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    • 家庭片 
    • 李依馨 富梓铭 
    • Voice 1 (male "professional announcer" type): This neighbor hood(1) was made for the wretched di gnity of the pe tty bourgeoisi e, for respec table occupa tions a nd intellectua l tourism. The sede ntary popul ation of the upper floors was shelte red from the i nfluences of t he street. This neigh borhood has remained t he same. It wa s the strange s etting of our stor y, where a s ystematic ques tioning of all the d iversions a nd work s of a soci ety, a total critiqu e of its i dea of happine ss, was expre ssed in acts. Th ese people a lso scorn ed &q uot;subjecti ve profundity& amp;quot;. Th ey were inte rested in nothing but a n adequate and concrete expres sion of themselve s. Voice 2 ( Debord, monotone) : Human bein gs are not fully consci ous of t heir real l ife - usua lly groping in the dark; ov erwhelmed by t he consequence s of their ac ts; at eve ry moment groups an d indiv iduals find themselves con fronted with results they have not w ished. Voic e 1: They said that oblivion was their rulin g passion. They wanted to rei nvent e verything e ach day; to beco me the m asters and po ssessors of their own lives. J ust as o ne does n ot judge a man accor ding to the conception he has of himsel f, one ca nnot judge suc h periods of transition accordi ng to their own consciousne ss; on the contr ary, one must expla in the conscio usness through the contr adictions of ma terial life, throug h the co nflict between social cond itions and th e force s of social p roduction. Th e progre ss achie ved in the domi nation of natur e was not yet matched b y a corr esponding li beration of ev eryday life. Yo uth pass ed away a mong the va rious contr ols of re signation. Our camera has cap tured for you a few aspec ts of a provisi onal micr osociety. The knowledge of empirica l facts re mains abstr act and s uperficial as long as it is no t concretiz ed by its integration i nto the whole &q uot;” whi ch alone permits the superse ssion of p artial and abst ract pro blems so as to arri ve at their con crete essence , and implicit ly at their mea ning. This g roup wa s on the marg ins of the eco nomy. It ten ded tow ard a role of pure con sumption, and first of all the free con sumption of i ts time . It thus found it self dir ectly engaged in quali tative vari ations o f everyday l ife but deprived o f any means t o intervene in them. The gr oup range d over a very small area . The sam e times brough t them bac k to the s ame plac es. No one went to bed early. Discuss ion on the m eaning of a ll this continu ed... Voice 2: "Our life is a journ ey "” In the winte r and t he night. & amp;quot;” We seek our passage...& amp;quot;� Voic e 1: The abando ned litera ture nev ertheless exerted a delayi ng action o n new affec tive formulat ions. Voi ce 2: The re was the f atigue and the cold of t he mornin g in this much-trav ersed l abyrinth, like an enigma t hat we had to resolve . It was a lo oking-g lass reality th rough which we had t o discover the potenti al richness of reality. On the bank o f the river e vening began o nce again; and caresses; and the importan ce of a worl d without im portance. Just as the ey es have a blurred vis ion of many thi ngs and can see only one c learly, so the wi ll can strive o nly incomplete ly toward diver se objects an d can comp letely l ove only one a t a tim e. Voic e 3 (youn g girl): No one c ounted on the f uture. It wo uld never be possible to be tog ether l ater, or a nywhere else. T here would never be a greater f reedom. Voice 1: The re fusal o f time and of growing old automat ically limit ed encou nters i n this narrow, conting ent zone, where what was lacking was felt as irrepara ble. The ext reme preca riousness of t he means of get ting by withou t worki ng was at the r oot of this i mpatienc e which made excesses nec essary and brea ks defi nitive. Voi ce 2: One never really con tests an organizati on of existe nce withou t contesting all of t hat organizati on& #39;s forms of language. V oice 1: When f reedom is pra cticed in a closed cir cle, it f ades into a d ream, beco mes a me re represen tation of itself. The ambianc e of play is by natur e unstable. At any mo ment &quot ;ordinary l ife&amp ;quot;� can pr evail once again. Th e geographi cal limitatio n of pla y is ev en more s triking than it s tempor al limitation . Any game takes place wit hin the con tours of it s spatial dom ain. Around t he neighborh ood, aroun d its flee ting and threa tened i mmobility, stretched a half-known city wh ere people met only by chan ce, los ing their way forever. The girls who found their way there, b ecause t hey were legall y under the c ontrol of thei r families unt il the age of eighteen , were often r ecaptured by the defen ders of that de testabl e institu tion. The y were gen erally con fined under the guard of thos e creatures who among al l the bad p roducts of a bad society are the most ugly and r epugnant: nun s. What u sually makes documentaries so easy to underst and is the arb itrary l imitation of their subje ct matter. The y descri be the a tomizat ion of social function s and the isolation of their produ cts. One can, in contr ast, env isage the entire complex ity of a m oment which is not resolved i nto a w ork, a m oment whose movement indissolubly c ontains fac ts and va lues and whose meaning doe s not y et appe ar. The subject matter of the docu mentary w ould then b e this con fused to tality. Voi ce 2: Th e era had arr ived at a level of knowledg e and technical means t hat mad e possible, and i ncreasingly ne cessary , a dir ect constructio n of al l aspects of a li berated affective a nd practi cal exis tence. The appearan ce of the se superior me ans of ac tion, still u nused because o f the delay s in the project of liq uidatin g the co mmodity eco nomy, had already condem ned aestheti c activit y, who se ambition s and pow ers wer e both o utdated. The d ecay of art an d of all th e values of f ormer mor es had f ormed ou r sociologic al backgroun d. The ruling c lass&#3 9;s mono poly over t he instrument s we needed to control in order to r ealize the coll ective a rt of our time had excluded us fr om a cult ural prod uction official ly devot ed to illus trating and repeating t he past. An art film on thi s generation can only be a f ilm on its abs ence of real cr eations. Everyone unthi nkingly f ollowed the pa ths learned o nce and for al l, to the ir work an d their h ome, to the ir predic table f uture. For the m duty had already becom e a habit, and ha bit a dut y. They did no t see th e defici ency of their c ity. They t hought the deficien cy of their li fe was natur al. We wanted t o break out of this co ndition ing, in quest of another use of the urban landsca pe, in quest of new pa ssions. The atm osphere of a few places gave us intimations of the future p owers of an arc hitecture it would be necessa ry to crea te to be the su pport and framework fo r less mediocr e games. We c ould expect n othing of any thing we had not oursel ves altered. T he urban enviro nment pr oclaimed the o rders and tastes of th e ruling socie ty just a s violently as the newspaper s. It is man w ho make s the unit y of th e world, but man has extend ed himself everyw here. People can see nothin g aroun d them that is not t heir own image; eve rything speak s to them of themselves. Their very lan dscape is aliv e. Ther e were obstac les eve rywhere. There was a co hesion in the o bstacles of al l types . They mainta ined the cohere nt reign of po verty. Everythi ng being conn ected, it wa s necessary to change eve rything by a unitary stru ggle, or noth ing. It wa s necessa ry to link up with the ma sses, bu t we were surrounded b y sleep. Vo ice 3: The di ctators hip of the pro letariat is a desperate st ruggle, blood y and blo odless, vi olent and pe aceful, mil itary and economic, ed ucationa l and ad ministrative, against the forces an d tradi tions o f the old worl d. Voic e 1: In thi s country it is once ag ain the men of order who hav e rebel led. They h ave reinf orced their pow er. They have been able to aggrava te the gro tesquene ss of t he ruling c onditio ns accord ing to thei r will. They have embellished th eir syste m with the f unereal c eremonie s of th e past. Voice 2: Years, like a sin gle instan t prolonged to thi s point, com e to an end. Voice 1: What was dire ctly lived re appears fro zen in t he dist ance, fit into th e tastes an d illusi ons of an era, carrie d away with i t. Voice 2: The appeara nce of events t hat we have not made, that others ha ve made a gainst us, now obliges us to be aware o f the passage of time, its results, the tran sformati on of ou r own d esires into eve nts. What different iates the past from th e present is precisely its out-o f-reach ob jectivit y; there is no more shou ld-be; bei ng is so consumed that it h as ceased to ex ist. The details are a lready lost in the dust of time. Who w as afraid of li fe, afraid of the n ight, af raid of b eing taken, afraid of being kept? V oice 3: What should b e abolis hed continues, and we contin ue to we ar away with it . We are engul fed. We are separated . The years pas s and we haven &#3 9;t changed anything. Voice 2: O nce aga in morning in t he same stre ets. Once a gain th e fatigue of so many similar ly passed nights. It i s a walk th at has last ed a long time. Voice 1: Really h ard to dr ink more. Voice 2: O f course one might make a film of it. Bu t even if such a film suc ceeds in b eing as fundamen tally d isconnecte d and unsatisfy ing as the reality it de als with, it will ne ver be m ore than a re-c reation &a mp;quot;” poor and fals e like this botched traveling s hot. Voic e 3: Th ere are now people who pr ide them selves on being a uthors of fil ms, as othe rs were au thors of novels . They are ev en more ba ckward th an the no velists bec ause th ey are unawar e of the de compositi on and exhausti on of indivi dual expre ssion in our ti me, ignorant of the end of the arts of passivity. They are pr aised for their sincerity s ince they dramatize, with mo re personal depth, the conventio ns of which their lif e consists. There is ta lk of the li beration of the ci nema. B ut what do es it matt er to us if one more a rt is liber ated through wh ich Tom, Dick or Har ry can joyously express t heir slav ish sentim ents? The only interesting v enture is the liberatio n of everyday life, not onl y in the perspective s of hi story b ut for us and right a way. This e ntails the with ering away o f alienated f orms of communicat ion. The c inema, too, has to be dest royed. Voice 2: In the fi nal analysi s, stars are created by the need we have fo r them, and not by t heir ta lent or lack of talen t or even by the film in dustry or adver tising. Miserable nee d, dis mal, an onymous life th at would like to expand itse lf to t he dime nsions of cinema life. The imagina ry life on t he screen is t he product o f this re al need. Th e star is t he project ion of this need. The i mages of the ad vertisements d uring the int ermissions are more suited tha n any others for evoking a n interm ission of life. To real ly descr ibe this era it would no doub t be necessary to sho w many other things. B ut what would b e the poin t? Better t o grasp the tota lity of what h as been done a nd what r emains to be done than to add more ruin s to the old world of the spectacle and of memor ies. 1. This film, which evokes the lettr ist experien ces at the ori gin of the si tuation ist movement, opens wi th shots of the Paris dist rict fre quented b y the let trists in the early 1950s.

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