This article examines and compares a couple of moments of fleeting strangeness punctuating the history of the cultural reception of moving image technologies. Maxim Gorky read the early cinematographic image in terms of 'cursed grey shadows' (1896), while recent reviewers of Hironobu Sakaguchi's Final Fantasy: The Spirits Within (2001) have rendered the film's computer-generated cast as cadavers, dummies, dolls and silicon-skinned mannequins. This article argues that it is not merely the image's unfamiliar and new aesthetics that evoke the uncanny. Rather the image is received within a cultural framework where its perceived strangeness speaks allegorically of what it means to be 'human' at that historical moment
"Making Images Move reveals a new history of the moving image as told through its engagement with ot...
Our century has seen the proliferation of reality shows devoted to ghost hunts, documentaries on hau...
Horror films often play with shadows, darkness and nightscapes. One need only to think of Nosferatu'...
This thesis examines an intermittent uncanniness that emerges in cultural responses to new image tec...
In this article, I argue that the new - as opposed to habitualised - optical and digital technologie...
© 2000 Dr. Michele PiersonThis thesis offers an historical and theoretical investigation into the ro...
This thesis explores how digital visual effects (DVFx) influence not only public appreciation of dig...
When new technologies are integrated with older media, potential viewers are introduced to these cha...
This article maps out and conceptualizes the way cinema emerged as a novel type of technology of the...
Cinema, with its passive cinematic apparatus and linear narrative is often characterised as a contra...
Today, cinema is digital: 95 percent of all movie theatres worldwide are equipped with digital proje...
The development of special effects technologies, from Edison’s Kinetograph to digitally composited f...
The concept of the uncanny has attracted the attention of critics and scholars for nearly a century....
The cinema, as originally an analogue apparatus of representation, has a particularly complex and co...
This paper explores notions of realism, evidence, undecidability and faith in the context of our rel...
"Making Images Move reveals a new history of the moving image as told through its engagement with ot...
Our century has seen the proliferation of reality shows devoted to ghost hunts, documentaries on hau...
Horror films often play with shadows, darkness and nightscapes. One need only to think of Nosferatu'...
This thesis examines an intermittent uncanniness that emerges in cultural responses to new image tec...
In this article, I argue that the new - as opposed to habitualised - optical and digital technologie...
© 2000 Dr. Michele PiersonThis thesis offers an historical and theoretical investigation into the ro...
This thesis explores how digital visual effects (DVFx) influence not only public appreciation of dig...
When new technologies are integrated with older media, potential viewers are introduced to these cha...
This article maps out and conceptualizes the way cinema emerged as a novel type of technology of the...
Cinema, with its passive cinematic apparatus and linear narrative is often characterised as a contra...
Today, cinema is digital: 95 percent of all movie theatres worldwide are equipped with digital proje...
The development of special effects technologies, from Edison’s Kinetograph to digitally composited f...
The concept of the uncanny has attracted the attention of critics and scholars for nearly a century....
The cinema, as originally an analogue apparatus of representation, has a particularly complex and co...
This paper explores notions of realism, evidence, undecidability and faith in the context of our rel...
"Making Images Move reveals a new history of the moving image as told through its engagement with ot...
Our century has seen the proliferation of reality shows devoted to ghost hunts, documentaries on hau...
Horror films often play with shadows, darkness and nightscapes. One need only to think of Nosferatu'...