The second part of
Cinema 1 concerns Deleuze's classification of types of movement-image. Bergson's thesis of movement is that of an entangled human body and brain in the world of matter where
perceptions cause
affects and where
affects cause
actions. The body and brain is thus an accumulation of
habitual memories. However, at one and the same time, for the human (as the human has evolved and as every human grows), habitual memories are multiple, contradictory, and paradoxical. This means that perceptions no longer wholly determine affects, and affects no longer wholly determine actions. The body and brain becomes a "centre of indetermination". Deleuze sees a correspondence between Bergson's philosophy of movement and the cinematic medium. There are thus four types of cinematic movement-images: •
perception-images (that focus on what is seen) •
affection-images (that focus on expressions of feeling) •
action-images (that focus on behaviours and changing the world) •
mental-images (that focus upon the multiplicities of habitual memory) As
David Rodowick – who wrote the first commentary on Deleuze's
Cinema books – summarises, the movement-image will "divide" when it is "related to a center of indetermination […] according to the type of determination, into perception-images, affection-images, action-images, and relation-images". The first three images are associated, respectively, with
long shots,
close-ups and
medium shots; while "the memory-image, the mental-image, the relation-image" will "derive" from the three other types. As Deleuze writes, with the memory-image "action, and also perception and affection, are framed in a fabric of relations. It is this chain of relations which constitutes the mental image, in opposition to the thread of actions, perceptions and affections".
Perception images "[I]f the cinematographic perception-image consequently passes from the subjective to the objective, and vice versa, should we not ascribe to it a specific, diffuse, supple status […]?" The perception-image creates characters and worlds within the film. The perception-image is thus the way in which the characters are perceived and perceive. The perception-image can vary from the subjective
point of view shot to the semi-subjective (as if seen by someone) to floating free becoming an anonymous, unidentified viewpoint of the camera (a camera consciousness). There are three different types of perception for Deleuze:
solid perception (normal human perception),
liquid perception (where images flow together, such as in pre-War French cinema), and
gaseous perception (the pure vision of the non-human eye: which is achieved through foregrounding montage). Gaseous perception is objective vision, the vision of matter, of the world before humans or at least not dependent upon human vision.
Dziga Vertov's images aspire to such pure vision, as does
experimental cinema. Deleuze's division of the perception-image into three signs (solid, liquid, and gaseous) comes from Bergson's conditions of perception in
Matter and Memory. Gaseous perception is the genesis of all perception-images where there are a multiplicity of images with no centre; with liquid perception multiple centres form and flow from one to another; while solid perception composes a unitary subjective centre to which all other images relate. The perception-image is the condition for all the other images of the movement-image: "perception will not constitute a first type of image in the movement-image without being extended into the other types, if there are any: perception of action, of affection, of relation, etc". This means that each of the other images will also have three signs corresponding to solid, liquid and gaseous perception.
Affection images '' (1928) "The affection-image is the close-up, and the close-up is the face..." A character in the film is perceived and perceives – and then will act. However, there is an interval between perception and action:
affects. Bodies are affected by the world, and then act upon the world. There will be thus be types of shots which take affects as their subject matter. The most familiar type of affective shot is of the face. The close-up. Some films, such as Dreyer's
The Passion of Joan of Arc (1928) are composed from a series of close-ups, and in this way create an affection-image film. The affection-image film is therefore a film which foregrounds emotions: desires, wants, needs. These emotions arise from images of faces which communicate the unfilmable intensive effects of the characters. This type of affection-image corresponds to the sign of solid perception of the perception-image and is called the "icon". There will then be types of affection-images and affection-image films which correspond to liquid and gaseous perception. These are named the "dividual" and "any-space-whatevers". The sign of the dividual is seen in films by Eisenstein which film collective emotions of the mass. Any-space-whatevers are most usually seen in backgrounds, and when they become the focus of the film can be landscapes or city-spaces, or using aspects of cinema such as color and lighting. Deleuze gets the idea of the any-space-whatever from Pascal Augé, who "would prefer to look for their source in the experimental cinema. But it could equally be said that they are as old as cinema itself". These are non-human affects: "a place of ruin, all-encompassing rain, the lens flare of sunshine, the shimmering of heat haze".
Action images 's
Intolerance (1916) "...the American cinema constantly shoots and reshoots a single fundamental film, which is the birth of a nation-civilisation, whose first version was provided by Griffith." Deleuze defines two forms of the action-image: the
large form and the
small form. In realism, which "produced the universal triumph of American cinema", actions transform an initial situation. Large form is defined as SAS. There are gaps waiting to be filled. The main genres of this image are the
documentary film, the psycho-social film,
film noir, the
Western and the
historical film. Deleuze attributes the large form to the
Actors Studio and its method. Small form is defined as ASA. The actions create the situation. The films of Chaplin,
Buster Keaton and
Harold Lloyd play with the spectator's assumptions of what they are viewing on the screen. The SAS and ASA can be a continuous progression occurring many times throughout the film.
Mental images '' (1954) "We hardly believe any longer that a global situation can give rise to an action which is capable of modifying it – no more than we believe that an action can force a situation to disclose itself, even partially". Hitchcock, according to Deleuze, introduces the
mental image, where relation itself is the object of the image. And this takes movement-image to its crisis. After Hitchcock, both the small form and the large form are in crisis, as are action-images in general. In
Robert Altman's
Nashville the multiple characters and storylines refer to a dispersive, rather than a globalising situation. In
Sidney Lumet's
Serpico and
Dog Day Afternoon characters "behave like windscreen wipers". Deleuze develops this theory by detailing the chronology of
Italian neorealism,
French New Wave, and
New German Cinema. Deleuze states that we must think "beyond movement", which leads us to
Cinema 2: The Time-Image. ==Taxonomy of movement-images==