英文摘要 |
This paper analyzes the 25th shot to the 39th shot in Tsai Ming-liang’s Goodbye, Dragon Inn. By using these 15 shots as case study, this paper aims to argue that in Goodbye, Dragon Inn, Tsai intends to create a new possibility in cinematic editing. Borrowing from Dziga Vertov’s concept of theory of intervals and Roland Barthes’s thinking of sens obtus, in this paper I try to connect the similarities and differences in various fundamental editing and montage principles, in order to develop a new possible path toward the concept of“obtuse montage”. And finally, I analyze these 15 shots by adopting Georges Didi-Huberman and Giorgio Agamben’s ways of thinking, and reflecting on what these 15 shots in Goodbye, Dragon Inn could provide in montage theory and cinematic aesthetics in future film studies. |