The Obscure Object of Desire: Trace, Image and Apocalypse in Modern Cinema
Ključne riječi:
singularity, sinthome, cinematic trace, third meaning, abjection, spectacle, simulation, ideological imageSažetak
This essay examines how desire and objects interact in modern cinema to produce what Gilles Deleuze calls cinematic singularity. I argue that this singularity emerges through the repetition of trace, image, and camera movement – elements that exceed established cinematic codes and resist the order of generality, resemblance, and quantification. Within this excess, modern cinema reveals obscure objects of desire that disturb narrative coherence and expose the instability of representation itself.
My argument unfolds through three case studies: Michelangelo Antonioni’s Blow-Up (1966), Jovan Jovanović’s Young and Healthy as a Rose (1971), and Francis Ford Coppola’s Apocalypse Now (1979). Each film stages a different moment in the transformation of the cinematic image. Antonioni’s photographic investigation turns the trace into an unstable signifier, where visual evidence dissolves into uncertainty. Jovanović’s Yugoslav countercultural experiment radicalizes the image as a site of ideological and libidinal excess. Coppola’s war epic ultimately pushes the cinematic image toward apocalypse, where language itself begins to fracture under the pressure of historical violence. Across these films, the obscure objects of desire appear as returning signifiers of neurosis, fetishism, and psychic disturbance, bringing cinema close to what Julia Kristeva describes as the abject – “a flaw in Oedipus’ impossible sovereignty, a flaw in his knowledge.”
This epistemological rupture functions as a Lacanian sinthome: a point where subjectivity confronts its own otherness. The emergence of this cinematic singularity is crystallized in the iconic beach scene of Apocalypse Now, when Lieutenant Colonel Kilgore’s celebrated “napalm” monologue transforms the language of military triumph into a strangely lyrical expression of destruction. Here the breakdown of ideological discourse, reminiscent of Louis Althusser’s notion of ideological apparatus, produces what Roland Barthes calls a “third meaning”: an obtuse level of signification where language slips into a poetic register bordering on abjection.
Drawing on a transdisciplinary framework that includes philosophy (Baudrillard, Deleuze, Althusser), psychoanalysis (Lacan, Kristeva), semiotics (Eco, Saussure), political theory (Djilas, Debord), cultural studies (Vulović), quantum physics (Carroll), and classical film theory (Oudart), in this essay I explore how modern cinema stages the emergence of these singularities at the threshold between desire, image, and apocalypse.
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