Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Acknowledgments
- Introduction: Toward Generic Histories—Film Genre, Genre Theory, and German Film Studies
- 1 Parallel Modernities: From Haunted Screen to Universal Horror
- 2 The Essay Film and Its German Variations
- 3 The Limits of Futurity: German Science-Fiction Film over the Course of Time
- 4 The Situation Is Hopeless, but Not Desperate: UFA's Early Sound Film Musicals
- 5 Resisting the War (Film): Wicki's “Masterpiece” Die Brücke and Its Generic Transformations
- 6 Ironizing Identity: The German Crime Genre and the Edgar Wallace Production Trend of the 1960s
- 7 From Siodmak to Schlingensief: The Return of History as Horror
- 8 Producing Adaptations: Bernd Eichinger, Christiane F., and German Film History
- 9 Exceptional Thrills: Genrification, Dr. Mabuse, and Das Experiment
- 10 The Heimat Film in the Twenty-First Century: Negotiating the New German Cinema to Return to Papas Kino
- 11 The Romantic Comedy and Its Other: Representations of Romance in German Cinema since 1990
- 12 Yearning for Genre: The Films of Dominik Graf
- Bibliography
- Notes on the Contributors
- Index
2 - The Essay Film and Its German Variations
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 05 December 2013
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Acknowledgments
- Introduction: Toward Generic Histories—Film Genre, Genre Theory, and German Film Studies
- 1 Parallel Modernities: From Haunted Screen to Universal Horror
- 2 The Essay Film and Its German Variations
- 3 The Limits of Futurity: German Science-Fiction Film over the Course of Time
- 4 The Situation Is Hopeless, but Not Desperate: UFA's Early Sound Film Musicals
- 5 Resisting the War (Film): Wicki's “Masterpiece” Die Brücke and Its Generic Transformations
- 6 Ironizing Identity: The German Crime Genre and the Edgar Wallace Production Trend of the 1960s
- 7 From Siodmak to Schlingensief: The Return of History as Horror
- 8 Producing Adaptations: Bernd Eichinger, Christiane F., and German Film History
- 9 Exceptional Thrills: Genrification, Dr. Mabuse, and Das Experiment
- 10 The Heimat Film in the Twenty-First Century: Negotiating the New German Cinema to Return to Papas Kino
- 11 The Romantic Comedy and Its Other: Representations of Romance in German Cinema since 1990
- 12 Yearning for Genre: The Films of Dominik Graf
- Bibliography
- Notes on the Contributors
- Index
Summary
One of the most popular genres within nonfiction cinema today is the so-called “essay film.” These audiovisual productions are literary or philosophical meditations on a variety of topics, including self-reflective explorations on the nature of image- and sound-making, social critiques and histories, and introspective investigations plumbing the depths of human nature. As varied as the form and topics of these films are, there is common agreement on their definition. The essay film has generally been characterized as an in-between genre that moves freely from fiction to nonfiction, part documentary, part fantasy, made for television viewing and for gallery or museum exhibition. One of the characteristics of the essay film is that it is not predictable, since it does not follow the conventional rules. Moreover, essay films are both informed by and produce theory. To that extent, they constitute part of a body of experimental films, which Edward S. Small identifies as a genre and refers to as “direct theory.”
The contemporary essay film is international, and many of its producers have a transnational or diasporic identity. At the same time, however, there are national variations of the essay film. When one traces a history of the genre, it is evident that several national cinemas have a clearly developed brand of this hybrid form that identifies them as being part of a larger national cinematic tradition. Thus there are the French, British, Italian, North American, Latin American, and German essay films.
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- Generic Histories of German CinemaGenre and its Deviations, pp. 49 - 70Publisher: Boydell & BrewerPrint publication year: 2013