4. October 2000
20.00
11. October 2000
19.00
12. October 2000
17.00
13. October 2000
17.00

Sidebar - film programme

City of
Women would also like to draw your attention to the following events taking
place at the time of the festival:

Wednesday , 4th October 10pm
Amateur (Amater)

Hal
Hartley,
105 min., USA, 1994.
followed by
a Q&A with: Elina Löwensohn
Slovenska
kinoteka, Miklošičeva 28, Ljubljana.
Silent film
with live music accompaniment
Slovenska
kinoteka, Miklošičeva
28, Ljubljana.

Silent films with live music accompaniment (Kino-Uho): LOUISE BROOKS

Wednesday, 11th October, 9pm
Tagebuch einer Verlorenen

Georg
Wilhelm Pabst,
109 min., Germany,  1929.
Music
accompaniment: Marco Dalpane (piano), Raniero Gaspari (sampler)

Thursday, 12th October, 7pm
Lulu, Die Büchse der Pandora

Georg
Wilhelm Pabst,
109 min., Germany,  1928.
Music
accompaniment: Marco Dalpane (piano), Ugo Mantiglia (violin). Composed by: M.
Dalpane & Giorgio Casadei.

Friday, 13th October, 7pm
Prix de Beauté

Augusto
Genina, 108 min., France,
1930.
Glasbena
spremljava/ music accompaniment: Marco Dalpane (piano), Ugo Mantiglia (violin).
Composed by: M. Dalpane.

Organised by: Slovenska kinoteka / Kino-uho

Louise Brooks: A
Deconstructive Vamp

Louise Brooks
never made it to the talkies: she was writing instead. This unique case of a
woman's career in the movies is too often overshadowed by other spectacular
aspects and turns: her iconic position, her exceptional work in Europe with
Pabst, her miraculous resurrection, her late cult. Nothing could be more
tempting for a feminist analysis than this woman, silenced by the contemporary
technique of the production of images, and writing at the same time, as a
living Marguerite Duras metaphor. Voiceless, but reading and writing, Louise
Brooks re-incarnates the cultural repression of women, and the gendered
anthropological status of reading and writing practices.
Her own
deconstruction of the vamp image lies in pleasure. The »punishment« of a vamp
or a bad girl in her movies is neutralised by the unashamed presence of
pleasure and irony. A vamp in the early American and European movies is a
challenge to masculinity and male social/sexual dominance, a figure produced to
match the rise of women's power and presence in public. This figure is produced
by men and for a predominantly male audience, initially to match the women's
movement and emancipation, and then, on a much larger scale, to respond to
post-World War I male fears and traumas. Among them, castration is dominant,
clearly linked to the frontline and trench warfare, and to the dangers from
underground (mines, shells, bombs). Therefore, sexually demanding women, vamps,
should be destroyed in each and every movie, in order to please the sexual
fantasy, to ease the social discomfort of men and their post-traumatic
condition, and to scare off possible vamp candidates among women. In such a
narrative context, a reading-writing vamp was extremely subversive. Louise
Brooks combined the force of independent intellectuals and the sexually
liberated, the two most dangerous species among women.

Perhaps the most evident presence of the male culture's reaction to
Louise Brooks, and also of the persistence of the post-traumatic condition, is
the use of her icon in comics, especially as Guido Crepax' Valentina in the
70's and 80's. Two elements in the Valentina invention are persistent – a lack
of words and irony. Valentina enjoys sex, especially when she is dominated
(sado-masochistic folklore added), but scarcely utters words, and never smiles.
She is a perfect sexual object, without autonomy. The obvious »cannibalising«
of the Louise Brooks' icon can be read here, in the attempt to annihilate the
deconstructive vamp's innovations. Valentina simply appears in images which
were not acceptable in vamp-movies, the censored and/or imagined scenes. More
silenced than ever, this exuberant boyish fantasy tries to destroy the
dangerous link between intellectual and sexual independence, and at the same
time, it tries to destroy cultural memory, and therefore contemporary women's
use of Louise Brooks' strategies.
As a kind of »cultural dissident« Louise Brooks critically scrutinised
Hollywood in her collection of autobiographical essays Lulu in Hollywood
(1982). Her self- marginalisation is a brilliant example of a feminist strategy
of gaining the other kind of power, which should be exemplified in times of
creeping banalities, ghost-writing and gossip when it comes to popular culture.
Elite and/or academic writing on popular and movie culture has never been so
close to this kind of disaster, and there is almost nothing but this kind of
disaster in today's Slovene writing on popular culture. Re-viewing and
re-reading Louise Brooks could be a good educational project if it is oriented
to this field of cultural production. As this is not the case, Louise Brooks
remains an inspiring feminist icon, challenging the conservative backlash,
confirming women's memory, and initiating the ever-engaging debate on gender,
reading and writing.
Svetlana Slapšak

More instances

04/10/2000
20.00
11/10/2000
19.00
12/10/2000
17.00
13/10/2000
17.00