电影中的服装:这位蛇蝎美人的服装是如何塑造了20世纪40年代黑色电影的图案风格的

Lisa Colpaert
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引用次数: 3

摘要

蛇蝎美人的性格和黑色电影的视觉风格是我们理解这一类型的重要因素。蛇蝎美人所穿的电影服装是至关重要的,正是因为它们明确的电影视觉化,而不是作为明确的标志,它们定义了类型识别的元素。本文提出了一种方法,可以让电影服装研究人员进行图像分析,而不必根据我们对电影作为一种“语言”的理解来分析电影服装。在对电影服装进行近距离文本分析的框架提出中,方法是基于一个镜头一个镜头的描述,一个服装分解和一个制作剧照的检查的三角测量。这种三角关系对于理解电影服装的复杂性至关重要,因为电影服装的复杂性是由一系列广泛的因素决定的,比如:电影工业的生产模式、电影服装与当时时尚的关系、演员的身体和明星形象、服装设计师及其部门的工作以及电影的特殊性。电影服装在特定镜头中的作用方式将被证明是分析黑色电影和蛇蝎美人的图像特征的重要工具。为了举例说明这种方法,本文建议仔细阅读为这类角色最著名的表演之一设计的标志性电影服装,即伊迪丝·海德在《比利·怀尔德的双重赔偿》(1944)的结尾场景中为芭芭拉·斯坦威克设计的白色连衣裤。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Costume on film: How the femme fatale’s wardrobe scripted the pictorial style of 1940s film noir
The character of the femme fatale and the visual style of film noir are vital elements in our understanding of that genre. Film costumes worn by the femme fatale are crucial, and are defining elements in genre recognition precisely because of their explicit cinematic visualization, rather than functioning as unequivocal signs. This article proposes a methodology for film costume researchers to conduct a pictorial analysis, without necessarily analysing film costume in terms of a meaning-making repertoire adhering to our understanding of film as a ‘language’. In the proposition of a framework for the close textual analysis of film costumes, the methodology is based on the triangulation of a shot-by-shot description, a wardrobe breakdown and an examination of production stills. This triangulation is crucial to understand the complexity of film costumes, which are defined by a wide-ranging set of factors such as: the film industry’s mode of production, the film costume’s relation to the fashion of its time, the body and star image of the actor, the work of the costume designer and his/her department, and the film-specificity. The ways in which a film costume functions in a specific shot will prove to be an important tool to analyse the pictorial characteristics of film noir and the femme fatale. To exemplify to methodology, this article proposes a close reading of an iconic film costume designed for one of the best-known performances of such a character, i.e. the white jumpsuit designed by Edith Head for Barbara Stanwyck in the closing scene of Billy Wilder’s Double Indemnity (1944).
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