European Art Cinema
European art cinema is the tradition of artistically ambitious, director-centered films, supported by festivals and art houses, that constituted a distinct mode of filmmaking against Hollywood from the postwar decades onward.
Definition
The mode of artistically oriented, auteur-driven filmmaking centered in postwar Europe, defined by distinctive narrative norms and a network of festivals, art houses, and subsidies.
Scope
This topic covers the institution and aesthetics of European art cinema. It examines the art-cinema mode of narration, marked by psychological realism, authorial expressivity, and ambiguity, the major movements and auteurs of Italy, France, Sweden, Germany, and elsewhere, and the festival, funding, and exhibition systems that sustained it. It also addresses the later expansion of 'art cinema' into a global category.
Core questions
- What narrative and stylistic norms define the art-cinema mode?
- How did festivals, subsidies, and art houses sustain European art cinema?
- Who are the central auteurs and movements of European art film?
- How has 'art cinema' expanded into a global rather than European category?
Key theories
- Art cinema as a mode of film practice
- Bordwell's influential definition of art cinema as a distinct narrative mode characterized by realism, authorial expressivity, and ambiguity, set against classical Hollywood narration.
- Global art cinema
- Galt and Schoonover's reframing of art cinema as a worldwide and historically variable category rather than a strictly European, postwar phenomenon.
History
European art cinema took shape after World War II as Neorealism, the French New Wave, and the work of auteurs such as Bergman, Antonioni, and Fellini gained international prestige through festivals like Cannes and Venice. State subsidies and art-house exhibition supported it through the 1960s and 1970s. Subsequent scholarship questioned the Eurocentric framing of 'art cinema' and extended it as a global, transhistorical mode.
Debates
- Is art cinema a coherent category?
- Scholars debate whether art cinema names a stable mode of narration, a marketing and exhibition category, or a Eurocentric construct that obscures the diversity of world filmmaking.
Key figures
- David Bordwell
- Rosalind Galt
- Karl Schoonover
- Ingmar Bergman
Related topics
Seminal works
- bordwell1979art
- galtschoonover2010
- nowellsmith1996
Frequently asked questions
- What distinguishes art cinema from commercial cinema?
- Art cinema typically foregrounds authorial vision, psychological realism, and narrative ambiguity rather than the goal-driven plots and closure of classical commercial film, and it circulates through festivals and art houses.
- Is art cinema only European?
- Historically the term centered postwar European film, but recent scholarship treats art cinema as a global and historically variable mode found across many national cinemas, not exclusively European.