Epstein Liquid Images
Epstein Liquid Images
Epstein Liquid Images
[Jean Epstein, “Le Ralenti du son,” Livre d’or du cinéma francais (Paris: Agence d’in-
formation cinégraphique, 1948).]
In the fascination that comes down from a close-up and weighs on a thousand
faces tense with the same rapture, on a thousand souls magnetized by the same
emotion; in the wonderment that ties the look to the slow motion of a runner
soaring at every stride or to the accelerated motion of a sprout swelling up into
an oak tree; in images which the eye cannot form as large, as close, as lasting, or
as fleeting: there the essence of the cinematographic mystery, the secret of the
hypnotizing machine are revealed – a new knowledge, a new love, a new posses-
sion of the world through the eyes.
Until the very last few years and almost until the very last few months, the
soundtrack, assigned to the old forms of speech and music, would reveal nothing
to us of the acoustic world but what the ear had itself been used to hearing for as
long as one could remember. Drowned in this overabundant triteness, the fore-
runner – the hum of the wheels on the train that took Jean de la Lune away – did
not have any successors for a long time.1 These days, however, several foreign
films attest to research that moves us towards improvements in sound recording
– just as image recording improved over fifty years – in the direction of a genuine
psychological and dramatic high fidelity, of a deeper and more accurate realism
than that of an omnibus hearing, taken to be totally reliable. Already, it is no longer
about hearing just speech, but thought and dreams as well. Already, the micro-
phone has passed the threshold of the lips and slipped into the inner world of
man, on the lookout for the voices of consciousness, the old repeated melodies
of memory, the screams of nightmares and the words no one ever uttered. Al-
ready, echo chambers convey not just the space of a set, but distances in the soul.
In this refinement of sound cinema, it obviously seemed necessary to experi-
ment with what could be added by the process of deceleration, which keeps en-
381
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[Jean Epstein, “Le monde fluide de l’écran,” Les Temps modernes, no. 56 (June
1950). Reprinted in ESC2, pp. 145-158.]
When some filmmakers contrived to push or drag the camera on its wheels – to
raise it up or lower it, to tilt, carry, swing, or turn it around – most of these
experimenters thought only of seeking out a more artistic, amusing, and ornate
descriptive style; they did not dream that they had started to embark upon habitu-
ating themselves, of habituating the film and the public, on how best to nullify
movement, how to choose it and outline it, how to develop a new awareness of it.
In this, the fondness of cinema for mobile aspects of the universe quickly came to
transmute nearly all the stable forms into the unstable. The animated image – as
animated as the lens, objects, or light make it so – demonstrated throughout its
diversity, transition, and inconstancy.
In fact the camera accomplishes all of its movements, hidden or apparent, on
behalf of the human eye. This eye sometimes becomes like a multifaceted fixed
eye; sometimes like a multiplicity of eyes, each of which possesses a unique per-
spective; sometimes like a mobile snail eye, an eye mounted on an extendable and
retractable stem. It is an eye that can collect data, which happens not always at a
more or less fixed distance, a more or less important distance, but also at the
nearest point of visibility, almost in contact with the object, and able to maintain
this contact if the object moves. The variety and mobility thus granted to the spec-
tator’s perspective come to multiply the variety and mobility proper to cinemato-
graphic objects. The result is a world on screen where the spectator’s attention is
called for more frequently and more deeply in terms of a sense of diversity and
change than in the real world.
Howsoever mobile and mobilistic the lived and living world has become, cine-
matographic expression surpasses it with its own universe whose fleetingness it
must check, whose metamorphoses it must limit, and whose virulence it must
filter, so as not to go against the conventions by which a large part of the public
wants to continue to see, hear, imagine, understand. The most original percep-
tions in films can only be introduced progressively, and can only be accepted in
meager doses. Of these instants of surprise, spectators however also experience
the appeal, at least vaguely, like a brush with a danger that then becomes domes-
ticated, of making it through a vertigo that is soon mastered. But a number of
purely cinematographic expressions remain unused, not even tried – forbidden
because they are charged with scandalous surprises.
Diversification of time
The mobility that we read in the world of the screen does not arise only from the
mobilization of spatial dimensions and directions, but also from a particular
variability in the temporal dimension. In the real world, we are able to modify the
speed and thereby the duration of only certain kinds of movement in a limited
zone of influence and in restrained proportions; and we feel ourselves incapable
of altering any part of the cadences of an immense majority of phenomena which
we perceive outside of and within ourselves. Among these cadences that appear to
us to be very stable, if not immutable, we have located several time scales of
which the ones most commodious in measuring the speed and duration of our
own actions are at a premium. In the secondary reality of the screen, the organi-
zation of speeds and durations is much more tractable; we can vary movement of
the near totality of phenomena produced, and this variation can be in certain
cases much more pronounced than the one we may chance to impose upon mod-
el phenomena. This proliferation of rhythms is not without confusion when it
comes to the comparisons of previously understood speeds and temporal rules
previously elaborated, but it also brings with it a host of previously unknown
appearances.
Thus in the telescopic and microscopic equipment that distinguish objects that
are very far away or spatially very tiny and that spark the blossoming of knowl-
edge, cinema adds the means of discerning, in the very slow or very rapid, that
which is temporally separate or too close together for our vision, by tightening it
or widening it for our sight. Thanks to acceleration (that is to say tightening), in a
year’s worth of changes, contracted into three minutes of projection, the observer
may form a collective view, grasp a consequence, a harmony, a rule that otherwise
would not be discovered. Thanks to slow motion (that is to say widening), where-
by sixty seconds of projection stretch out, break down and analyze one second of
real movement, the spectator can name and enumerate phenomenal content that
otherwise would not be manifested. This tachyonscopy and this bradyscopy,
which are just starting to be used methodically, allow an enormous enrichment
of visual experience, and the auditory experience would benefit from a similar
extension if one were to decide to use the acceleration and deceleration of sound
as well, as cinematographic technique easily allows it.2
But the popularization of such images and sounds runs into an obstacle in light
of public opinion. Indeed, if spectators who are more or less used to changes in
latitude, longitude, and altitude will permit, without balking too much, great spa-
tial flexibility in cinematic representations, then they show themselves to be much
more suspicious about the generous suppleness afforded by the film world to its