Sunday, August 18, 2019
Cinematic Techniques in Nabokovs Laughter in the Dark Essay -- Movie
Cinematic Techniques in Nabokov's Laughter in the Dark     Ã     Vladimir Nabokov's Laughter  in the Dark takes the movies for its style as well as its subject matter. In recounting the farcical tragedy  of director Albinus and starlet Margot, Nabokov imports a wide variety of  techniques and imagery from the cinema into the novel. But Nabokov's "cinematic"  style is not analagous to that of a screenplay: the polished prose is always  tinged with the novelist's trademark irony. Gavriel Moses notes that     Ã       Nabokov's most consistent reaction to popular films in their public context  is his awareness that the film image... is overwhelming in its insistent claim  to presence and, as a consequence, to truth. But in formula films perceived  uncritically or absorbed inertly, film tends to displace... what is really  important in life and to impose its own schematic simplifications upon life's  teaming and idiosyncratic details. (62)     Ã       Virtually all the characters in Laughter in the Dark take their  understandings of life from the film industry. Their ideas and impressions,  therefore, tend to be rather banal, predictable, and superficial. Nabokov's  people never surprise the reader, never think unusual thoughts, never reveal  unexpected depths. In contrast to the complex psyches found in Tolstoy and  Chekhov, for instance, Albinus, Rex, and Margot are cartoons, with speech  balloons floating above their heads. Indeed, even their thought processes  resemble the interior monologues of characters in Hollywood films. So, for example, when Nabokov  transcribes Albinus's silent thoughts, he employs a standard voice-over  template:     Ã       Albinus, his queer emotions riding him, thought: "What the devil do I care  for this fellow...              ...chcock: Fifty Years of His Motion  Pictures. New York: An Anchor  Book, Doubleday, 1992. Originally published by Hopkinson and Blake in 1976.     Ã       Works Consulted     Nabokov, Vladimir. Lolita. New York: Vintage Books, A Division of Random  House, Inc., 1999. First published 1955.     Raguet-Bouvart, Christine. "Camera Obscura and Laughter in the Dark, or, The  Confusion of Texts." Translated from the French by Jeff Edmunds.     Seifrid, Thomas. "Nabokov's Poetics of Vision, or, What Anna Karenina is  Doing in Kameraobskura." Copyright 1996 Board of Trustees of Davidson College.  Originally published in Nabokov's Studies #3 (1996).     http://www.libraries.psu.edu/iasweb/nabokov/seifrid1.htm     Simon, John. "Vladimir Nabokov: The Russian Years." From The New Criterion  Vol.9, No.6, February 1991.     http://www.newcriterion.com/archive/09/feb91/nabokov.htm     Ã                        
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