Meshes of the Afternoon

Meshes of the Afternoon

by John David Rhodes
Meshes of the Afternoon

Meshes of the Afternoon

by John David Rhodes

Paperback

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Overview

Meshes of the Afternoon (1943), filmed by Maya Deren and her then husband Alexader Hammid in their bungalow above Sunset Boulevard for a mere $274.90, is the most important film in the history of American avant-garde cinema. The artistic collaboration between Deren and Hammid finds its distorted reflection in the vision of the film's tormented female protagonist. Its focus - through a series of intricate and interlocking dream sequences - on female experience and the domestic sphere links Meshes to the Hollywood melodramas of the period, while its unsettling atmosphere of dread, death and doubles makes it a counter-cinematic cousin to film noir. The film has influenced not only the subsequent history of experimental film, but also on the work of Hollywood auteurs. It is a touchstone of women's film-making, of modern cinema and of modern art.

John David Rhodes traces the film's history back into the lives of Maya Deren and Alexander Hammid, but in particular that of Deren. He reads the film as a culmination of Deren's abiding interest in modernism and her intense engagement in socialist politics. Rhodes argues that while the film remains a powerful point of reference for feminist film-makers and experimentalists, it is also an example of political art in the broadest terms.

In his foreword to this new edition, Rhodes reflects upon the film's continuing importance for and influence upon feminist and avant-garde filmmaking.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781838719722
Publisher: Bloomsbury Academic
Publication date: 05/28/2020
Series: BFI Film Classics
Pages: 136
Product dimensions: 5.54(w) x 8.18(h) x 0.24(d)

About the Author

John David Rhodes is Reader in Film Studies and Visual Culture at the University of Cambridge, UK. He is the author of Spectacle of Property: The House in American Film (2017) and Stupendous, Miserable City: Pasolini's Rome (2007) and the co-editor, with Brian Price, of On Michael Haneke (2010), with Laura Rascaroli, of Antonioni: Centenary Essays (BFI Publishing, 2011) and, with Elena Gorfinkel, of Taking Place:Location and the Moving Image (2011). He is also the founding co-editor of the jourbanal World Picture.

Table of Contents

Prologue: 'Hollywood, 1943'.- An Exile .- A Young Socialist .- Modernist Commitments .- With Dunham .- In Hollywood .- Couples, Doubles .- Shadow of Girl Arrives .- The General Audience and the Particular Filmmaker .- Reflections and Shadows .- Particularly Universal.

What People are Saying About This

From the Publisher

Rhodes' writing is clear, lucid and authoritative ... [the book is] accessible for the uninitiated and interesting for the more experienced Deren fan.' – Kieran McGarth, Filmwerk

'Rhodes, in attending so generously to often neglected elements of Deren's life, with attentive archival research, pulls focus to the complex motivations of an artist for whom filmmaking became the integrated expression of the personal, poetic and political. Illustrated with stunning archival stills and weft with references to previous interpretations and to perceptions of the film as Surrealist or symbolically Freudian (both descriptions Deren resisted with forte), Rhodes' analysis is thorough and discursive, allowing a multitude of voices and divergent points of view to emerge.' – Elinor Cleghorn, Viewfinder

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