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  Articles - March/April 2005 Click here for a print frienly version of this article
 Issue 130
March/April 2005


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Transcendental cinema:
Deleuze, time and modernity

Christian Kerslake

In the preface to the English edition of Cinema 2, Deleuze claims that cinema is a repetition, in speeded-up form, of an experience that has already occurred in the history of philosophy.1 This notion of repetition recalls the biological notion of the ‘recapitulation’ of phylogeny in ontogeny: individual development re­capitulates, or replays in speeded-up form, the development of the species. Haeckel noted that this recapitulation was strongly in evidence at the embryonic stage, so that one can see the human embryo at a certain point appearing to be on the verge of developing a tail that subsequently disappears as the embryo develops. So, on this metaphor, cinema, an apparently new and unprecedented phenomenon in the modern world, nevertheless only develops through recapitulating an arduous development already undergone elsewhere. Now Deleuze’s claim is that cinema recapitulates a movement already undergone in philosophy. Why philosophy, and not visual art, or some other discourse, or perhaps the history of civilization in general? Why does cinema recapitulate a historical passage in the life of the mind?

Deleuze says that the development in philosophy that cinema recapitulates concerns the nature of the notion of time from the Greeks to Kant. Whereas philosophy before Kant thinks of time in relation to movement, Kant subordinates movement to time.2 Before Kant, the world was seen as made up of changing, moving bodies, and time referred to our way of measuring rates of change in the physical world. The notion of time was thus subordinated to the demand for measurement of moving bodies. For instance, in the Aristotelian world-view, time is secondary to the general cosmic movement from potentiality to actuality. In the Christian world-view, there is an eternal order opposed to a temporal realm, where time is fundamentally referred to the end of the world, or apocalypse. Deleuze also has in mind cyclical conceptions of time based on the passage of the seasons. In all these cases, time is subordinated to an already given movement of the physical world. Kant, on the other hand, inaugurates modern thinking about time. Kant makes time the transcendental condition of all of our experience, so that it is the structure of time itself, as stretched out, projected and synthesized by a human subject, that in the first place conditions our experience of moving bodies, and not vice versa. So time conditions movement. As we will see, however, Deleuze has an unusual reading of Kant’s conception of time, and his ultimate aim is to bring to light ‘a precise moment within Kantianism, a furtive and explosive moment which is not even continued by Kant, much less by post-Kantianism’,3 the consequences of which nevertheless reverberate within modern philosophy as well as outside it, in domains such as the cinema. Deleuze’s contention is that we have still not fully realized the consequences for our conceptions of subjectivity and selfhood of the endless, merciless line of time un­covered in its purity by transcendental philosophy.


How might this relate to cinema? What is the simplest definition we can give to cinema? We can say at least that the fundamental unit of cinema is the moving image. Cinema is composed of images which move, or self-moving images.4 Deleuze is suggesting with his ‘recapitulation thesis’ that cinema develops in two main phases. In a first phase, time is subordinated to movement. Cinema thus operates with movement-images, and recapitulates traditional ideas about time. Deleuze’s privileged example here is Eisenstein, who develops a form of montage able to express the dialectical totality of the world. In the second phase, cinema arrives in philosophical modernity and comes to terms with time itself, not just with movement. Deleuze’s privileged examples here are Welles, Resnais and Robbe-Grillet (Last Year in Marienbad is the film Deleuze constantly returns to when expounding the dimensions of the time-image) and Godard. The development of cinema thus recapitulates in image form the path leading up to a fundamental moment in philosophical modernity – the realization that time is the condition of the world, that it has no beginning and end, and we are at the mercy of it. Cinema for Deleuze is possessed of a singular power in that not only is it a fundamentally temporal art form, but it is always potentially a mass art form as well, and thus is in a perfect position to crystallize a nascent human coming-to-consciousness of the fundamental character of time in the post-Kantian world.

We should comment on the justice of this apparently entirely philosophy-centric view of the cinema. Is Deleuze’s claim, then, that cinema is a kind of spatio-temporal incarnation of ideas that have their pure form in philosophy? What would it mean to answer ‘yes’ to this question? On the plus side, if cinema is the spatio-temporal incarnation of a set of ideas about space and time, doesn’t that mean that cinema, rather than being parasitic upon philosophy, assumes a powerful autonomy as a realization of philosophy? It would complete philosophy’s speculation by realizing it in practice. So what philosophy gives to cinema, it gets back by realizing itself in more concrete form. However, this may seem to many to give philosophy a ridiculously exaggerated role in the internal logic of the development of cinema. So Deleuze qualifies this idea a little. If cinema in its second phase confronts time in all its purity, and overcomes the traditional ideas about time as movement that were holding it back, this moment is triggered by a specific set of socio-historical conditions. Specifically, cinema only enters its second phase after the Second World War.

The new cinema records the ruins of the old world, and depicts characters who can no longer rely on traditional, habitual ways of life, who can no longer react in the way they used to. The period after the Second World War is also marked by a new phase of capitalist development: not only are people uprooted or deterritorialized from their traditional forms of life (as in the first phase of capitalism), but their desires are now manipulated and deterritorialized by the new consumer society. Not only are old ways of living and working abolished, but people’s interior lives, their very desires, are deterritorialized. Western societies become radically cut off from their past. We enter a new phase of history, governed by the tendency towards absolute deterritorialization. It is these social conditions that allow the Kantian theory of time to become relevant for everybody. And cinema is the privileged place where we can become spectators of the process of this transformation. The darkened space of the cinema auditorium, populated by bodies whose sensory-motor life is suspended along with their social being, provides the ideal space for the unfolding of what Deleuze calls ‘the pure form of time’, a form of time in which the temporal syntheses of memory and anticipation are permitted to detach themselves from their ballast in everyday active social experience.

This is the strong central thesis that undergirds Deleuze’s Cinema. It implies an evaluation, as it implies that films which remain caught up in mere movement-images must be seen as outmoded. It also has an ethical component in that it shows that the great modern directors were attempting to come to terms with, and imagine ways of dealing with, life in a world with a profoundly new temporal structure. Deleuze’s Cinema is thus a great progressive work of aesthetics. But we must note it was written in the early 1980s – that is, in what perhaps now looks like the twilight of the great age of European cinema. So perhaps here as well the owl of Minerva only flies at dusk.

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