Seeing Images, Reading Images: Circularity, Mirroring and the Artwork in Dario Argento’s Cinema

Since Dario Argento’s directorial debut, The Bird with the Crystal Plumage, visual composition has played a key role in his work, as has the strict correlation between visual perception and image interpretation. Specifically, what emerges from Argento’s filmography since the early 1970s is the direc...

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Main Author: Giulio Luciano Giusti
Format: Article
Language:Catalan
Published: Liverpool University Press 2025-02-01
Series:Modern Languages Open
Online Access:https://account.modernlanguagesopen.org/index.php/up-j-mlo/article/view/336
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author Giulio Luciano Giusti
author_facet Giulio Luciano Giusti
author_sort Giulio Luciano Giusti
collection DOAJ
description Since Dario Argento’s directorial debut, The Bird with the Crystal Plumage, visual composition has played a key role in his work, as has the strict correlation between visual perception and image interpretation. Specifically, what emerges from Argento’s filmography since the early 1970s is the director’s ability to play with the ambivalence of pictorial images and techniques within a film in a specific duality that serves narrative purposes on the one hand, while challenging the self-enclosed mediality of classical cinematic narration on the other. In this regard, the diegetic art-historical repertoire, as well as the pictorial iconography and techniques displayed in Argento’s oeuvre, appear to transfer the dramatic tension from the narrative to the cinematic language, making the images the ultimate riddle to be solved. In a chosen corpus of the director’s work, it is evident that this ambivalence is already a prominent theme from the opening credit sequences. These sequences serve both a narrative and metanarrative function by foreshadowing the main themes of the films in question, and by serving as introductions to the aesthetic “textures” of the films through visual representation. The purpose of this article is to examine specific instances in Argento’s oeuvre, namely Four Flies on Grey Velvet, Deep Red, Trauma and, most notably, The Stendhal Syndrome, where the visual symbols and methods shown in the opening credit sequences serve the defined metanarrative objectives. Additionally, it aims to explore the extent to which this metanarrative function of artistic references extends beyond the opening credits in these films. The director’s cinema exhibits aesthetic and narrative circularity by repeatedly framing and reworking the same visual motifs developed in the opening credits in mirror-like sequences throughout key scenes. These motifs ultimately resurface in the epilogue, serving as a clear example of this circularity. This article demonstrates how these examples from Argento’s work exemplify the core of the director’s comprehensive production of a harmonious integration of narrative and visuals, which can effectively communicate a self-reflexive message about the essence of the shown images and their potential interpretation.
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spelling doaj-art-cb05f6dcdd72411282e05a279ef5d6bf2025-08-20T02:55:54ZcatLiverpool University PressModern Languages Open2052-53972025-02-014410.3828/mlo.v0i0.336321Seeing Images, Reading Images: Circularity, Mirroring and the Artwork in Dario Argento’s CinemaGiulio Luciano Giusti0https://orcid.org/0000-0001-9527-3041Sheffield Hallam UniversitySince Dario Argento’s directorial debut, The Bird with the Crystal Plumage, visual composition has played a key role in his work, as has the strict correlation between visual perception and image interpretation. Specifically, what emerges from Argento’s filmography since the early 1970s is the director’s ability to play with the ambivalence of pictorial images and techniques within a film in a specific duality that serves narrative purposes on the one hand, while challenging the self-enclosed mediality of classical cinematic narration on the other. In this regard, the diegetic art-historical repertoire, as well as the pictorial iconography and techniques displayed in Argento’s oeuvre, appear to transfer the dramatic tension from the narrative to the cinematic language, making the images the ultimate riddle to be solved. In a chosen corpus of the director’s work, it is evident that this ambivalence is already a prominent theme from the opening credit sequences. These sequences serve both a narrative and metanarrative function by foreshadowing the main themes of the films in question, and by serving as introductions to the aesthetic “textures” of the films through visual representation. The purpose of this article is to examine specific instances in Argento’s oeuvre, namely Four Flies on Grey Velvet, Deep Red, Trauma and, most notably, The Stendhal Syndrome, where the visual symbols and methods shown in the opening credit sequences serve the defined metanarrative objectives. Additionally, it aims to explore the extent to which this metanarrative function of artistic references extends beyond the opening credits in these films. The director’s cinema exhibits aesthetic and narrative circularity by repeatedly framing and reworking the same visual motifs developed in the opening credits in mirror-like sequences throughout key scenes. These motifs ultimately resurface in the epilogue, serving as a clear example of this circularity. This article demonstrates how these examples from Argento’s work exemplify the core of the director’s comprehensive production of a harmonious integration of narrative and visuals, which can effectively communicate a self-reflexive message about the essence of the shown images and their potential interpretation.https://account.modernlanguagesopen.org/index.php/up-j-mlo/article/view/336
spellingShingle Giulio Luciano Giusti
Seeing Images, Reading Images: Circularity, Mirroring and the Artwork in Dario Argento’s Cinema
Modern Languages Open
title Seeing Images, Reading Images: Circularity, Mirroring and the Artwork in Dario Argento’s Cinema
title_full Seeing Images, Reading Images: Circularity, Mirroring and the Artwork in Dario Argento’s Cinema
title_fullStr Seeing Images, Reading Images: Circularity, Mirroring and the Artwork in Dario Argento’s Cinema
title_full_unstemmed Seeing Images, Reading Images: Circularity, Mirroring and the Artwork in Dario Argento’s Cinema
title_short Seeing Images, Reading Images: Circularity, Mirroring and the Artwork in Dario Argento’s Cinema
title_sort seeing images reading images circularity mirroring and the artwork in dario argento s cinema
url https://account.modernlanguagesopen.org/index.php/up-j-mlo/article/view/336
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