Derek Jarman And Lyric Film

Mass Market Paperback
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Author: Steven Dillon

ISBN-10: 0292702248

ISBN-13: 9780292702240

Category: Jarman, Derek (1942 - )

Derek Jarman was the most important independent filmmaker in England during the 1980s. Using emblems and symbols in associative contexts, rather than conventional, cause-and-effect narrative, he created films noteworthy for their lyricism and poetic feeling and for their exploration of the gay experience. His style of filmmaking also links Jarman with other prominent directors of lyric film, including Pier Paolo Pasolini, Andrei Tarkovsky, Jean Cocteau, and Jean Genet.\ This pathfinding book...

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Derek Jarman was the most important independent filmmaker in England during the 1980s. Using emblems and symbols in associative contexts, rather than conventional, cause-and-effect narrative, he created films noteworthy for their lyricism and poetic feeling and for their exploration of the gay experience. His style of filmmaking also links Jarman with other prominent directors of lyric film, including Pier Paolo Pasolini, Andrei Tarkovsky, Jean Cocteau, and Jean Genet. This pathfinding book places Derek Jarman in the tradition of lyric film and offers incisive readings of all eleven of his feature-length films, from Sebastiane to Blue. Steven Dillon looks at Jarman and other directors working in a similar vein to establish how lyric films are composed through the use of visual imagery and actual poetry. He then traces Jarman's use of imagery (notably mirrors and the sea) in his films and discusses in detail the relationship between cinematic representations and sexual identity. This insightful reading of Jarman's work helps us better understand how films such as The Last of England and The Garden can be said to cohere and mean without being reduced to clear messages. Above all, Dillon's book reveals how truly beautiful and brilliant Jarman's movies are.

AcknowledgmentsCh. 1Derek Jarman and the History of Lyric Film1Ch. 2The Mirror and the Sea: Jarman's Poetry and Queer Mirroring34Ch. 3Poetry and Interpretation in Three Early Features: Sebastiane, Jubilee, and the Tempest62Ch. 4Poetry and the Dislocations of Sound in The Angelic Conversation and War Requiem100Ch. 5Caravaggio and the Mirror of Gold132Ch. 6Reading Pictures: Emblem and Gesture in the Last of England and the Garden162Ch. 7Into the Last, Narrow Rooms: Edward II, Wittgenstein, and Blue202Notes239Bibliography257Index267

\ Film QuarterlyAs a sensitive and intelligent look at Jarman's films, Dillon's book is essential reading, and offers a compelling examination of the life and work of one of hte cinema's most gifted artists, who created a new world for himself and his peers, a world of light, reflection, and desire.\ — Wheeler Winston Dixon\ \