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Intellect is delighted to announce that Short Film Studies 9.2 is now
available!

This issue features articles based on the short films, 'El Adiós (The
Goodbye)' and 'Haunted Memory: The cinema of Víctor Er'.

For more information about the issue, click here >>
https://www.intellectbooks.co.uk/journals/view-issue,id=3679/

*Contents*

*El Adiós (The Goodbye) Clara Roquet, Spain and USA, 2015, 15 min.*

*El Adiós (The Goodbye)*
Authors: Clara Roquet

*A shot-by-shot breakdown of The Goodbye*
Authors: Richard Raskin

*Miscellaneous*
Authors: Clara Roquet

*An interview with Clara Roquet on The Goodbye*
Authors: Richard Raskin

*Structural and sensual reflexivity in The Goodbye*
Authors: Anna Batori

The article analyses the film’s mise en abyme structure, with special
attention paid to the play of continuity and discontinuity between shots
and the tableaux-like organization of images.

*El Adiós – Death: Threat, transition or mystery?*
Authors: Balász Zágoni

The female characters in the film have very different approaches to death.
Julia, the youngest, has to learn about death by observing Rosana’s and
Mercè’s ways of processing it. This article will compare these death
narratives and their visual representations.

*A small and silent revolution*
Authors: Ryan Prout

Through explicitation of Roquet’s aesthetics – including echoes and
reflections of Erice, Hammershøi and Martel – this article argues that The
Goodbye harnesses intertextuality concisely to question how class,
language, gender, servitude and race intersect. It addresses the role of
grief in illuminating the indignities of deeply entrenched power relations.

*Breaking the rules of the game*
Authors: Cynthia Felando

El Adiós is a sincere portrait of a dutiful servant as she tends to her
deceased employer’s body and home for the last time, while enduring the
routine class-based offenses delivered by her employer’s daughter. This
article notes how camerawork and mise en scène emphasize the protagonist’s
sensitive and ambiguous position.

*Rosana’s house*
Authors: Graciela Michelotti

This article compares Roquet’s short with García Lorca’s La casa de
Bernarda Alba (1936), exploring how relationships between maids and female
employers have been preserved despite the passage of time. When framed by
the incidence of class differences, long-held traditions and repressed
emotions, silence dominates both texts.

*The handling of time*
Authors: Jacques Lefebvre-Linetzky

The story unfolds chronologically and each sequence has a specific ‘time
quality’ according to who appears on-screen. The death of the grandmother
evokes the past, while most of the story takes place in the present as told
by the omniscient camera. The future brings a paradoxical sense of closure.

*The strength of stillness*
Authors: Iben Have

The article discusses the strength of stillness both at a narrative level
related to Rosana’s appearance and at an aesthetic level related to the
soundtrack. The quiet sound design communicates intensity and meaning, as
does Rosana, who is largely ignored by the family but is an eminently
strong character.

*Latin American caretakers in Spain: Reading effect and agency in The
Goodbye*
Authors: Miguel Fernández Labayen And  Francisco Utray

This article studies the reception of The Goodbye among Latin American
migrants in Spain. Through a focus group discussion with Latin American
female caretakers in Madrid, the article analyses the individual and
collective responses in relation to the issues of class, race and gender
mobility addressed by the film.

*Haunted Memory: The cinema of Víctor Erice Cristina Álvarez López and
Adrian Martin, Spain, 2016, 13 min.*

*A shot-by-shot breakdown of Haunted Memory: The Cinema of Víctor Erice*
Authors: Richard Raskin

*An interview with Cristina Álvarez López and Adrian Martin on Haunted
Memory*

*Retrieving trauma, overcoming trauma: Erice’s cinematic poetics*
Authors: Gracia Ramírez

This article examines Haunted Memory’s overall structure and how the
voice-over commentary both caresses the images as treasured objects and
inscribes new meaning. Thus, the video essay goes beyond paying homage to
the celebrated film director and considers the universality of the
experiences of trauma and cinema.

*On voice in Haunted Memory*
Authors: Libertad Gills

This article will analyse the use of voice in this video essay and how the
authors’ voice, spoken by Martin, engages with the images and sounds of
Erice’s films, most importantly, with Erice’s voice. How do the voice of
the video essayist and the voice of the director differ? And what do these
voices teach us about the possibilities of speaking with, over and about
images?

*A poetic approach to the cinema of Erice*
Authors: Federico Bonaddio

Haunted Memory evokes those themes across Erice’s cinema that are of
universal significance: memory, childhood, the nature of cinema itself.
Mostly absent, however, is the specifically Spanish context, something that
attests to this audio-visual essay’s engagement with the predominantly
poetic, rather than explicative, approach of Erice’s work.

*Haunting analysis: The audio-visual essay*
Authors: Mads Outzen

This article reflects upon the audio-visual essay as academic work and work
of art, exploring Martin and Álvarez López’ short to demonstrate that this
form of cinematic experimentation is indeed both things – providing
analytical examination of the cinema of Víctor Erice as well as creating a
new poetic experience in itself.

*Critical haunting*
Authors: Hoi Lun Law

A distinctive feature of Haunted Memory is its evocative interplay between
voice-over and visual that suspends the viewer – not unlike the
curious-child in Víctor Erice’s films – in a position between understanding
and non-understanding. This article explores how the practice of the
audio-visual essay presents an opportunity to exploit critical uncertainty.

*The last word, image, sound*
Authors: Cristina Álvarez López And Adrian Martin


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