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Closer and Closer: On Close-Ups in Film
Patrick Walters
B茅la Bal谩zs, in Theory of the Film (1930), examines the close-up鈥檚 productive, illuminating uses in cinema. He sees this shot choice as serving certain key functions. It is a figure, a vehicle for meaning pointing to something else; whether a face or hand or inanimate object, the shot can signify feelings, intentions, character. It can be revelatory, subtly signaling hidden motivations or repressed emotion. It also has a relation to other shots, is part of a larger engine of meaning that is the film entire. Bal谩zs also considers the degree to which the viewers must collaborate with the text, look for meaning, read the signs.
Bal谩zs believes that one of the most generative, compelling abilities of the close-up is as a compassionate window into a character. He notes how the shot emanates from the screen with a kind of emotional energy matched by the viewer鈥檚 own feelings, which are sparked by the image: 鈥淸鈥 good close-ups radiate a tender human attitude in the contemplation of hidden things, a delicate solicitude, a gentle bending over the intimacies of life-in-miniature, a warm sensibility. Good close-ups are lyrical; it is the heart, not the eye, that has perceived them.鈥 Bal谩zs brings the image/character, viewer and director together in this trinity of good will. He suggests that we are leaning into the shot along with the camera, the director and viewer huddled around the subject; whether the close-up is a face or hand or inanimate object, the framing confers upon it a kind of aura we respond to, hearing its music. Josef von Sternberg, in The Last Command, employs close-ups that we may consider in light of Bal谩zs鈥檚 poetic definition. The exiled General turned typecast actor goes numbly through the motions in wardrobe, seated (ironically) at a communal table with the dregs of Central Casting. Reaching surreptitiously in close-up into his jacket for a wallet, he removes a Russian military medal and, as the shot pans gently over to his jacket, he pins it on. This gesture is close to the vest, but the previous close-up is a fellow actor looking on, so the point of view is his rather than the General鈥檚. Rather than an evocation of the General鈥檚 private relation to the past, this is observed by a mocking member of the proletariat who prefigures the seething mob who will depose the General in a long flashback to come. Still, the tender framing and compassion of this little glimpse overcomes a callous eye and the moment is, Bal谩zs might also remind us, 鈥渆xpressing the poetic sensibility of the director.鈥 The point of view, he suggests, is on some level the filmmaker鈥檚 as well, if only in the shot鈥檚 emotional register. The director鈥檚 compassion has a seat at the table, as does ours.
Bal谩zs offers various examples of the close-up鈥檚 way of isolating and bringing forward someone鈥檚 nature, motivation or emotional state. These moments are a shared glance, involving the camera eye and the viewer鈥檚, in addition to whatever relations are established between the characters鈥 points of view. Bal谩zs describes how the 鈥渟ectional pictures鈥 in shots are, rather than parts of some master picture, a series of discrete images which 鈥渕erge in our consciousness into a total scene.鈥 He acknowledges the role of both the filmmaker and the viewer in this assemblage. The lucid construction of a sequence of these sectional pictures can help the viewers do work of their own, 鈥渁n association of ideas, a synthesis of consciousness and imagination.鈥 Bal谩zs points to the collaboration between text and reader, material and mind. The active spectator responds to cues, and one shot followed by another will combine to make sense. The apparatus of montage delivers or presents a series of distinct images, thereby conferring an order and intention, but we must still make an effort to divine meaning from the sequence. Since close-ups are relative to shots that are not close, the viewer must always consider their status in relation to other shots, which have suggestive meanings of their own.
In The Last Command, the General鈥檚 flashback journey into the past is bookended by close-ups in a mirror. The medal was something he sought through excavating the past, and this 鈥渓yrical鈥 close-up is now a cue for self-reflection. His face in the mirror equates to the long narrative to come, which seems to emanate from that gaze. This sectional picture, in effect, triggers the many images to come just as, Bal谩zs notes, 鈥渁 movement, a gesture, a form鈥 in one shot can 鈥渞efer the eye to the preceding and following shots.鈥 The framing of the main narrative with these close-ups operates in the directive, guiding fashion that Bal谩zs highlights. He emphasizes the investigative nature of close-ups, their ability to spotlight the overlooked: 鈥淐lose-ups are often dramatic revelations of what is really happening under the surface of appearances.鈥 The General鈥檚 private moment is an exposure of pain and longing, and perhaps also a recognition of our own assessment of his abject condition. His forlorn close-up and its 鈥溾榤icrophysiognomy鈥 show[s] a deeply moving human tragedy with the greatest economy of expression.鈥 The long narrative that follows is not the only point here; these shots, Bal谩zs would concur, have a story of their own. Speech is not necessary, because the General鈥檚 face speaks for itself: 鈥淎 single twitch of a facial muscle may express a passion for the expression of which a long sentence would be needed.鈥 A voice-over or monologue would be redundant, since the image itself is a 鈥渕ute soliloquy.鈥
In his appreciation of how the silent cinema zoomed in on the 鈥渉idden life of little things鈥 and the 鈥減oetry of miniature landscapes,鈥 Bal谩zs is acknowledging how the close-up takes us from overview to ground level, from global to local, where the 鈥済eneral is transformed into the particular.鈥 Whether of the face or hand, close shots capture an otherwise hidden emotional language: 鈥淭he close-up can show us a quality in a gesture of the hand we never noticed before when we saw that hand stroke or strike something, a quality which is often more expressive than any play of the features.鈥 He sees the close-up as a window opening on meaning, and perhaps notes the synecdochal function of the hand as a figure for the face, an eloquent substitute. In the final scene of City Lights, Charlie Chaplin uses close-ups of both face and hand to communicate the characters鈥 emotional epiphanies, understated as they are. His decision to do so without sound, even in 1931, evinces a belief that silence is the most expressive arena for close-ups. When the Tramp and the Blind Girl who now can see reunite, she feels his familiar hand, but is looking at his face for the first time. Chaplin cuts to a close-up of their joined hands. The Tramp鈥檚 hand is who he is to her, the hand that had shown her compassion. Bal谩zs would admire how, with her poignant gestures, 鈥渢he invisible face behind the visible鈥 reveals itself. He lauds subtle acting and how it can open up a gateway for the audience.
The close-up on their hands is a performance in itself as she goes from recognition to gratitude, a little pat of comfort, and finally a loving caress. Her hand moves up his arm, still in close-up, to his chest, his heart. The shots of the Tramp are tighter, since her discovery is central so far. When she says 鈥淵es, I can see now鈥 she takes his hand to her heart. The final shot鈥攁 close-up of the Tramp, tears welling, fingers sheepishly in his mouth and flower in hand鈥 fades after just a few seconds. Chaplin chooses not to indulgently linger, as if respectfully leaving them to the rest of their lives. The fade, rather than evoking the 鈥渟adness of farewells and the impermanence of things,鈥 is hopeful. Bal谩zs proposes that a tight shot 鈥渃an get so close that it can show 鈥榤icrophysiognomic details鈥欌; while his point is that the shot can reveal something the character might want to hide, with the Tramp we are close enough to see what we would not be able to in even a medium shot. Bal谩zs illustrates the close-up鈥檚 musical, lyrical ability, how it works on us at the deepest level. He feels that this is just enough. The cinema viewer, after three decades of silence, was adept at the 鈥渁rt of reading faces.鈥 These delicate performances at the end of City Lights, hands and faces, confirm Bal谩zs鈥檚 view that the close-up allowed a more restrained acting style due to its revelatory spark.
Bal谩zs also recognizes that close-ups have a power that should not be limited to the face or hands, or the human figure at all. He believes that in silent cinema, through the very act of photography, 鈥渕en and things were thus brought on to the same plane鈥 (58). In his treatment of Michael Romm鈥檚 The Thirteen, Bal谩zs examines the metonymic uses of these close-ups, their ability to present human experience through a figurative resonance. A soldier鈥檚 agonizing journey across the desert is depicted indirectly, the director employing close-ups of the terrain as an indication of the brutal nature of the experience: 鈥淭hen the close-ups of the trail mark the beginning of an exciting drama. For the trail changes its shape, it takes on a physiognomy鈥攊t shows us the fatigue and then exhaustion of the increasingly uncertain feet and our imagination is stimulated by the fact that we cannot see, but merely deduce or guess the condition of the man by the state of the trail.鈥 Bal谩zs describes these images as signs or markers in place of what the viewer might otherwise have expected to see. The trail has its own face, he suggests, one that stands for the face we know is in agony. An economical reliance on close-ups conveys the inner life of the soldier, his anguish and ordeal, at the same time encouraging鈥攅ven demanding鈥攖hat the viewer engage actively with the imagery, make connections: 鈥淭hat we have not seen a close-up of the dead horse brings home the significance of the close-up more than anything else [鈥 He himself has not been shown us even once, but the picture our imagination paints of him is all the more harrowing.鈥 Bal谩zs contends that the images we are seeing鈥攖he soldier鈥檚 trail in the sand, his lone footsteps, his discarded equipment鈥攁re signifiers of the difficulty of his journey, the death of his horse, the impossibility of continuing to carry anything under these alarming conditions. The referents here, the corresponding shots that, in a montage, would connect the dots for the reader and complete the meaning, are subordinated, even rejected. Bal谩zs acknowledges both the good sense of the director and the astute watchfulness necessary in the viewer to take advantage of these cues. Rather than laud the close-up as obvious or a shortcut, which he does do at times, here he highlights both the confidence of the director and the image-making minds of the audience.
Some of Bal谩zs鈥檚 most compelling arguments involve the interplay between the film and viewer, his belief that we are constantly woven into the imagery and narrative through our watching, particularly with close-ups: 鈥淭hey show the faces of things and those expressions on them which are significant because they are reflected expressions of our own subconscious feeling.鈥 The shot is a mirror of our own inner state, which aligns us with the character and stitches us into the moment. In the tense pause before the tarpaulin-covered sailors aboard the Potemkin are to be shot, Eisenstein inserts several close-ups of the priest鈥檚 hand tapping his cross with the countdown to fire and the soldier鈥檚 hand keeping time on his sword. In Bal谩zs鈥檚 terms these are evocations of our own tension, and perhaps also confirm (or create) an idea we might have about the oppressive authority of church and state. In a film without much subjectivity, this moment seems to conform to Bal谩zs鈥檚 estimation of the close-up鈥檚 consonance with our own feelings in a charged moment, as well as to offer a 鈥渟ign of an internal storm鈥 within the character. In the final scene of Late Spring, Yasujiro Ozu also uses close-ups of a hand to indicate an emotional state, as a figure for a man鈥檚 inner life. While this is a sound film, Ozu鈥檚 customary restraint and subtlety serve a quiet, dialogue-free moment. Professor Shukichi returns home after his daughter鈥檚 wedding, alone and bereft, in discreet long shots evoking his loneliness and isolation. He sits down in a frontal medium shot, as we get closer to witnessing his sorrow. He reaches for an apple, still in medium shot, but then a cut to close-up, his careful peeling. A cut to a close-up of Shukichi鈥檚 anguished face, as if the paring of the apple had exposed what he was trying, in his dignified manner, to contain. A cut back to the apple, a weary pause, and the peel drops. The hand and the apple are associative figures for Shukichi鈥檚 emotions. The final shot is of the tide coming in, a grand image after the intimacy of the scene and its close-ups. Ozu uses the close-ups as part of a series of other kinds of shots to punctuate their importance. Bal谩zs, remembering that early cinemagoers had to become schooled in the way that shot sequences work, explicates the logic of the relations between shots of varying distance: 鈥淚f the close-up lifts some object or some part of an object out of its surroundings, we nevertheless perceive it as existing in space; we do not for instance forget that the hand, say, which is shown by the close-up, belongs to some human being. It is precisely this connection which lends meaning to its very movement.鈥 As always, Bal谩zs honors both the integrity of the single image and its relation to others, the sectional pictures in league with other pictures, but maintaining a power of their own.
The close-up, for Bal谩zs, works because it does something other shots, and other art forms, cannot. His emphasis on the variety of its applications is a testament to his admiration for this potent cinematic device. Going beyond the conventional sense we might have of the close-up鈥攁s a way for the film to offer a 鈥減ortrait鈥 of the character, a snapshot鈥擝al谩zs also reminds us of the synecdochal opportunities (hands, feet) or metonymic flourishes (an apple, a sword) of the close-up. These shots can become a figure, an idea to be read, connected logically to the 鈥渢otal picture鈥 of character or body, but separated, with an ontological status of its own. The close-up gets its foot in the door of intimate realms unreached by the distance of the presentational, proscenium shot, marking its own territory as something uniquely cinematic.
Patrick Walters is a Sylvania English Instructor. In 2017 he attended Film Studies courses as part of his sabbatical. This essay was written for a Film Theory class.