"…Canadian director Bruce McDonald reinvented the cinema with his remarkable "The Tracey Fragments", adapted by Maureen Medved from her stream-of-consciousness novel about a 15-year-old Winnipeg girl (Ellen Page) suffering dramatically from the slings and arrows of adolescence. McDonald undertakes to break the screen into an array of panels, of ever-changing quantity and attributes, each containing an independent image.
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Subjective panel creation: Tracey imagines Billy Zero saying “I love you, Tracey Berkowitz” before her act of violence.
Motivated panel creation: small panels appear and disappear with the sound of Tracey’s breathing.
Lyrical panel creation: as noted above, a thousand quiet slamming doors create a fluttering vibration; or, the screen converts over, one panel at a time, to an array of images of buzzing street lamps at twilight.
Non-diegetic panel creation: Some panels of Tracey running are replaced by running horses, to reference the Patti Smith song on the soundtrack.
Drama tied to panel creation: increase in quantity and frequency of panels when Tracey’s mom won’t speak to her on the phone.
Drama tied to new effect concepts: non-rectangular panels appear for the first time after the film’s most violent scene.
Drama tied to removal of effects: natural sound and color are restored as Billy Zero penetrates Tracey.
Drama tied to end of paneling: there are no panels at all a few times in the film, most powerfully at the ending.
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Suspense cross-cutting: simultaneous panels show Tracey shoplifting and a suspicious store clerk watching.
Cause/effect cross-cutting: simultaneous panels show Tracey in a photo booth and the pictures she takes.
Point-of-view cross-cutting: simultaneous panels show Tracey reading a comic and frames from the comic.
Space-preserving panels: a widescreen panel at the top of the screen shows a panorama of the space where Tracey talks to Billy Zero, with the rest of the screen showing details.
Space-restoring effects: panels gradually reassemble a full-screen image after Tracey is pushed out of the car.
Time shift: Panels assemble a contiguous space, but some panels are time-delayed, in the scene where Tracey stands up after Billy Zero leaves in his car.
Unmotivated geometry play: panels are layered horizontally; or, panels are arranged in a checkerboard pattern.
Motivated geometry play: the top horizontal panel of the screen shows the ceiling above Tracey.
Text interpolations: Billy Zero’s first appearance at school is accompanied by a panel containing the words “New Boy.”
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Source: notebook.theauteurs.com
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