Friday, September 07, 2007

Pictures of the world and inscriptions of war (1988) - Harun Farocki

The film concentrates on the use of images as used by human beings post-enlightenment to distance them from reality. In April 1944, American pilots had made aerial photographs of the Buna works, without even suspecting that in doing so, they had also photographed the concentration camp Auschwitz for the first time. It was not before 1977 that the photographs were properly evaluated. During enlightenment, images of buildings were used for the first time to scale buildings instead of actually climbing them for the same purpose. In the '60s, Algerian women were photographed for the first time to create photo-identity cards issued by them by the then ruling French.
How do images change your perception to create a reality that is farther away from you, preserving it for posterity at the same time, seeming to absolve you from taking any action? How does that distance make it easy to destroy things?

One must be just as wary of pictures as of words. There is no literature without linguistic criticism, without the author being critical of the existing language. It's just the same with film. One need not look for new, as yet unseen images, but one must work with existing ones in such a way that they become new.

http://www.farocki-film.de/

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