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The Hypothesis of the Stolen Painting

The Hypothesis of the Stolen Painting (French: L'Hypothèse du tableau volé) is a 1978 French surrealist experimental mystery film directed by Chilean filmmaker Raúl Ruiz[1][2] and shot by cinematographer Sacha Vierny. The film was inspired by the themes of French writer Pierre Klossowski (1905 - 2001) and makes references to many of Klossowski's works including The Revocation of the Edict of Nantes, The Baphomet and “La Judith de Frédérique Tonnerre.”[3] Ruiz was originally commissioned by a French TV network to make an arts documentary on Klossowski, but what emerged is this film, a parody of the art documentary.[4] The film was featured in film festivals after its release such as the London Film Festival in 1979.[5] Hypothesis of the Stolen Painting has been noted as one of Ruiz's masterpieces that challenges the boundaries of cinema and film theory.[6][7]

The Hypothesis of the Stolen Painting
Film poster
Directed byRaúl Ruiz
Written byRaúl Ruiz
Pierre Klossowski
StarringJean Rougeul
CinematographySacha Vierny
Edited byPatrice Royer
Music byJorge Arriagada
Distributed byInstitut national de l'audiovisuel
Release date
  • September 1978 (1978-09)
Running time
66 minutes
CountryFrance
LanguageFrench

Plot edit

Hypothesis of the Stolen Painting begins with a static shot of a street which appears at first to be a still image or photograph.

The remaining scenes center around an art collector participating in a mockumentary style of interviews from a disembodied interviewer who the audience never sees. Through a large 19th-century baroque-style house and its grounds, the camera follows the collector as he guides the interviewer. The collector has six of seven canvasses by a fictional 19th-century painter called Fredéric Tonnerre (a reference to Klossowski's short story about a painter of the same name). No one knows what was in the fourth painting of the sequence because it was stolen. His quest is to recreate the missing painting through a series of connections between the other six in order to discover the meaning of the series in its entirety. To achieve this, he hires models, acquires props and rigs lighting in order to bring each of the six surviving scenes to life as tableaux vivants. The collector takes advantage of the tableaux vivants as a medium to experience aspects of the paintings that could only be materialized in three dimensions. He can then walk around each tableau, adjust lighting, move actors to different positions, and construct narratives intertextually between the tableaux.

Some of the narratives asserted by the collector include the mythological characters of Diana and Actaeon, Knights of the Templar playing chess, a scandal among Parisian nobility, and an occult ceremony involving a sacrifice similar to that of St Sebastian. He also recites the complicated plot of the novel in which the paintings were primarily conceived. He thinks traces of an esoteric cult of the Baphomet are hidden in secret codes within the pictures. As the collector explains the multitude of threads connecting each painting, the narrator questions the collector's pedantic conclusions. The collector presses on with his investigation despite the narrator's critique. Yet, without the missing painting, any overall answer eludes him, and the collector is left asking more questions than when he'd begun.

He travels back through the gallery toward the exit, slowly walking past the tableaux vivants which are now entangled and sprawled throughout the gallery. The actors playing the characters in the tableaux are having trouble keeping still; some blink and some begin to lose their balance. The collector exits through the back door of the gallery and the film ends while the camera resides in the gallery.

Interpretation edit

"You can say The Hypothesis of the Stolen Painting is a detective film because of its riddle… In a more baroque system as in the system of Hypothesis, you don’t enjoy finding the enigma."[8]

The opening shot introduces the audience to the themes the film will later elaborate. Michael Goddard's The Cinema of Raúl Ruiz: Impossible Cartographies poses that this film demonstrates the exploration of cinema's power of “simulacral repetition,” the ability of cinema to simulate images that extend beyond the power of repetition where repeated images build upon themselves.[3] Or, as David Heinemann puts it, film "demonstrates how visual signs draw on, and generate other signs.[9] Hypothesis, with its inclusion of multiple forms of reproduction, exhibits this cinematic power.

Cast edit

  • Jean Rougeul as The Collector
  • Chantal Paley as Tableaux Personnel
  • Jean Raynaud as Tableaux Personnel
  • Daniel Grimm as Tableaux Personnel
  • Isidro Romero as Tableaux Personnel
  • Bernard Daillencourt as Tableaux Personnel
  • Jean-Damien Thiollier as Tableaux Personnel
  • Alix Comte as Tableaux Personnel
  • Christian Broutin as Tableaux Personnel
  • Guy Bonnafoux as Tableaux Personnel
  • Tony Rödel as Tableaux Personnel (as Tony Rodel)
  • Pascal Lambertini as Tableaux Personnel
  • Jean Narboni as Tableaux Personnel
  • Nadège Clair as Tableaux Personnel
  • Jean Reno as Tableaux Personnel
  • Vincent Skimenti as Tableaux Personnel (as Vincent Schimenti)
  • Anne Desbois as Tableaux Personnel
  • Stéphane Shandor as Personage des Tableaux

Reception edit

This film was an "international film festival favorite" as advertised in Black Matter. It was featured in a London Film Festival review as, "the best new film" at the festival.[5] One reviewer regards the film as “playing outside the maps of 70s theory” with an ability to link “raw fragments of human existence with the most severe or expansive kinds of experiments with form.”[6]

In a 1984 Monthly Film Bulletin piece on the film, Thomas Elsaesser compared it to work by Peter Greenaway, Eric Rohmer and Jacques Rivette, calling it "a very literary meditation on the subject of parallel worlds, of messages disguising themselves as accidents and coincidences revealing the hand of fate. Ruiz courteously pays tribute to Jorge Luis Borges, Italo Calvino and the paranoid histories of Thomas Pynchon. But like Umberto Eco's The Name of the Rose, it is also a detective story."[10]

Ranked #13 Best Black and White Films Since 1970 - Film Comment.[11]

References edit

  1. ^ . lecinemaderaoulruiz.com. Archived from the original on 28 February 2012. Retrieved 27 October 2009.
  2. ^ Canby, Vincent (2008). . Movies & TV Dept. The New York Times. Archived from the original on 5 February 2008. Retrieved 27 October 2009.
  3. ^ a b Goddard, Michael (2013). The Cinema of Raúl Ruiz: Impossible Cartographies. New York: Columbia University Press. pp. 45–51.
  4. ^ Rosenbaum, Jonathan (1997). "Ruiz Hopping and Buried Treasure: Twelve Selected Global Sites". Film Comment. 33 (1): 14–27. JSTOR 43455240.
  5. ^ a b Adair, Gilbert (1980). "Gilbert Adair from London". Film Comment. 16 (2): 4–6. JSTOR 43452520.
  6. ^ a b Martin, Adrian (1 October 1998). "From Adrian Martin (Melbourne)". Film Quarterly. 52 (1): 41–43. doi:10.2307/1213361. JSTOR 1213361.
  7. ^ Koehler, Robert (2011). "Review of Mysteries of Lisbon". Cinéaste. 37 (1): 57–58. JSTOR 41691097.
  8. ^ Ruiz, Raúl. ‘Two Comments on Hypothesis of the Stolen Painting.’ Sydney: AFTRS [Translation from ‘Camera Je,’ May 1979], 1981. p 2
  9. ^ Heinemann, David (December 2013). "Siren song: the narrating voice in two films by Raúl Ruiz". Cinema Comparat/Ive Cinema. 1 (3): 66–75.
  10. ^ Elsaesser, Thomas. "The Hypothesis of the Stolen Painting (L'Hypothese du tableau volé, France, 1978)". rouge.com.au. Retrieved 4 June 2019.
  11. ^ Chang, Chris; Finnegan, Jesse P.; Kronenberg, Richard; Hottman, Scott; Daly, Margaret; COOGAN, STEVE; BRYDON, ROB (2011). "OPENING SHOTS". Film Comment. 47 (5): 6–12. JSTOR 43459810.

Further reading edit

  • Timothy Corrigan, The Essay Film: From Montaigne, After Marker (Oxford University Press, 2011), pp. 183–187

External links edit

  • The Hypothesis of the Stolen Painting at IMDb  
  • The Hypothesis of the Stolen Painting at Rotten Tomatoes

hypothesis, stolen, painting, french, hypothèse, tableau, volé, 1978, french, surrealist, experimental, mystery, film, directed, chilean, filmmaker, raúl, ruiz, shot, cinematographer, sacha, vierny, film, inspired, themes, french, writer, pierre, klossowski, 1. The Hypothesis of the Stolen Painting French L Hypothese du tableau vole is a 1978 French surrealist experimental mystery film directed by Chilean filmmaker Raul Ruiz 1 2 and shot by cinematographer Sacha Vierny The film was inspired by the themes of French writer Pierre Klossowski 1905 2001 and makes references to many of Klossowski s works including The Revocation of the Edict of Nantes The Baphomet and La Judith de Frederique Tonnerre 3 Ruiz was originally commissioned by a French TV network to make an arts documentary on Klossowski but what emerged is this film a parody of the art documentary 4 The film was featured in film festivals after its release such as the London Film Festival in 1979 5 Hypothesis of the Stolen Painting has been noted as one of Ruiz s masterpieces that challenges the boundaries of cinema and film theory 6 7 The Hypothesis of the Stolen PaintingFilm posterDirected byRaul RuizWritten byRaul RuizPierre KlossowskiStarringJean RougeulCinematographySacha ViernyEdited byPatrice RoyerMusic byJorge ArriagadaDistributed byInstitut national de l audiovisuelRelease dateSeptember 1978 1978 09 Running time66 minutesCountryFranceLanguageFrench Contents 1 Plot 2 Interpretation 3 Cast 4 Reception 5 References 6 Further reading 7 External linksPlot editHypothesis of the Stolen Painting begins with a static shot of a street which appears at first to be a still image or photograph The remaining scenes center around an art collector participating in a mockumentary style of interviews from a disembodied interviewer who the audience never sees Through a large 19th century baroque style house and its grounds the camera follows the collector as he guides the interviewer The collector has six of seven canvasses by a fictional 19th century painter called Frederic Tonnerre a reference to Klossowski s short story about a painter of the same name No one knows what was in the fourth painting of the sequence because it was stolen His quest is to recreate the missing painting through a series of connections between the other six in order to discover the meaning of the series in its entirety To achieve this he hires models acquires props and rigs lighting in order to bring each of the six surviving scenes to life as tableaux vivants The collector takes advantage of the tableaux vivants as a medium to experience aspects of the paintings that could only be materialized in three dimensions He can then walk around each tableau adjust lighting move actors to different positions and construct narratives intertextually between the tableaux Some of the narratives asserted by the collector include the mythological characters of Diana and Actaeon Knights of the Templar playing chess a scandal among Parisian nobility and an occult ceremony involving a sacrifice similar to that of St Sebastian He also recites the complicated plot of the novel in which the paintings were primarily conceived He thinks traces of an esoteric cult of the Baphomet are hidden in secret codes within the pictures As the collector explains the multitude of threads connecting each painting the narrator questions the collector s pedantic conclusions The collector presses on with his investigation despite the narrator s critique Yet without the missing painting any overall answer eludes him and the collector is left asking more questions than when he d begun He travels back through the gallery toward the exit slowly walking past the tableaux vivants which are now entangled and sprawled throughout the gallery The actors playing the characters in the tableaux are having trouble keeping still some blink and some begin to lose their balance The collector exits through the back door of the gallery and the film ends while the camera resides in the gallery Interpretation edit You can say The Hypothesis of the Stolen Painting is a detective film because of its riddle In a more baroque system as in the system of Hypothesis you don t enjoy finding the enigma 8 The opening shot introduces the audience to the themes the film will later elaborate Michael Goddard s The Cinema of Raul Ruiz Impossible Cartographies poses that this film demonstrates the exploration of cinema s power of simulacral repetition the ability of cinema to simulate images that extend beyond the power of repetition where repeated images build upon themselves 3 Or as David Heinemann puts it film demonstrates how visual signs draw on and generate other signs 9 Hypothesis with its inclusion of multiple forms of reproduction exhibits this cinematic power Cast editJean Rougeul as The Collector Chantal Paley as Tableaux Personnel Jean Raynaud as Tableaux Personnel Daniel Grimm as Tableaux Personnel Isidro Romero as Tableaux Personnel Bernard Daillencourt as Tableaux Personnel Jean Damien Thiollier as Tableaux Personnel Alix Comte as Tableaux Personnel Christian Broutin as Tableaux Personnel Guy Bonnafoux as Tableaux Personnel Tony Rodel as Tableaux Personnel as Tony Rodel Pascal Lambertini as Tableaux Personnel Jean Narboni as Tableaux Personnel Nadege Clair as Tableaux Personnel Jean Reno as Tableaux Personnel Vincent Skimenti as Tableaux Personnel as Vincent Schimenti Anne Desbois as Tableaux Personnel Stephane Shandor as Personage des TableauxReception editThis film was an international film festival favorite as advertised in Black Matter It was featured in a London Film Festival review as the best new film at the festival 5 One reviewer regards the film as playing outside the maps of 70s theory with an ability to link raw fragments of human existence with the most severe or expansive kinds of experiments with form 6 In a 1984 Monthly Film Bulletin piece on the film Thomas Elsaesser compared it to work by Peter Greenaway Eric Rohmer and Jacques Rivette calling it a very literary meditation on the subject of parallel worlds of messages disguising themselves as accidents and coincidences revealing the hand of fate Ruiz courteously pays tribute to Jorge Luis Borges Italo Calvino and the paranoid histories of Thomas Pynchon But like Umberto Eco s The Name of the Rose it is also a detective story 10 Ranked 13 Best Black and White Films Since 1970 Film Comment 11 References edit Le Cinema de Raoul Ruiz L Hypothese du tableau vole lecinemaderaoulruiz com Archived from the original on 28 February 2012 Retrieved 27 October 2009 Canby Vincent 2008 NY Times L Hypothese du tableau vole Movies amp TV Dept The New York Times Archived from the original on 5 February 2008 Retrieved 27 October 2009 a b Goddard Michael 2013 The Cinema of Raul Ruiz Impossible Cartographies New York Columbia University Press pp 45 51 Rosenbaum Jonathan 1997 Ruiz Hopping and Buried Treasure Twelve Selected Global Sites Film Comment 33 1 14 27 JSTOR 43455240 a b Adair Gilbert 1980 Gilbert Adair from London Film Comment 16 2 4 6 JSTOR 43452520 a b Martin Adrian 1 October 1998 From Adrian Martin Melbourne Film Quarterly 52 1 41 43 doi 10 2307 1213361 JSTOR 1213361 Koehler Robert 2011 Review of Mysteries of Lisbon Cineaste 37 1 57 58 JSTOR 41691097 Ruiz Raul Two Comments on Hypothesis of the Stolen Painting Sydney AFTRS Translation from Camera Je May 1979 1981 p 2 Heinemann David December 2013 Siren song the narrating voice in two films by Raul Ruiz Cinema Comparat Ive Cinema 1 3 66 75 Elsaesser Thomas The Hypothesis of the Stolen Painting L Hypothese du tableau vole France 1978 rouge com au Retrieved 4 June 2019 Chang Chris Finnegan Jesse P Kronenberg Richard Hottman Scott Daly Margaret COOGAN STEVE BRYDON ROB 2011 OPENING SHOTS Film Comment 47 5 6 12 JSTOR 43459810 Further reading editTimothy Corrigan The Essay Film From Montaigne After Marker Oxford University Press 2011 pp 183 187External links editThe Hypothesis of the Stolen Painting at IMDb nbsp The Hypothesis of the Stolen Painting at Rotten Tomatoes Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title The Hypothesis of the Stolen Painting amp oldid 1194331467, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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