Cinema is the art of time made visible — through editing, the filmmaker controls what we see and when we see it, which is a form of power over consciousness that no other art has exercised in quite the same way. The industrial scale of filmmaking can obscure its essential intimacy: the close-up of a face, the cut that reveals or withholds, the way a shot can carry something the dialogue refuses to say. To take cinema seriously as an art form is to study not what it shows but how it shows — how it shapes the experience of being a witnessing mind.
Each step builds on the last.