Una ópera de cine
Keywords:
Aesthetics, Opera, Dramaturgy, Avant-Garde, ChaplinAbstract
The twentieth century was the backdrop to a sociological and aesthetic process in which the invention of film firmly established itself as an art form. It was not until the second wave of the avant-garde burst onto the creative scene during the 1920s that the aesthetic importance and transcendence of film began to be reconsidered. Few creative genres were impervious to its influence, but opera was and is one of them. This research reflects on how an opera, Charlot, by Bacarisse and Gómez de la Serna, used film as a valid aesthetic element for the first time; an action which enabled film to be seen as a transcendent event within the bounds of high European culture. In 1932, the aesthetic communion between Ramón Gómez de la Serna and Salvador Bacarisse resulted in an opera with not only a filmic plot line, but whose dramaturgy even dictated that projected scenes had to be employed. As part of the transition from silent to talking films, the opera Charlot is a work of vital importance when attempting to follow an unbroken line of research on the aesthetic interaction between film and music. The opera by Bacarisse expertly unfolds using a bold and contemporary neoclassical and polytonal language. Gómez de la Serna focused his plot on a conflict of aesthetic weight involving Charlie Chaplin the filmmaker, his character, and the issue of the disappearance of silent film. Analysing the aesthetic aspects of Charlot and its intense relationship with film in depth is essential for film musicology as the two genres exist in a shared space that is as important as it is rare, and which therefore must be broached.
Published
How to Cite
Issue
Section
License
All articles and content published in the Journal of Sound, Silence, Image and Technology (JoSSIT) have an Attribution 4.0 International Creative Commons licence. More information can be found here: https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/deed.en. This licence allows copying, distribution, public communication, derived works and commercial uses of JoSSIT content as long as the source (JoSSIT) and author of the article are credited.
For images, however, authors are solely responsible for obtaining the necessary permissions for any images used in their works that have copyright.
For any other use or permission not included here, please email the journal at: jossit@tecnocampus.cat
Unless otherwise indicated, at the time of submission authors will be deemed to accept JoSSIT's confidentiality policy and legal notice.
By submitting an article, the author accepts and declares that they are the original author of the work and that they have the necessary permissions, as well as accepting they are not performing any illegal act by submitting their work. The editor, director and members of JoSSIT are exempt from any obligation or responsibility arising from the work that may infringe the rights of third parties in any way.