posted on 2023-01-20, 14:59authored byMatteo Ciccognani
This article frames a theoretical discussion of cinematic gestures in their opposing forms, illusionism and reflexivity, exploring different modes connecting surveillance and film. One observes cinema as an illusionistic surveilling machine that records reality. In this respect, surveillance can be an “element of movie plots.” Then, given the simultaneously entrapped and swaying nature of cinematic gestures, the investigation of film reflexivity associated with surveillance reveals a dual character. The dominant one (auto-mediacy), although guided by a subversive thrust, ultimately reinforces the dynamics of the internal panopticon, the regulation, and the marketization of the self. Conversely, another form of emancipative self-reflexivity (autoscopia) operates a set of enunciations exalting the filmmaking process’ materiality. The film Grizzly Man is an example of autoscopia generating a form of technology-mediated subversive self examination.
History
Citation
Ciccognani, M. (2022). Exploring Modes of Surveillance in Films. CINEJ Cinema Journal, 10(1), 89-123. doi:https://doi.org/10.5195/cinej.2022.444
Author affiliation
School of Business
Version
VoR (Version of Record)
Published in
CINEJ Cinema Journal
Volume
10
Issue
1
Pagination
89 - 123
Publisher
University Library System, University of Pittsburgh