5.10.2009

Montage theory: Eisenstein, Vertov, & Hitchcock 1: Eisenstein & montage

from North by Northwest by Hitchcock,
the United Nations sequence


Theories in film has always fascinated me. I recently came across this interesting site which discusses three montage theories. Here is the first:

“Montage--juxtaposing images by editing--is unique to film (and now video). During the 1920s, the pioneering Russian film directors and theorists Sergei Eisenstein and Dziga Vertov demonstrated the technical, aesthetic, and ideological potentials of montage. The ‘new media’ theorist Lev Manovich has pointed out how much these experiments of the 1920s underlie the aesthetics of contemporary video.

Eisenstein believed that film montage could create ideas or have an impact beyond the individual images. Two or more images edited together create a “tertium quid” (third thing) that makes the whole greater than the sum of its individual parts.

Eisenstein’s greatest demonstration of the power of montage comes in the “Odessa Steps” sequence of his 1925 film Battleship Potemkin. On the simplest level, montage allows Eisenstein to manipulate the audience’s perception of time by stretching out the crowd’s flight down the steps for seven minutes, several times longer than it would take in real time:”



The rapid progression and alternation of images gives a sensational event even greater visceral impact:



More of this first page Here. The other two pages, Here and Here.




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