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Wim Wenders: With 3D "the door is open". Interview.

ADMIN USE ONLY | 17:43 UK time, Tuesday, 19 April 2011

"Pina is trying to say the most simple things," says Wim Wenders, his voice close to a whisper: "Pina invented an art that is so obvious it's unbelievable that nobody came up with it. Pina is interested in who we are and what moves us."

In 2009 Wenders, the acclaimed film director, was about to begin a documentary collaboration with German choreographer Pina Bausch, chronicling her work at the l. But Bausch died suddenly, days before the shoot was to begin:

"I cancelled the film. I pulled the plug - it seemed impossible. And weeks later I realised it was the wrong decision; there was still a film to make about that look and her work. And there was still all these pieces that she'd programmed at the theatre, so we could film it together."

The result is - a visual memorial for Bausch: her work, as always, challenging, troubled and now shot as dance has never been shot - up close and in 3D.

There are Wenders' trademark shots, drifting in and out of the dancers' POV. There is closeness, immediacy; even the rain in Bauch's watery masterpiece seems to have mass. Every drop. For Wenders the new medium is a revelation:

"I thought it would be good to be close. And with 3D you not just have a close body you feel the aura of a person. All of a sudden the body has a volume. All of a sudden there is a different physicality that you ever see on a screen. I wanted to take the audience as close as possible to these people and to their horror."

For Wenders the Pina documentary is the latest stage of a long journey. In Wings of Desire he commemorated the last days of Cold War Berlin; with Paris, Texas and Until the End of The World he took the road movie to new extremes - then switched to documentaries, celebrating the music of another iconic city, Havana, in Buena Vista Social Club.

He sees the move to 3D as something historic and irreversible in the development of cinema. But it's a medium that's hardly been explored: there are a dearth of scripts, written to exploit the possibilities, says Wenders:

"I'm working on it. I'm trying to find a story that has that affinity. It's not obvious I must tell you. Cinema has done marvelous things for more that a hundred years with the language we had. We used dollies and put the camera into helicopters and cars and on our shoulders and stuff in order to create the fiction of cinema. Now we have the access - and nobody walks through the door for heaven's sake!"

It was Georges Méliès, in the 1890s, who switched cinema's path of innovation from "how do you make a better camera?" to "how do you mix closeups with wides"? Not stopping there, he moved quickly to multiple exposures; nudity and science fiction. Within ten years of its invention, arguably, all the genres and most of the techniques of 2D moving imagery had been discovered. Now we're at the very beginning of that process with 3D.

Does Wenders think cinema might become closer to the subject with 3D, less reliant on the editing techniques and semi-theatrical shot lists?

"I think it's a very inviting medium to have. [It allows you] to be in the presense of someone. If you are in the presence of somebody you don't have to cut all that much. That presence is more overwhelming. And also [it allows you] to go places. 3D allows you to discover a place in a whole different way. "

"It can transport you there. The horizon is over there - plus you have something close. And you are, as an audience, taken into somebody's world and you can visit it. That's what you could never do in a movie. There was always that distance of the artificial two dimensions. "

"With 3D there is a whole new technology and that is obviously pushed by the industry. And there is also a language. The language has to be used by people who are interested in it; who can extend the realm of expression. And I don't see the studios doing that. They have no interest in that. But that's the history of cinema. It's always been both industry and expression."

Wenders is visibly transported when he speaks about the new medium: his eyes shine. He speaks of 2D cinema as "the flat screen" - ignoring the fact that 3D is merely a flat screen and a pair of crazy spectacles. He speaks of 2D as "movies" and, implicitly, 3D as something else.

He had been in negotiations to direct Wagner's Ring cycle at Bayreuth, and film it in 3D, but talks broke down. So is there anything else he'd like to direct in the new format?

"'Pina' was not a classic documentary because [it involves] chorographers, dance and expression. I would love to use 3D in the classic documentary: go somewhere, into somebody's world."

"The other thing I would like to do is find a story that could use 3D, that could not be done any other way. Over all I feel we have only scratched the surface: there is so much left to discover.

Could he go back to two dimensions?

"Going back is already the expression. I feel that it would be going back. The door is open. I have all these wide spaces now. I want to go there."

Wenders is in London open an of his stills photography, at the Haunch of Venison. Shooting handheld, on film, as he's done since childhood, he produces giant often empty scenes:

"A lot of my movies start with a desire to explore a place. Most of my movies start with first - a sense of place. Then you have a story and characters and before you know it they take centre stage. And characters take over. And the places necessarily step in the background. In photography I can do the opposite I can give the place the central part and the people who show up are the extras."

Some of Wenders' photographs explicitly reference the look and feel of American painter Edward Hopper. As with Hopper, the loneliest scenes occur when he dispenses with the human subject altogether and conveys the loneliness of a scene by the simple absence of life and movement. How big an influence was Hopper?

"Hopper was a great experience in my life: I was blown away with not only the formats but also the subjects. Cities - lonely people, alienation. In a strange way it coincided with making moves about similar subjects. I was facinated by the cities - I was facinated by the lonesomeness and Hopper became my hero painter. Also, in my photography, I'm more interested in the history of painting than in the history of photography."

Both Wenders and Pina Bausch were products of post-war Germany: both, effectively, ripped up and started afresh their respective genres - Wenders famously improvising an entire film on set in Wings of Desire, the set being the bombed out bohemia of West Berlin in the 1980s; Bausch forced dancers to stumble, eyes closed, through the angst-ridden chair-scape in Café Muller, to beat their chests and hyperventilate a the soil-strewn stage for Stravinsky's Rite of Spring. Says Wenders:

"Pina realised she was looking for someone else. Something deeper, something more human something existential. She didn't want to change dance - she said let me start again."

Watch my interview with Wim Wenders on Newsnight, 2230, ³ÉÈË¿ìÊÖ TWO, 19 April 2011. And on iPlayer for seven days.

Comments

  • Comment number 1.

    So what door is open? The door of perception? Sounds like Mr Wenders sees 3D cinematography as opening up new channels in subliminal programming.

  • Comment number 2.

    THE DOOR THAT GODOT WILL COME THROUGH WHEN HE GETS

    I think the clue lies in the shirt. Personally, I look forward to 4D. I can then expereince the whole charade without even participating.

  • Comment number 3.

    The wisdom of Children

    I was looking at one of the embedded clips, the kids saw 'u-tube' on screen and drifted over to take a look in the hope of seeing something funny / visually full of salt, sugar and saturated fat.

    'whats that dad' ?

    ' its a new kind of dance I think'

    'is it good' she asked quizically with furrowed brow.


    ' I dont know' I say.


    ' Just looks like some maniacs splashing their arms in water to me'

    And off she went.


    What do I do?


    Research it, learn about it and explain someones subjective explanation of what the dance means to my daugher along with my own opinion or just leave it as.

    'some maniacs splashing their arms in water'.


    I have no idea.

  • Comment number 4.

    Thoughtful and intelligent. Thanks Paul.

    #2 - barriesingleton

    THE DOOR THAT GODOT WILL COME THROUGH WHEN HE GETS -

    What? Bored, stuffed, inexplicably upended? What the hell are you on about?

    #3 - Jericoa

    "I have no idea".

    For once, we agree.

  • Comment number 5.

    Good to see you doing an interview on this. The digital camera is now in-between a film camera and a still camera. What Garry Winogrand tried to do in the street and mostly failed is now possible. This is because you can take 6,8,10 frames a second of high resolution imaging without having to change film every few mins. The other thing is that Gary thought it was necessary to put the viewfinder to the eye compose and shoot - too much time - use the camera like a film camera on the move to a moving subject, pre-focus point and shoot moving. This type of street photography is called 'hardcore' A small number of photographers including myself started to do this from 2004 and developed a head on approach technique around 2006 :-

  • Comment number 6.

    "It was Georges Méliès, in the 1890s, who switched cinema's path of innovation from "how do you make a better camera?" to "how do you mix closeups with wides"? Not stopping there, he moved quickly to multiple exposures; nudity and science fiction. Within ten years of its invention, arguably, all the genres and most of the techniques of 2D moving imagery had been discovered". This argues that the importance is not the technology or the technique. It is the message/thought that is conveyed that is important. Same as the e-book reader. 2001: A Space Odyssey as a film, 1984 as a book, it's not how the grey computer between the ears receives the message that counts, but the message itself and how the grey computer reacts, resolves, remembers.

  • Comment number 7.

    I came to dissociate myself from the street photographers mentioned when they started labeling people as cowards who would hold the camera in a particular way - That way is the way of fascism. Still the work deserves recognition being as we were amongst the first to exploit what was possible with digital camera's in the street and the work has intensity, directness and integrity even if it was carried out by bigots in waiting or not.

  • Comment number 8.

    To use one of Barrie's terms, this article demonstrates apes confused by language. I've read it several times and the only reaction I can come up with is "Uh?"

    WS Gilbert's Bunthorne is still the original model for Pseud's Corner:

    "And ev'ry one will say,
    As you walk your mystic way,
    "If this young man expresses himself in terms too deep for me,
    Why, what a very singularly deep young man this deep young man
    must be!""

    Sorry!

  • Comment number 9.

    Paul,

    In terms of 'art holding up a mirror to life' Tom Jones as is undeniably demonstrated in the following clip was WAY ahead of his time despite being untrained in dance.


    For those of the modern twitchy impatient disposition go staight to 1 min 15 seconds of the clip and contemplate how this new style of dance he invented perfectly reflects the modern world including, perhaps, your own twitchy impatient disposition. His achievement is even more remarkable by being entirely un-intensional and unchoreographed on his part.

    I would pay a lot of money to see this is 3d, I bet if it was analysed by cal tech by motion capture software it would show that some of the things he did are actually impossible...amazing.








  • Comment number 10.

    Went to see Pina last night. It was a marvellous experience. First time I've heard a cinema audience clap at the end. Thanks to Paul for the ad.

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