Frida Filme Drive May 2026

Christian Metz, in The Imaginary Signifier (1982), applies Freudian drive theory to cinema: the scopic drive (pleasure in looking) and the invocatory drive (pleasure in hearing) structure the spectator’s relationship to the screen. Metz argues that cinema reenacts the infant’s mirror stage—the split between seeing and being seen. For an artist like Kahlo, whose work relentlessly stages self-observation, the cinematic medium becomes a prosthetic for the drive’s circuit.

Mulvey, L. (1975). Visual pleasure and narrative cinema. Screen , 16(3), 6–18. frida filme drive

Frida Kahlo, cinematic drive, scopic drive, Julie Taymor, psychoanalytic film theory Introduction Since the 2002 release of Julie Taymor’s Frida , starring Salma Hayek, critics have praised its visual vibrancy and fidelity to Kahlo’s paintings. Yet few have examined how the film’s formal structure operationalizes psychoanalytic drive (Freud’s Trieb ) rather than simple biographical desire. While desire seeks an object and temporary satisfaction, drive circulates around a void, repeating its trajectory. This paper proposes that Taymor’s Frida is not merely a biopic but a cinematic mapping of the artistic drive’s four components (pressure, aim, object, source), with Kahlo’s broken body as both source and obstacle. Christian Metz, in The Imaginary Signifier (1982), applies