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| AVANT-GARDE
SHORTS |
Screening
Time: Saturday, May 4, 4:30PM, Charles Theatre 5 |
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(35mm,
16mm, BetaSP) 69 minutes
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PASSAGE (dir. Chel White, Portland, OR)
11 minutes, 35mm
Haunting underwater portraits of people are juxtaposed
with archival films of war and atrocities in this stylized
film collage that premiered in 2001 as a silent film
with live orchestral accompaniment performed by the
Oregon Symphony.
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EXPOSED (dir. Seigfried A. Fruhauf, Austria)
9 minutes, 16mm
Multiple exposures of one scene from a feature film
- a man observing a dancing woman through a keyhole
- but seen through the perforations of a black strip
of film create an entirely new "peeping tom" motif,
and a hypnotic visual effect.
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PLAIN ENGLISH (dir. John Standiford, Baltimore,
MD)
9 minutes,16mm
A conversation using samples from Speak Another Language
albums is brought to life through very simple animation
made up of images of Ayako Wakao, Akira Kurosawa (with
the eyes of Toshiro Mifune), a mask of the Kyyogen deamon
Be-Aku, and set before a background from Ozu's An
Autumn Afternoon.
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SOUNDINGS (dir. Sandra Gibson, NY, NY)
5.5 minutes,16mm
An eclectic collage of colors, rhythms and sounds interwoven
with images of film icons that takes you to a place
somewhere between consciousness and unconsciousness.
Images fly by in pulsating directions, often a frame
at a time. A subterranean dissection of the film medium.
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NO SUNSHINE (dir. Bjorn Melhus, Germany)
6.5 minutes, BetaSP
Two floating bodies lip-synch samples from old soul
recordings, while watching their own relationship play
out over their shoulders. Festival director, Jed Dietz,
describes this as "Devo meets Teletubbies".
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YA PRIVATE SKY (dir. Stom Sogo, SF, CA)
3 minutes, BetaSP
Hypnotizing flashing colors, shapes and images.
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KEN BURNS GIVE YOU SOMETHING (dir. Kent Lambert,
Chicago, IL)
4 minutes, BetaSP
Documentarian Ken Burns is given the appropriation treatment,
his sentences dissected and rearranged like a Max Headroom
speech.
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SILVER PLAY (dir. Stom Sogo, SF, CA)
15 minutes, BetaSP
Random footage from Asian media, home video footage
and manipulated video are cut together to ask the question,
"Does America see Mexico in the same way Japan sees
Indonesia?"
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A BOY AND HIS BREAKFAST (dir. Kent Lambert & Mark
Wright, Chicago, IL)
6 minutes, VHS
Preparing a grapefruit has never been so meaningful.
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For more avant-garde shorts, be sure not to miss the
Black Maria shorts program.
(films are not necessarily listed in the order they
will shown)
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