Title

On the British Reception of Ken Russell's Mahler

Document Type

Book Chapter

Abstract

Ken Russell's Mahler (1974) constitutes aesthetically and historically one of the most idiosyncratic and rewarding composer biopics. With a train as locus of the diegesis, the narrative provides overlapping flashbacks interspersed with fantasy and dream sequences. The viewer must put together Mahler's life as if in a temporal puzzle, in a non-teleological fashion that contrasts with the linear progression of time implied by the train's journey. Despite historical inconsistencies and extravagant presentation, the film offers commentary on a composer still being discovered. Its visual and aural synchronisations between Mahler's memories and his music re-construct and manipulate Mahler's - and also the audiences' - memories, and comment on the reception of Mahler's life and music at that particular point in time, thus perpetuating existing images and ideologies. Rather than a study in myth-making, making encapsulates and appropriates the reception of the Mahler myth.

Publication Date

2017

Publication Title

Rethinking Mahler

Publisher

Oxford University Press

DOI

https://doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780199316090.003.0009

Start Page No.

163

End Page No.

182

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