Conference | Talking Pictures: Elevated Tension – The Elevator in Film
Few architectural elements create cinematic tension as intensely as the elevator. In the confined space, it forces strangers into close proximity, restricts their movement, and transforms a mundane means of transport into a stage for fear, desire, and violence. In film, the elevator is never just a functional space but a lens magnifying psychological and social tensions.
From Fritz Lang's Metropolis (1927), where it symbolizes the gap between underground workers and the privileged, to films like Louis Malle's Ascenseur pour l'échafaud (1958), Brian De Palma's Dressed to Kill (1980), and Dick Maas' De Lift (1983), the elevator serves as a focal point of intrigue, suspense, or violence. The conference explores how cinema uses this vertical transit space as a device for claustrophobia, crisis, and suspense—from silent films to genre movies and even advertising that now adopts this symbolic dimension.
Good to know
Speaker: Yves Steichen
Language: Luxembourgish with simultaneous interpretation in French
Free entry
Automatically translated from German.
Where does it take place?
Bibliothèque nationale du Luxembourg
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