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Friday, April 30, 2010

Hyperlink cinema - part II



In fictional literature, no character is introduced, however insignificant he or she may seem at that point of time, who doesn't appear later on at some crucial moment to give the narration an unexpected twist. Hyperlink cinema is sort of reflection of this type of literature and has emerged in the movies over the last few years. It is being lapped up by the audience who have grown to accept that the chances of 2 strangers from different walks of life meeting at different times is probable with the advent of technology and the direct result of a shrinking and flat world.

The phenomena of ‘six degrees’ of separation as cited by Malcolm Gladwell in his book ‘The Tipping Point’ is a great supporter of this idea and which says that every individual in the world is connected to every other individual by via a minimum of six steps.

So now we have movies with several different, seemingly unrelated storylines that are all connected in some small way. The action of one character, unbeknownst to them, affects another character, and the film follows that effect, instead of the character. People are linked up in interesting, often surprising ways, and the whole thing has a ‘butterfly effect’ feel to it. Each event has its own ramifications and repercussions that touch several other lifes and characters are involved inadvertently in several stories at once, with subtle, passing or major influences.

These films unfurl slowly and methodically ,like layers of an onion or as a jigsaw that seems to take shape out of obscure pieces, a collage made from varied ingredients ,but beautiful regardless of that or more so because of that.

Hyperlink cinema is truly a new genre, with potential for telling stories across cultures,generations, and boundaries. It involves stories about people more than stories involving people, with plenty of subtitles and with climaxes that may not necessarily have any clear conflict resolution or summit clash. Many may come out the theatre with the feeling that nothing happened in the movie but essentially that is the aim- to show a slice of life, not the whole lifespan in entirety. Sometimes the subtext carries more significance than the main scene and you have to respect that point of view as well.

Cinema evolves; and the more the techniques, perspectives and vantage points, the more enriched becomes the medium.

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