Esta obra monumental, fruto de largos años de intenso trabajo, refleja ampliamente todas las ideas de Dracauer sobre el cine, desde la reivindicación de lo que se podría denominar un realismo humanista hasta la descripción del papel que debe desempeñar el arte cinematográfico en la cultura contemporánea. Como testigo de un estado de cosas y como alternativa crítica, el texto tiene el empaque de una propuesta vital, ofreciendo así dos intereses distintos y a la vez por un lado, un interés histórico, como reflejo de un momento de la evolución del cine como arte en desarrollo; y, por otro, un interés hermenéutico, como documento de un estado de la cuestión en lo que se refiere a la teoría crítica, no sólo como enfrentamiento con el hecho de la imagen en movimiento, sino también con el hecho de la interpretación -más ontológica que valorativa- de esa misma imagen. Libro denso y sugerente, abierto a cualquier discusión, Teoría del cine posee la riqueza suficiente como para ser a la vez una toma de postura y un trabajo erudito; una obra personalísima, en fin, que ha ejercido una considerable influencia en numerosos profesionales del medio.
Born to a Jewish family in Frankfurt am Main, Kracauer studied architecture from 1907 to 1913, eventually obtaining a doctorate in engineering in 1914 and working as an architect in Osnabrück, Munich, and Berlin until 1920.
Near the end of the First World War, he befriended the young Theodor W. Adorno, to whom he became an early philosophical mentor.
From 1922 to 1933 he worked as the leading film and literature editor of the Frankfurter Zeitung (a leading Frankfurt newspaper) as its correspondent in Berlin, where he worked alongside Walter Benjamin and Ernst Bloch, among others. Between 1923 and 1925, he wrote an essay entitled Der Detektiv-Roman (The Detective Novel), in which he concerned himself with phenomena from everyday life in modern society.
Kracauer continued this trend over the next few years, building up theoretical methods of analyzing circuses, photography, films, advertising, tourism, city layout, and dance, which he published in 1927 with the work Ornament der Masse (published in English as The Mass Ornament).
In 1930, Kracauer published Die Angestellten (The Salaried Masses), a critical look at the lifestyle and culture of the new class of white-collar employees. Spiritually homeless, and divorced from custom and tradition, these employees sought refuge in the new "distraction industries" of entertainment. Observers note that many of these lower-middle class employees were quick to adopt Nazism, three years later.
Kracauer became increasingly critical of capitalism (having read the works of Karl Marx) and eventually broke away from the Frankfurter Zeitung. About this same time (1930), he married Lili Ehrenreich. He was also very critical of Stalinism and the "terrorist totalitarianism" of the Soviet government.
With the rise of the Nazis in Germany in 1933, Kracauer migrated to Paris, and then in 1941 emigrated to the United States.
From 1941 to 1943 he worked in the Museum of Modern Art in New York City, supported by Guggenheim and Rockefeller scholarships for his work in German film. Eventually, he published From Caligari to Hitler: A Psychological History of the German Film (1947), which traces the birth of Nazism from the cinema of the Weimar Republic as well as helping lay the foundation of modern film criticism.
In 1960, he released Theory of Film: The Redemption of Physical Reality, which argued that realism is the most important function of cinema.
In the last years of his life Kracauer worked as a sociologist for different institutes, amongst them in New York as a director of research for applied social sciences at Columbia University. He died there, in 1966, from the consequences of pneumonia.
His last book is the posthumously published History, the Last Things Before the Last.
I personally feel that this is the bridge between the early onslaught of Nazi propagandism and the regime that followed. Kracauer is a visionary. His sense for where film belonged among popular culture is very valuable for understanding what happened during wartime Germany.
Behind a sometimes pedantic "medium specificity" theory of film aesthetics is something urgent and even radical—a nuanced argument for the utility of cinematic captures amid changing technologies and conditions of experience. "The film screen is Athena's polished shield," and that function depends not on a particular medium in the narrow sense but on an attunement enabled by cinematic perception.
When I (finally, after three tries) gained entry to the Polytechnic of Central London to study film-but-mainly-photography in the 1980s, I had with me a copy of Kracauer’s film theory book, with its thrilling front-cover image of an unspooled film spool (the pic here is different!). Within about a fornight it was in a box under the bed. There was really nothing so uncool as a book of Marxist film criticism on a degree course that was all French post-structuralism and radical anti-realism. It’s back on the shelf, of course, now that we’re all happily absorbing the work of opinionated materialists again, and it's brilliant, bracing, Frankfurt School thinking. I love this book.
Kracauer's quasi-philosophical investigation of the meaning of cinema was published almost at the half way mark (1960) between the age of Melies and Lumiere and that of the MCU Universe and Bullet Train.
Naturally it suffers from looking back over seventy years without benefit of the subsequent sixty. Cinema morphs with technology in a way that does not apply to Literature. This matters a great deal. Nevertheless the book still stands as a relatively early attempt to 'understand' Film.
Kracauer's core thesis (although the book is also valuable for many specific insights) is that cinema is closely linked to physical reality although I would dispute the thesis myself. This is also where he is at his most obscure.
It is the insights that require our attention because they do what good philosophy should do - not allow us to close the book having found some secret about reality but rather driving us to question further and develop our own answers.
For example, he refers to the universality of film - how an audience in (say) New York can 'see' persons and events in Tokyo or Bombay. This raises interesting questions about the role of film in constructing global culture and the role of propaganda in the struggle to control the planet.
He usefully makes clear the line that separates the cinematic from the theatrical and literary. Although we may enjoy a film version of Shaw or Austen, such a film version cannot be called cinematic unless it is cinematic, making use of the unique character of the medium.
Then there is the difference between stage acting (projection in real space and time to an audience in position and busy suspending disbelief through the magic of words) and film acting where the camera is said to 'love' the actor. The audience identifies with fluid movement and small gestures.
Watch Lilian Gish as a nineteen year old in her first film ('An Unseen Enemy', 1912) and you see the very origins of the concept of 'star'. She shines. We do not suspend belief when we watch a film, we believe something entirely new in an oneiric experience.
This might be why the surrealists played so assiduously with film but Kracauer has another solid insight for us - that extending Art into film is not cinematic, it is just the use of another medium for the sake of Art.
He deals with experimental film (and its obverse, documentary) at length. He dismisses much of it as uncinematic although I would suggest that experiments can become profoundly cinematic in the hands of Rene Clair, Maya Deren, Kenneth Anger or Curtis Harrington.
If the book has a fault (perhaps a forgivable one in the light of the high seriousness of mid-twentieth century intellectual life) it is that Kracauer has a tendency to put cinema into far too tight a strait-jacket, to move towards the 'canonical' thinking that might ossify an art.
It never gets that bad both because Kracauer does not become overly prescriptive and because we know now that cinema would continue to develop along lines that Kracauer could not possibly have anticipated - the French New Wave, Tarantino, CGI, whatever.
If he does show a sense of disapproval, it perhaps appears in his resistance to the leaching of Art into cinema. He emphasises the materiality of cinema and the fact that it cannot reproduce concept and thought processes as the novel has done.
Instinctively this is right as we have all seen a favourite book mangled by film makers, a great film based on a book looking less impressive after reading the novel, great films made from very bad books and films strangled into dullness by verbiage thanks to literary scriptwriters.
However, I kept finding myself disputing his thesis of materiality which seemed to depend a great deal on his constant references back to the then-fashionable Italian Neo-Realists and to a clear prejudice in favour of the documentary.
First, film's oneiric quality (which he very much acknowledges) does not require the dream to be cast in surrealist terms but allows the film itself to be the dream. This capacity for becoming the dream has been enhanced in recent decades by new technologies such as CGI and in animation.
Second, the alleged material reality in the cinematic (as in the photographic) is illusory since the selection of images means the de-selection of everything not included in the presentation of reality and the abandonment of all the other senses and personal movement that we use to navigate reality.
When we live in the world, we select but from a much wider range of possible sensory choices. We create our own reality from immediate material reality. In cinema and photography, someone creates a limited reality for us to lose ourselves in - a willing restriction of choice.
This focusing of perception on sound and vision without smell, touch, taste or prioperception or the ability to walk away (to sit 'entranced') means that the link to material reality is like that we have in dreams - it seems real while we are in the state of entrancement.
Most of us will have had the sensation of leaving a cinema (the television screen or tablet is less able to do this) and found that the film has taken a while to leave us, that it leaches into reality much like the experience of waking from a particularly intense dream and still half-thinking we are in it.
Film 'uses' material reality but is not material reality other than the technology required to get the image into our eyes and the sound into our ears. It merely purports to be material reality which is why we should continue to distrust news footage and documentaries. They are selective artefacts.
The implications of film as vector for dream-like acceptance of invented realities and its effect on human culture has still barely been analysed, perhaps because much of the relevant intelligentsia is closely involved in its production and the recipients do not care.
Reading Kracauer and earlier theorists, you become increasingly aware that humanity has become increasingly inoculated to the 'magic' of film as merely film and has learned to lose itself into the dramatic and fantastic yet increasingly to become doubtful of the allegedly factual.
Film is unique whether as news footage or 'cinema' because nothing but film presents us with an apparent reality in movement away from the source of that reality. There is, of course, recorded music and words where we have to fill in any imagery ourselves but photography is still.
Theatre and opera or masque unless filmed might be 'oneiric' with suspension of disbelief but it is bound by physicality in itself and it requires a ritual more complex than buying a ticket and sitting in a dark room where you can walk in and out any time you want. At home, there is no ritual.
It has also become the 'art' that can express the lives of the marginal and the different to the largest number of people in the shortest amount of time alongside the mass news media. Without either, high art expressions of meaning are highly restricted in their reach to elites.
Which raises interesting questions about propaganda which Kracauer seems not to grasp or want to grasp. Exactly how much is film an intrinsically exploitative or intrinsically liberatory medium? The skills of the film maker are, in themselves, no more ethically grounded than the atomic scientist's.
This, of course, applies to all arts and literature. It takes us back to the theatrical where Kracauer points out Olivier's genius in thinking cinematically in order to enfold his theatrical versions of Hamlet and Henry V and yet these are essentially theatrical not cinematic experiences.
The film musical becomes a type case in the intrinsic creative absurdity of the cinematic, episodes of realism along usually hackneyed lines being interposed episodically (episodes are seen by Kracauer as essential to film story-telling) with 'numbers' being actually cinematic.
He has an extensive section on the use of sound in cinema which is still useful if perhaps one of the more obscurely philosophical sections. And, yes, the book can be a dry read at times so that the insights are fought hard for if worthwhile.
Overall one gets the sense of an intellectual trying to (at least partly) academicize something almost too slippery ever to be analysed in such terms. The thinking is sound but you get the impression that, at any moment, a new 'fact' (a new film) might unravel any proposition he might make.
Cinema is an art but not part of Art. It works because it follows its own material nature (the underpinning technology) and creates a bond between its producer and its audience based on a shared understanding about the material reality that the producer uses to reach the audience.
The 'chase' is an example. The 'chase' is cinematic since no other art form can present rapid movement over time and space. It may be a spool of film or pixels 'in reality' but, in the author's time, the chase was only possible by putting a camera on a vehicle in the real world and editing.
Sixty years on, the 'chase' is still cinematic but it is manufactured in the editing suite from a combination of live action (often actors with a green screen) and CGI. Bullet Train is one long invention of material reality through the digital. Kracauer's material reality is no longer central.
What we are probably seeing in this book is an early attempt to create a tradition, a route to a canon, at a time when film needed to be presented as an art to be respectable (rather than as a global business sensitive to popular culture).
To a great extent, this does take place - the Nouvelle Vague needed Hitchcock to feel real, Tarantino needed the Hollywood of the 1960s and 1970s to create his 'ouevre' as an 'auteur' - but the 'art form' (like comic books) is vastly bigger than canonical thinking can now permit.
Rather than an accepted 'tradition' (which was still conceptually possible to imagine in 1960), cinema is now a huge and growing pool of eclectic items from which each generation of film-makers can pick and choose whatever will 'sell' as bridge between their creativity and the public. Times change.
J’adhère au parti-pris de Krakauer (le cinéma comme art réaliste par excellence) non pas par conviction, mais par goût. C’est là la faute principale de cet ouvrage : le fait qu’elle repose (ou semble reposer) sur une argumentation personnelle et somme toute subjective, et non sur un avis objectif. Cela dit, beaucoup de ses chapitres peuvent facilement être validés. Mais pas tous. 3,2/5
Yet another book for my film class, so I only read about 2/3, but it was good. It was dense at times, and I had to re-read some things just to make sure I understood, but overall I liked the writing style.
Wie immer bei älteren Büchern kann man nie hundertprozentig einer Meinung mit dem Autor sein. Doch Kracauer hat mir sehr gefallen - seine Sprache ist flüssig und schön, er ist nicht (fast nie) konservativ. Es ist eine Reise durch alte Filme und eben ein sehr theoretischer Text, nichts für technische Filmliebhaber. Seine Punkte gefallen mir sehr : die Dualität des Films zwischen Beeinflussung und Befreiung des Zuschauers, der Zuschauer zwischen Bildkonsum und Träumen. So ist es: nicht schwarzer oder weiß. Genauso wird Film auch im Kontext von Kunst gesehen - etwas Neues, nicht fest definierte Kunst. Das gefällt mir und macht das Buch äußerst interessant, angenehm und irgendwie auch zeitlos.
4.5/5 - Essential text that understands thoroughly the thousandfold nuances unique to film, even the parts neglected by uneven focus on the cornerstones were fully available to surmise and ultimately referred to. Further fascinating in relation to the platonic flow of life, abstraction's faults, modernity, and yet also in having been published before films of the 1960s, providing an older view of cinematic history from barely after its origins.
Kracauer successfully shifted me into the mindset of a mid century film goer, giving an axiomatic reading of the form and functions of cinema. While I didn’t agree with some of his takes, his direct analysis of the vices and virtues were highly persuasive and insightful to the minutia we take for granted. I’d love to see what he thinks of contemporary film now that I have a great idea of the best 1920s–40s’ releases.
Das kann man schon lesen, obwohl es ein wenig wie eine Eigenparodie wirkt. Soziologisch verbrämtes Gewäsch. Aber wenigstens spürt man, dass der Mann den Film (natürlich nur sw, erstaunlicherweise lässt er Ton gelten) liebte, und darum wollen wir das gern durchgehen lassen. 5/10
Obviously Kracauer is a bit restrictive, but there’s still much here of interest and of worth. There’s a paragraph near the end where he anticipates McLuhan! And his passion for the subject is unmistakable, as well as his ability to turn a good phrase.
'Theory of Film' is an ambitious early foundational work on its title's topical field(s) of study. This 1960 book is Siegfried Kracauer's final completed work prior to his passing in 1967, only a short time before its recognition in film studies scholarship and curriculums the following decade. While this volume is imperfect as a work by itself, its insights and perspectives come from an author who is himself a curious, intelligent, amusingly (almost dourly) dry, and naturally eccentric character.
Here are sophisticated, distinguishing, even important ideas (for example, the opening chapter on photography) along with a few portions which are irrelevant by the time the book gets its full acceptance. It's palpable in the later sections, when his political conclusions or definitions of the place of film feel very specifically affected by his political and cultural observations as a young journalist and writer throughout the chaos of the Weimar Republic and the emerged full nihilism of National Socialism.
Kracauer has another book on cinema, a 1942 analysis of early 20th century German film, 'From Caligari to Hitler: A Psychological Study of the German Film,' written immediately upon safely escaping to the USA from occupied France. That earlier one is methodically consistent and "indispensable" and as such is accorded consistent accolades. It was also the product of necessity, American appeal, and is a summation of the chapters of his life from his education through his early career. But what remains worthwhile in 'Theory of Film' feels alive and contemporary, and Kracauer is inspiring yet unlike the circles of his peers and his pseudo-alignments (e.g. Critical Theory), someone who remains outside the stereotypical categorizations of early 20th century intellectual movements.
(Note: a number of Kracauer's earlier books were written in German and subsequently translated by others, but Kracauer writes this one's English edition himself.)