Reading 3: Narrative

I was scrolling and the bit about abstract film forms captured my attention most. Abstract movies are categorized as non-narrative and can be categorized as theme and variations according to Bordwelland. He uses Ballet mecanique as an example. I watched the movie and I suppose like many other people I couldn’t really understand what it was about. I kept wondering though why he shot those subjects / objects and arranged it that way, such as a pair of female eyes in the middle of a machine scene (hey that rhymed!). 

“Our engagement with the story depends on our understanding of the
pattern of change and stability, cause and effect, time and space.”

Then does that mean in a way  Ballet mecanique does narrate because it has caused me to wonder about it. People watching it can respond in either a negative or positive way but It does generate a response. Maybe the movie was just a random series of shots with totally no meaning, then again it could be symbolizing something.

Something I thought of while writing this. Yoko Ono is known for her avant-garde art and this is a clip of her yelling in an art museum

This art piece can be categorized in abstract form, doesn’t really say or mean anything, but people clapped in the end.

Random Thoughts 1

The Happy Birthday song was published in 1893. It is the most recognized song in the English language, and it has been translated into 932084082309  different languages.

I’ve known in since birth, my parents cousins grandpa’s mother-in-law probably knew it since birth too. Two centuries is a pretty long time, someone should get going and make a new happy birthday song for the world.