Moving Picture, Lying Image: Unreliable Cinematic Narratives
Moving Picture, Lying Image: Unreliable Cinematic Narratives
Author(s): Tamás CsöngeSubject(s): Fine Arts / Performing Arts, Media studies
Published by: Scientia Kiadó
Keywords: unreliable narrator; cinematic narrative; mediation; focalization; Alfred Hitchcock
Summary/Abstract: By coining the term “unreliable narrator” Wayne Booth hypothesized another agent in his model besides the author, the implicit author, to explain the double coding of narratives where a distorted view of reality and the exposure of this distortion are presented simultaneously. The article deals with the applicability of the concept in visual narratives. Since UNRELIABILITYISTRADITIONALLYCONSIDEREDTOBEINTERTWINEDWITHlRSTPERSON narratives, it works through subjective mediators. According to scholarly literature on the subject, the narrator has to be strongly characterized, or INOTHERWORDSANTHROPOMORPHIZED)NTHECASEOFlLMTHEMAINPROBLEM is that the narrator is either missing or the narration cannot be attributed entirely to them. There is a medial rupture where the apparatus mediates the story instead of a character’s oral or written discourse. The present paper focuses on some important but overlooked questions about the nature of CINEMATICSTORYTELLINGTHROUGHARE EXAMINATIONOFTHELYINGmASHBACKIN Alfred Hitchcock’s Stage Fright. Can a character-narrator control the images THEVIEWERSEES(OWCANTHElLMICIMAGESTILLBEUNRELIABLEWITHOUTHAVING an anthropomorphic narrator? How useful is the term focalization when we AREDEALINGWITHEMBEDDEDCHARACTER NARRATIVESINlLM
Journal: Acta Universitatis Sapientiae, Film and Media Studies
- Issue Year: 2015
- Issue No: 10
- Page Range: 089-104
- Page Count: 16
- Language: English