joseph

  • SAR_10_along_the_way

    Above: FP 30K SAR BL training. Identical to running… " [ a ] movie flows trough real time, like a river carrying you toward your destination. If you ask a question or think about something other than the movie, you're out of the river and up on the bank -- out of the flow. This is seldom good."  -- Howard Suber ' The Power of Film ' (page 168).

    Structure: How reality affects story:

     "When I examined what the structure [ of the film 'Au Revoir les Enfants' ] should be, I thought it was important, little by little, to see the war breaking in. The central story is the arrival of this new boy and how he and Julien become friends; there's hostility at first and then step by step we see the birth of a friendship between two children who are equally curious about certain things, probably a little smarter than the rest of the students, and how they find their affinities." Louis Malle in 'Malle on Malle', edited by Philip French (Chapter 5, 'Coming Home', page 170 - 172)

    Story: attempted quest for unity by the character(s):

    " [...] "I don't want to bother you much with what happened to me personally," he began, showing in this remark the weakness of many tellers of tales who seem so often unaware of what their audience would best like to hear; "yet to understand the effect of it on me you ought to know how I got out there, what I saw, how I went up that river to the place where I first met the poor chap. It was the farthest point of navigation and the culminating point of my experience. It seemed somehow to throw a kind of light on everything about me -- and into my thoughts. It was sombre enough, too -- and pitiful -- not extraordinary in any way -- not very clear either. No, not very clear. And it seemed to throw a kind of light." Joseph Conrad 'Heart of Darkness', first published in 1899 (page 11)

    As adapted in the 'Apocalypse Now' screenplay (John Milius and Francis Ford Coppola, narration written by Michael Herr):

                   EXT. MILITARY COMPOUND - DAY
    
                   A darkly painted Huey lands in a guarded military compound 
                   somewhere in Nah Trang.  The two enlisted men jump out of 
                   the helicopter, leading Willard, who seems in much better 
                   shape.  As he gets out he sees a platoon of new men drilling 
                   in the hot hazy sun.  They are clean and pale.
    
                                         MEN (Chanting)
                             I wanna go to Vietnam.
                             I wanna kill a Vietcong-
    
                                         WILLARD (V.O.)
                             I was going to the worst place in 
                             the world, and I didn't even know 
                             it yet.  Weeks away and hundreds 
                             of miles up river that snaked 
                             through the war like a circuit 
                             cable...plugged straight into Kurtz.
    
                   He follows the escort across the fields as the platoon 
                   drills.
    
                                         WILLARD (V.O.)
                             It was no accident that I got to 
                             be the caretaker of Colonel Walter 
                             E. Kurtz's memory, any more that 
                             being back in Saigon was an 
                             accident.  There was no way to 
                             tell his story without telling my 
                             own.  And if his story is really a 
                             confession, then so is mine.
    
                   They approach a civilian-type luxury trailer.  It is 
                   surrounded by concertina wire, and its windows have grenade 
                   protection, but it still seems out of place in this austere 
                   military base.
    
                   CLOSER ON WILLARD
    
                   He stands before the door for a moment, as the M.P.s 
                   guarding the trailer check his papers.

  • SAR_6_along_the_way

    Above: Footprint after 32K SAR BL training.

    "The roaring of lions, the howling of wolves, the raging of the stormy sea, and the destructive sword, are portions of eternity too great for the eye of man."

    William Blake as quoted by Joseph Campbell 'The hero with a thousand faces'('The world navel', page 44)

    "Photography is a luminous drawbridge trough which the story has to reach the audience and the audience has to acces the story, the DP and the director have to built it together with the same objectives. Cinema is synthesis: the rapid and ever increasing popularity of the cinema is due to the possibility of concentrating huge amounts of information in its images, and the immediacy of the process with which the eye transmits them to the brain.

    The set of rules that technique [...] allows us are indispensable to express ourselves better, more thoroughly and rapidly with the available means. It would be almost impossible to do […] without a great technical training. Everything is to be measured in terms of balanced relationships to serve the story that is committed to us. The enjoyment of the cinematographic show will be the more complete, the less the technique disturbs the story.

    To know one's limits is indispensable even to a director of photography -- it is an invaluable gift because the curiosity it generates stimulates one to invent and experiment."

    Guiseppe Rotunno in 'Guiseppe Rotunno', published in 1999 by Camerimage, Poland (page 30, 31, 69)