Tag Archive: Story of Film


The truth to power of Ken Loach

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I, DANIEL BLAKE directed by Ken Loach (UK, 2016)

blakeIn part 12 of his illuminating Channel 4 documentary series on The Story Of Film, Mark Cousins focused on notable directors from around the world like John Sayles in the US and Krzysztof Kieslowski in Poland who were prepared to stand up for worthy, though unfashionable, political causes.

The connecting theme was what Cousins frequently referred to as ‘speaking truth to power’, a phrase that originated with the Quaker movement in the 1950s and was later adopted in the United States as a rallying call to those opposing the dark forces of Fascism and totalitarianism.

For half a century, Ken Loach has followed this principle by being a voice for the dispossessed and downtrodden in society. He opposes the political establishment that serves the masters yet ignores the slaves. He stands against systems which sustain the healthy and the wealthy but provide little nourishment to the poor and needy. Continue reading

Mark Cousins
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In previous posts I have praised Mark Cousins’ epic  ‘Story of Film’ – both the book and the Channel 4 TV series.

Cousins has an encyclopedic knowledge of cinema and the gift of articulating his enthusiasm for movies.

This talent is also evident in interviews he conducted for the BBC Scotland between 1999 and 2001 in a series called Scene By Scene.

The idea, which originated at the Edinburgh Film Festival  through an interview with Sean Connery, was a simple one. Top directors and actors were shown clips from films they had made or appeared in and talk about the background to them.

Cousins is from Ulster and his Irish accent is often confused for Scots. From comments on various forums, it’s obvious that his speaking voice irritates the hell out of many. Personally, I find the sing-song quality charming but whatever you may think about how he talks, it’s hard to criticise him for the passion and preparation he puts into his work.

Television is so full of shallow chat shows or banal documentaries that tell you nothing, that it’s a pleasure to find someone who doesn’t insult or patronise the audience.

Continue reading

THE STORY OF FILM (the book) by Mark Cousins (first published, 2004)

Screen shot 2020-06-16 at 21.57.21After reading E.H. Gombrich’s ‘The Story of Art’, I decided this was the best book I was ever likely to read about the history of visual arts.

In his preface, Gombrich wrote that his book was  “intended for all who feel in need of some first orientation in a strange and fascinating world”.

Mark Cousins makes no secret of the fact that Gombrich’s definitive work was a model for his story of the art of cinema from the silent era of the 1880s to today’s digital age.

His is an equally comprehensive and triumphant work of scholarship and stamina.

One can only be awestruck, and a little envious, that Cousins has not only seen so many movies but that he has the skill and insight to place each in its context and describe then so succinctly and intelligently.

The easy road to take with a book of this type would be to relate the history  as that of American cinema while throwing in a few token movies from other parts of the world to add a little exotic variation.

One of the great things about Cousins’ book, and the 15-hour documentary series for Channel 4 series that followed, is that he does more than just pay lip service to the concept of world cinema.

Hollywood is obviously recognised for its fundamental part in the story he tells but we are shown how innovations in U.S. cinema was mirrored, or many cases anticipated,  in countries around the world such as Japan, Russia, France, Italy and Britain.

“Film history has more than one line of narrative”, argues Cousins and he proves this by comparing and contrasting the art form from a truly global perspective.

In so doing, his subject centres more on the visionary directors than on the movie stars. His objective is to celebrate cinema as a means of expression  rather than as a fame factory or an exotic business model.

The focus is always on those men and women who asked the question “How can I do this differently?”  This is what Steven Spielberg asked himself when he was shooting the memorable opening sequence to Saving Private Ryan and it’s a question the greatest filmmakers have asked themselves throughout the history of cinema.

The book looks at those artists who took risks to challenge existing ways of seeing and in so doing ensure that the language of film is one that is constantly evolving.

Cousins shows how experiments with lighting and editing, or by shooting with different lens or from an unusual angles changed the audience’s perspective and opened up fresh possibilities. He made me realise that I miss many of these details by simply following the plot of the film.

His deconstruction is not done to explain acts of trickery or as an academic exercise, but to show what makes movies work and gives them their power

By adopting an admirably non-elitist standpoint and by writing in plain, jargon-free English, he combines the enthusiasm of a fan with the thrill of discovery. It’s a perspective that means he can convey as much admiration for Laurel & Hardy as for Ozu and Godard.

The subtext is that there are always many ways of seeing the world and true magic happens when a film succeeds in tapping into our dreams or exposing us to our nightmares.

He made me want to re-visit those films I’ve already seen and seek out the many films he mentions which I have yet to see.

At a time when mainstream American movies in particular are rapidly running out of ideas, this book is a timely and impassioned reminder that great cinema , like great literature, should not deaden the brain but inspire us to see the world from other points of view.

E.H. Gombrich set a high benchmark but Mark Cousins manages to reach it.  This is the best book about the art of film I have ever read.

Mark Cousins after a few late nights, (Photograph: Gareth Cattermole/Getty Images)

Mark Cousins may look he’s been dragged through a hedge backwards  in his publicity photos but he is a gentle soul with a lot of wisdom to impart.

I enjoyed an interview in the Guardian  about his new movie that has been  premiered at Cannes and can’t wait to see  A Story Of Children And Film.

This sounds like it follows in the same vein as the wonderful Story Of Film series he made for Channel 4, ie. lilting voiceover and a refreshingly global perspective on the magic of movies.

He explains how children can be more transparent and truthful than adults : “They are not ashamed of bawling or crying just because they want something – and switching it off and turning at once to laughter. They don’t feel they have to disguise the nakedness of those emotions. It’s not just that we mask and they don’t – they are faster in their feelings, I think.”

MARK COUSINS’ FILM ODYSSEY

I have been highly impressed by Mark Cousins’ ambitious 15 part documentary The Story Of Film – An Odyssey  currently being shown on Channel 4. Unfortunately, I missed the first half dozen episodes, but have been glued to the second half.

Cousin’s delivery is slow and deliberate; the unusual rising cadence of his strong Northern Irish accent sounds like a comic reigning in the punch lines.

It sounds strange at first but quickly becomes quite seductive as, always off camera, he picks out  precise details without being elitist or  patronising.

His voiceover intro to the series justifiably boasts of its epic scale in that it covers 12 decades, 6 continents and over a thousand films. The fact that such a wide-ranging documentary got to be financed in these penny pinching times is little short of miraculous. It is undoubtedly money well spent with selective use of interviews which, refreshingly, are not dominated by glitzy stars and the usual talking heads.

Rather than focus on Hollywood films, Cousins takes a truly global perspective highlighting innovative movies from around the world and celebrating those filmmakers who dare to be different.

In the era of Thatcher and Reagan, for example, he singles out  movies from China, Africa, America, Poland and Britain who were “saying truth to power”. For the epic movies of the 1970s Hong Kong, Bollywood and the Middle East take precedence over American blockbusters like Jaws, The Exorcist and Star Wars.

It’s all too easy to regard cinema solely as escapist corporate-led entertainment. Cousins brings passion and a fresh eye to the film history. His documentary, based on the book of the same title, is a timely reminder that the best movies respond to and reflect social change.