both
his own growth in film and his growing understanding of his relationship to
filmic and extra-filmic experience. With The River he turns outward
to the territory, as yet only peripherally explored by him, in which spectator-screen-image-filmmaker
relationships are to be explored, so that the process of filmmaking will provide
him with a means of epistemologically querying the cinematographic sound and
image.
1.
Olson discusses three "simplicities" by which composition by field,
or projective composition, is accomplished. "(1) KINETICS A poem is energy
transferred from where the poet got it (he will have some several causations),
by way of the poem itself to, all the way over to, the reader." As such
the poet "can go by no track other than the one the poem under hand declares,
for itself. (2) FORM IS NEVER MORE THAN AN EXTENSION OF CONTENT ... right
form, in any given poem, is the only and exclusively possible extension of
content under hand. (3) ONE PERCEPTION MUST IMMEDIATELY AND DIRECTLY LEAD
TO A FURTHER PERCEPTION."
Charles Olson, Selected
Writings; Poetry New York, 1950.
2.
Continually, Hoffman seems to be enmeshed in a struggle to understand his
reasons for making a film, or for turning on the camera, partly believing
that film (like music in Nietzsche's statement): "is not a copy of the
phenomenon, or, more accurately, of the adequate objectivity of the will,
but an immediate copy
of the will itself, and therefore complements everything physical in the world
and every phenomenon by representing what is metaphysical, the thing in itself,"
so that not only is Hoffman caught questioning his own will but also the meaning
of images that can seem to be a reflection of the will and an exact copy of
nature at one and the same time. Without resolve he continues to search for
an allusive oneness with nature in balance with a belief that "existence
and the world seem justified only as an aesthetic phenomenon."
Nietzsche
quoted from: Friedrich Nietzsche, The Birth of Tragedy, trans by Walter
Kaufmann; Random House, Inc., 1967.
3. A short segment of Kerr's film Dogs Have
Tales is inserted into Hoffman's
The Road
Ended At The Beach as Hoffman mentions that the two friends attended college
together ("we made films together"). Hoffman himself appears in
the shot from Kerr's film.
4.
Shortly before the end of The Road Ended At The Beach Hoffman inserts
a close-up of a child's face looking directly into the lens of the camera.
He then cuts back to Robert Frank who says, about the beat generation,: ?Maybe
things were freer because we knew less." After more shots through a rain
splattered car windshield (from one of the trips west) washed in somber colours
and replete with mirrors, a 'Feeling Satisfied' advertising sign, and a blue
moonlit evening, Hoffman cuts to his last shot on the beach in Newfoundland
looking out to the rock where we hear and see children again.
The
disillusionment and dissatisfaction Hoffman feels as his static camera peers,
blinking (the shot is composed of a series of jump cuts), attempting to understand
loss, change, and find meaning in what he sees (and has seen) while joyful
sounds of children playing about assail his private thoughts, -places him
in the same deplorable position in which Wordsworth found himself:
... I was often unable to think of external
things as having external existence, and I communed with all that I saw as
something not apart from, but inherent in, my own immaterial nature. Many
times while going to school have I grasped at a wall or tree to recall myself
from this abyss of idealism to the reality. At that time I was afraid of such
processes. In later periods of life I have deplored, as we have all reason
to do, a subjugation of an opposite character, and have rejoiced over the
remembrances, as is expressed in the lines -
'Obstinate
questionings Of sense and outward things, Fallings from us, vanishings; To
that dream-like vividness and splendour which invest objects of sight in childhood,
every one, I believe, if he would look back, could bear testimony ..."
William Wordsworth,
Introduction to "Ode: Intimations of Immortality
From Recollections
of Early Childhood"
After The Road Ended At The Beach, these
thoughts seem to be reconciled in Somewhere Between.
5. eg.
reaching out, the white sheet
is pulled over the
dead boy's body the children wept
6. The action in most shots is langourous; nearly
each shot is separated by an intertitle; three of the shots are in black and
white, thereby obscuring their contemporaneity; the selected Mexican locations
appear ageless, even in the second shot in which a large red Coca-Cola sign,
and speeding cars traversing the frame horizontally, try to dominate the image,
an old Mexican in a mule cart draws torpidly up the centre of the-frame and
stops.
7. By placing his camera down on the ground
and refusing to show images of the dead boy, Hoffman may seem to be following
an accepted wisdom, stemming as far back as the Greek classical tragedy, in
which the most explicit, violent, or horrifying act does not take place before
the eyes of the spectator (leaving it to the power of the imagination) or
he may be taking into consideration the dubitable efficacy of presenting spectacular
or gratuitous shots to an audience already immune to such images due to their
inundation from the mass media; but I contend it was a more personal moment
derived from the filmmaker's own history in film together with the attendant
awareness that he would be able later to capture images commensurate with
his feelings at the time, synchronous to his perceptions of the passing events
in the narrative text. Although unconscious decisions are made in the filming,
the material itself would suggest its own place in the editing stage.
8. Near the otherwise inconsiderable little
town of Jalostotitlan is an ornate graveyard; Encarnacion, a town 60 km. away,
is the Spanish word for incarnation. Somewhere on the road between these two
towns lies the dead boy.
9. The first image
and last two images of the film are shot in high contrast black and white
with yellow light added in the printing stage. Although many of the shots
in the film reflect a minimal amount of manipulation (superimpositions, wide
angle lenses) the first and the last two shots are almost painterly in their
look. The first shot is of a Boulder street playing; on the soundtrack we
hear the saxophone playing upbeat jazzy phrases that for a moment seem to
be synchronous to the image. We soon realize that the saxophone has been added
later and sound and image are not synchronous.. Through the course of the
film the saxophonist's breaths (and lonely, mellow phrasing) develop synchronously
with the breaths of the Bolex camera; and as the boy's spirit leaves through
its blue (in the intertitles), and the last two black and white-yellow coloured
shots (the girl on the snail and the stream in the woods) come up on the screen,
and the saxophone exhales a sigh, it is the filmmaker's manipulation which
manifests the harmonious concert of elements derived from his perception of
the synchronicity of people, events, and objects.