Article 5RQQQ So that’s how you do an eating scene! How TikTok swallowed the movies

So that’s how you do an eating scene! How TikTok swallowed the movies

by
Peter Bradshaw
from Technology | The Guardian on (#5RQQQ)

The film side of TikTok has plenty of spoofs. But our writer prefers the critics, the metal-jawed burger-biting machine - and the effects experts revealing how to make a camera crew vanish into thin air

Film TikTok is giving film an explosion of energy, a performative and democratised version of cinephilia that celebrates, imitates, teases, lip-syncs, mashes up and mocks - but all the time rubs up against - the movies. Susan Sontag, in Against Interpretation, called for a rich, intuitive kind of criticism that celebrates and reproduces the sensuous effect of art, instead of imposing a coldly pedagogic analysis. I think she'd have loved Film TikTok. And it's happened over just a few years, propelled by people under the age of 25.

Apart from everything else, Film TikTok may be undermining one of the most fundamental tenets of cinema: that the screen has to be landscape" style, since anything else looks amateurish and inauthentic. British film-maker Charlie Shackleton recently talked about mentoring a group of young Australian critics and finding how utterly steeped they were in the language of TikTok: asked to take a picture of them on his phone, he recalls his chagrin for turning it sideways - Like a fucking Lumiere brother!"

Jean-Luc Godard collaged the movies in his epic essay project: Histoire(s) du Cinema. And Film TikTok is doing something comparable, though without the conspicuous cultural weight and heft. It's appropriating constituent elements and scenes then reshuffling them, or cutting in new goofy re-enactments. This juxtaposition is a critical act. Overwhelmingly, it's driven by humour and comedy, and Film TikTok incidentally adores the key TikTok trope of the doppelganger - the shot-reverse-shot of the same people talking to themselves as different characters, shot slightly from below to underline the absurdity.

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