Swan Songs: Philosophical Reflections on Death, Time, and Memory in Testament Films

A special issue of Arts (ISSN 2076-0752).

Deadline for manuscript submissions: 1 April 2026 | Viewed by 3403

Special Issue Editors


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Guest Editor
IFILNOVA, NOVA FCSH, 1069-061 Lisbon, Portugal
Interests: Jankélévitch; film philosophy; history of metaphysics; aesthetics

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Guest Editor
Department of Communication Sciences, NOVA FCSH, 1069-061 Lisbon, Portugal
Interests: Deleuze; philosophy of film; philosophy of time; aesthetics; contemporary philosophy; Portuguese cinema

Special Issue Information

Dear Colleagues,

Dedicated to the last films of renowned filmmakers, often referred to as “testament films” or “swan songs,” this Special Issue will examine their thematic, narrative, and stylistic elements, viewing these final works as profound summations of their creators’ careers and philosophical syntheses of their conceptions of life, death, and historical legacy.

Despite occasional discussions of testament films in philosophy, film theory, and director-specific analyses, the philosophical and artistic significance of these works as a distinct category remains largely unexplored. This Special Issue will address this research gap by defining “testament films” as a cohesive field of study, exploring their patterns and divergences, and interrogating how filmmakers approach mortality, transience, and legacy in their final works.

As suggested in Deleuze and Guattari’s What Is Philosophy?, the nature of philosophy—and, by extension, art—comes into sharper focus in old age, when approaching the end of life can lead to a self-reflective interrogation of one’s own (philosophical and artistic) work. Testament films provide a unique opportunity to explore this dynamic, offering audiences rich meditations on mortality, time, and the human condition. Filmmakers such as Akerman, Bergman, Dreyer, Fassbinder, Fellini, Kubrick, Kurosawa, Oliveira, Ozu, Satyajit Ray, Tarkovsky, Varda, and Welles, among others, have crafted final works that serve as both artistic summations and philosophical reflections. Films such as Tarkovsky’s The Sacrifice (1986) or Kubrick’s Eyes Wide Shut (1999) exemplify how these creations can act as meditative explorations of time, memory, faith, and legacy, often blurring the line between cinematic expression and the philosophies of death and time.

Key Questions:

  • How does an artist’s awareness of mortality shape their final works?
  • Can testament films be connected to distinct views of temporality as an accumulation of moments or as the exhaustion of possibility?
  • To what extent do these films intersect with, or contribute to, philosophical reflections on mortality and art from the 19th to the 21st centuries, as developed by thinkers such as Baudrillard, Bauman, Cavell, Freud, Heidegger, Jankélévitch, Kierkegaard, Landsberg, Simmel, Simon Critchley, Todd May, and Thomas Nagel?
  • How do ideas such as Heidegger’s “being-towards-death,” Kierkegaard’s concept of despair, Schopenhauer’s notion of transcendence, or Danto’s “end of art” intersect with testament films’ explorations of mortality, meaning, and artistic expression?
  • Could testament films serve as a modern continuation of philosophical meditations on death, such as those of Plato, the Sceptics, the Epicureans, the Stoics, and Montaigne? If so, what do they teach us, and how do these teachings intersect with, or diverge from, strictly philosophical discourse?
  • How do audiences interpret the meaning of death in art through art itself?

We invite contributions that address the interdisciplinary dialogue between philosophy and cinema, focusing on (but not limited to) the following topics:

  • Philosophical approaches to “Testament Films”;
  • Central themes of existentialism and mortality, time and memory, faith and transcendence, and the aesthetics of closure;
  • The concept of testament art, including philosophical frameworks, memento mori in cinema, and representations of mortality in film;
  • Analyses of testament films by Akerman, Bergman, Dreyer, Fassbinder, Fellini, Kubrick, Kurosawa, Oliveira, Ozu, Satyajit Ray, Tarkovsky, Varda, Welles, and others.

The editors are currently involved in a project funded by the European Research Council named Film and Death (https://filmdeath.fcsh.unl.pt).

Dr. Vasco Baptista Marques
Dr. Susana Viegas
Guest Editors

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Keywords

  • film philosophy
  • testament films
  • philosophy of death
  • mortality
  • memory

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Published Papers (4 papers)

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Research

18 pages, 5816 KB  
Article
Lola Montès: Max Ophüls’s Final Dive into Circularity and Repetition
by Carlos Natálio
Arts 2026, 15(1), 19; https://doi.org/10.3390/arts15010019 - 16 Jan 2026
Viewed by 227
Abstract
This article aims to reflect on the testamentary dimension of Max Ophüls’ last feature film, Lola Montès, from a research context that seeks to understand the thematic, narrative, and stylistic traits of film directors’ last films. Through a mobilisation of Gilles Deleuze’s [...] Read more.
This article aims to reflect on the testamentary dimension of Max Ophüls’ last feature film, Lola Montès, from a research context that seeks to understand the thematic, narrative, and stylistic traits of film directors’ last films. Through a mobilisation of Gilles Deleuze’s concept of crystal image, and a film analysis of the work and comparison with other important Ophüls films, this paper argues that the constant movement of the characters and the filmmaker’s camera throughout his body of work is, in this testament film, transformed into an infernal circularity in which its protagonist is imprisoned. This movement without escape, based on the circularity of the circus arena in which Lola is held captive, is ultimately a way of portraying the decadence and exploitation of mass entertainment culture in its logic of capture, exploitation and commodification of its “human products.” The culmination of circularity and repetition in this capture is associated with the degradation of both the living performative body of Lola and the figure of its director Max Ophüls, given that Lola Montès was not only a very difficult film to direct but also very poorly received at the time of its release. Full article
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15 pages, 236 KB  
Article
The Anti-Testament of Ozu Time, Finitude and Repetition in An Autumn Afternoon
by Patrícia Castello Branco
Arts 2025, 14(6), 149; https://doi.org/10.3390/arts14060149 - 19 Nov 2025
Viewed by 652
Abstract
This article reconsiders Yasujiro Ozu’s An Autumn Afternoon (1962) as a cinematic “anti-testament”, a final film that eschews resolution, culmination, or closure in favour of subtle continuity, repetition, and quiet disappearance. Situated between the Japanese aesthetic of mono no aware and Western existential [...] Read more.
This article reconsiders Yasujiro Ozu’s An Autumn Afternoon (1962) as a cinematic “anti-testament”, a final film that eschews resolution, culmination, or closure in favour of subtle continuity, repetition, and quiet disappearance. Situated between the Japanese aesthetic of mono no aware and Western existential philosophy, Ozu’s final work embodies an ethics of impermanence and restraint, where cinema becomes a contemplative practice rather than a narrative of finality. Through formal strategies such as the low “tatami shot,” fixed camera, and elliptical editing, the film materialises time as presence, not progression. Drawing on Heidegger’s conception of aletheia, Cavell’s ethics of acknowledgment, and Tarkovsky’s reflections on haiku, this study argues that Ozu develops a philosophy of parting grounded in repetition, care, and relationality. Rather than a monument to his oeuvre, An Autumn Afternoon offers a visual ritual of transmission, where the invisible dwells within the visible, and the act of letting go becomes cinema’s most philosophical gesture. In doing so, Ozu dissolves the notion of the cinematic testament, transforming it into a meditative cadence of impermanence. Full article
11 pages, 241 KB  
Article
A.I. Artificial Intelligence (2001) as the Spiritual Swan Song of Stanley Kubrick
by Alexandre Nascimento Braga Teixeira
Arts 2025, 14(6), 138; https://doi.org/10.3390/arts14060138 - 13 Nov 2025
Viewed by 710
Abstract
This article proposes a reading of A.I. Artificial Intelligence (2001) as the spiritual swan song of Stanley Kubrick, even though it was completed posthumously by Steven Spielberg. Conceived and developed by Kubrick from the 1970s until the late 1990s, the film emerges as [...] Read more.
This article proposes a reading of A.I. Artificial Intelligence (2001) as the spiritual swan song of Stanley Kubrick, even though it was completed posthumously by Steven Spielberg. Conceived and developed by Kubrick from the 1970s until the late 1990s, the film emerges as a profound meditation on life, death, and the persistence of memory—one that continues to resonate through another author’s hand. It stands as a singular case of authorial transmission, where Spielberg’s intervention operates less as completion than as curatorship: the act of listening to, translating, and preserving a vision projected beyond its creator’s lifetime. Beyond its production history, which includes Kubrick’s long collaboration with writer Ian Watson, the early story treatments, and Spielberg’s eventual reinterpretation of Kubrick’s design materials and narrative architecture, this essay advances a philosophical reflection on A.I. as a mediated testamentary work. Drawing on the thoughts of Paul Ricoeur, Jacques Derrida, and Maurice Blanchot, it examines how questions of authorship, memory, and narrative closure intersect with the film’s ontological and affective dimensions. Through these lenses, A.I. reveals itself as both an allegory of survival and a reflection on artistic legacy—suggesting that a swan song may endure beyond its maker, preserved through the curatorship and imagination of another. Full article
13 pages, 221 KB  
Article
Wrapping Up “Through the Eyes of Those Who Are No Longer”: Paolo Taviani’s Leonora addio (2022)
by Marco Grosoli
Arts 2025, 14(5), 115; https://doi.org/10.3390/arts14050115 - 24 Sep 2025
Viewed by 1101
Abstract
The first film signed by Paolo Taviani without his brother Vittorio (who died in 2018) in more than 60 years, Leonora addio (2022) recapitulates and condenses an entire career by recounting the grotesque (real-life) journey of the burial, cremation, exhumation, transfer (from Rome [...] Read more.
The first film signed by Paolo Taviani without his brother Vittorio (who died in 2018) in more than 60 years, Leonora addio (2022) recapitulates and condenses an entire career by recounting the grotesque (real-life) journey of the burial, cremation, exhumation, transfer (from Rome to Sicily) and re-burial of Luigi Pirandello’s corpse over more than ten years, as well as by showing in the last thirty minutes an adaptation for the screen of “The Nail” (“Il chiodo”, the last novella by the renowned Sicilian writer). A quintessential testament film refracting the writer’s death in Vittorio’s (one of the film’s many Pirandello-esque mirror games) and alluding to the intellectual legacies of either, Leonora addio daringly thematizes the exploitation of cultural value as well as its political implications—particularly in the specific Italian context and, implicitly yet unmistakably, in the present day too. My paper will analyse Leonora addio paying particular attention to how this subtext intersects the film’s “testamentary” surface, to Deleuze’s “crystal images” (pervasively informing the structure of Leonora addio), to the film’s many nods to Kaos (a 1984 Pirandello adaptation for the screen by the Taviani, analysed mainly through the lens of Lacanian gaze theory) and to the role of death in both films. Full article
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