Quantcast
Channel: Experimental – Cinema of the World
Viewing all 1664 articles
Browse latest View live

Azadeh Navai – Friday Mosque (2014)

$
0
0

29f7c043f76a2bde437fd0d52a185152

A silent meditation on the Islamic prayer ritual through motion (water is the core, but light is the cause) in FRIDAY MOSQUE. Shot on high-contrast black and white 16mm film, Navai hand processed the negative and painstakingly contact- printed the strips of celluloid. The resulting image quivers and pulses. Enlarged film grain nearly obliterates the already abstracted image. There exists both a tension and serenity in the flickering frame. Every element is preparing for and anticipating the faithful soul that is summoned to the everyday practice. The silent tune of the calling, Azan, has overtaken.

Quote:
https://www.fandor.com/keyframe/inside-azadeh-navais-friday-mosque

Azadeh Navai’s cinema responds to a rich lineage of avant-garde filmmaking. The Iranian’s works, made in the last four years, have been selected in world-renowned programs for experimental shorts at the New York, Rotterdam and Edinburgh film festivals. More recently, her films are being shown in two other programs dedicated to less commercial fare—San Francisco Cinematheque’s ‘Crossroads’ program (April, 2016), and ‘Minority Report (March, 2016),’ a selection of video and 16mm works presented by Toronto’s Pleasure Dome and curated by fellow experimental filmmaker Nazlı Dinçel.

The introductory text for the latter program, which included Navai’s Remembering the Pentagons (2015), described a body of films in which the “textures of spaces and the synaptic explosions they recall unravel… a collision between official histories, personal memory and the perilousness of translation, which are autopsied and brought back to life in both vivid and oblique terms. A kaleidoscopic encounter with colonialism and autonomy, surveillance and invisibility, language and illegibility, various displaces are exhumed from the morass of history and across spatial boundaries.”

Though not every word here applies specifically to Navai, it’s useful in offering a particular adjectival mode with which to approach the Iranian’s work. Friday Mosque, a seven-and-a-half-minute short that won the Jury Award at the Student Experimental Film Festival in 2014, is one of those heavily textural films whose imagery is both elusive and self-explanatory: elusive because it’s difficult to clearly describe what it actually is, and self-explanatory because the core elements of its abstractions are the most basic—water and light. It’s a simple but layered film: synaptic (sensory, experiential), kaleidoscopic (unpredictable, shape-shifting), language-resistant, vivid and oblique (associative, suggestive).

Autonomous, too. Navai’s “silent meditation on the Islamic prayer ritual” is the result of a particular and exacting form of human labor: she hand-processed the negative and contact-printed its filmstrips. To watch Friday Mosque—a high-contrast, monochromic 16mm work—is to see formal elements captured in such proximity that their molecular basis appears to be unstable. Water droplets, combined with tadpole-blemishes on the film grain itself, are like magnetized iron filings, heads in a crowd, fizzing constellations in an always-fluctuating cosmos. Flux is key: osmosis, change, instability.

With its silent soundtrack, Friday Mosque feels implosive rather than explosive, suffocating rather than freeing, agitational rather than confrontational. As one intertitle reads, “self is reflected.” It can be highly unsettling to sit through something as deliberately claustrophobic as this. And yet the frantic shimmers of light that actively burn through its seven-plus minutes suggest a positive energy desperate to break out. (Light and water are respective opposites, if you like, of shadow and dust: they are conducive rather than prohibiting.) It’s also, in its way, a deeply architectural film: architextural, we might say, in how it finds new contexts in which to de-familiarize—so as to re-appreciate—a place of worship.

Navai was born in 1985. After graduating from the University of Tehran with a BFA in Graphic Design, she studied at CalArts. Friday Mosque concludes by thanking three filmmakers who teach at the eminent Californian institute: Charlotte Pryce, Betsy Bromberg and Nathan Meier.





http://nitroflare.com/view/3872F1E581284CF/Friday_Mosque_%28Azadeh_Navai%2C_2014%29.mkv

http://uploadgig.com/file/download/fADBdd10e9fc3afc/Friday Mosque Azadeh Navai 2014.mkv

Subtitles:English


Robert Beavers – The Hedge Theater (1986-90/2002)

$
0
0

29f7c043f76a2bde437fd0d52a185152

Quote:
The Hedge Theater, USA 1986-90/2002, 19 min

Cast: Robert Beavers, Gregory J. Markopoulos

Beavers shot The Hedge Theatre in Rome in the 1980s. It is an intimate film inspired by the Baroque architecture and stone carvings of Francesco Borromini and St. Martin and the Beggar, a painting by the Sienese painter Il Sassetta. Beavers’ montage contrasts the sensuous softness of winter light with the lush green growth brought by spring rains. Each shot and each source of sound is steeped in meaning and placed within the film’s structure with exacting skill to build a poetic relationship between image and sound. (Susan Oxtoby, Toronto International Film Festival)






Selected parts from P. Adam Sitney’s book Eyes Upside Down.

In contrast to the astonishing rapidity with which Robert Beavers made the apprenticeship films of his first cycle (1968–70) and the four magnificent and mature works of his second cycle (1971–75), it took him another twenty-six years to finish the seven films of the third cycle of My Hand Outstretched to the Winged Distance and Sightless Measure. Of course, this schematic view does not take account of the reediting and new soundtracks he made for all of his early works in the 1990s. Those revisions were integral to the arrangement of the previously autonomous films into the cycles in the first place.

Two central events in the filmmaker’s life frame the production of those concluding seven films and account, in part, for the pace of their production: shortly after completing the first version of Sotiros in 1978, he and Gregory Markopoulos were hit by a bus in Greece. Beavers was severely injured and almost lost his sight in one eye as a consequence of the accident; then, in 1992, Markopoulos died of a lymphoma. It was only after that that Beavers finished a number of films he had shot in the 1980s and revised the rest of his work. The fleeting presence and hovering absence of Markopoulos hedge the elegiac tone that regularly sounds, fades away, and sounds again throughout the cycle, culminating in the final film.

None of the seven films, Sotiros (1976–78/1996), AMOR (1980), Eυψυχι (Efpsychi) (1983/1996), Wingseed (1985), The Hedge Theater (1986–90/2002), The Stoas (1991–97), and The Ground (1993–2001), are longer than a half hour. They were made predominantly in Greece, although there are scenes from Austria, Switzerland, and Italy. Hand gestures play a large role in many of them. Although Beavers ceased to pay homage to great artists of the past, allusions to ancient and baroque theater occur throughout the cycle. The theater eventually forms an imaginary backdrop against which simple acts of production and tidying from everyday life take on meaning: the filmmaker highlights shaving, dressing, cutting, sewing, carting, broom making, measuring, stone cutting, and house building.

Sotiros was condensed to twenty-five minutes from three films: Sotiros Responds (1975), Sotiros (Alone) (1977), and Sotiros in the Elements (1977), although there may be nothing of the last in it. “Sotiros,” one of the Greek epithets for Apollo, means savior, redeemer, healer; it can be a first name in Greece, the equivalent of Salvador. With Markopoulos, Beavers had visited the temple of Apollo Sotiros (or Epikouros) at Bassae when he started the series. (Nearby, Markopoulos selected a site for the Temenos. The major work of Markopoulos’s last fifteen years was the reediting of his entire corpus for screenings in the Temenos; he restructured his work into the twenty-two cycles of Eniaios. It would take more than eighty hours to show the approximately one hundred films that comprise the serial work. Beavers’ reworking of all of his films and arranging into the three cycles of My Hand Outstretched follows the example Markopoulos set with Eniaios, who conceived the Temenos project as soteriological on an analogy to the healing cults of Asclepius.)

The Hedge Theater, the last film in the cycle to be completed, follows Wingseed, presumably because they were shot in that order. Beavers took fifteen years to give the film its ultimate shape. It is the complement of AMOR: they are the two films of the cycle made in Rome and Salzburg, where both use the Heckentheater as an emblem for cinema’s perspectival depth and representation of the natural world. In place of the Piazza San Ignazio, Beavers lovingly records details from two churches built by Francesco Borromini. Even the tailoring motif recurs: where AMOR shows moments of a suit being made, in The Hedge Theater we see a tailor’s hand sewing a buttonhole on a white shirt.

[I recommend not reading the next paragraphs before watching the film for the first time]

The opening montage intercuts details of the church of San Carlo alle Quattro Fontane with bird cages and snares, the sewing of a button, and Beavers operating his camera. The initial parallelism, elaborately unfolded, of Borromini’s church and the woodland rocolo (filmed in Lombardy) for trapping fowl suggests that the church might be a cage to catch the Holy Ghost or, conversely, the Holy Ghost’s snare for human souls. As Leo Steinberg demonstrated, the “S. Carlino” itself is a rigorous iconographic system, “combining octagon-circle-cross-hexagon,” symbolically affirming the multifaceted nature of the Trinity. Beavers absorbed this system into his film and amplified it.

Eventually the polarities of the editing alternate between Borromini’s St. Ivo delle Sapienza (which Steinberg reads as a symbolic representation of the “Domus Sapientiae, the house built by Holy Wisdom”15) and the Salzburg hedge theater covered with snow. The editing stresses dead leaves and two stone lions nearly buried in snow. At that point Beavers intercut a shot of himself with a man’s arm over his shoulder and brief glimpses of Markopopulos’s face, turning the winter vision into a muted elegy for his lover.

Beavers initially planned to complement the fi lm inspired by Borromini with one centered on San Martino e il povero, a panel by Stefano di Giovanni, called Sassetta, in the Collezione Chigi-Saracini, Siena. He fused the two projects when he finally found the appropriate form for The Hedge Theater. The transition from Markopoulos’s gesture of affection to the second part of the film is marked by a sound of fabric ripping as the camera pans up and down Sassetta’s poorly preserved panel of St. Martin of Tours giving half of his cloak to a beggar. Beavers alternates glimpses of the painting with images of the hedge theater, now green, in spring or summer. The film ends with an inundation of rain, which we can hear before we see it.

Although the title simply translates the Heckentheater, where much of it was filmed, it harbors a revealing pun; for Beavers’s films hedge their theatricality with elegant aesthetic decorum. Consider, for instance, his revision of The Painting. By introducing the images of the torn photograph of himself he does not abandon the reticence characteristic of his art, but rather inflects it; for the dramatic incident in which Markopoulos ripped up the image (if, indeed, my inference about the significance of those shots is accurate) remains suppressed. Instead, the ripped image anchors the analogy of the filmmaker to the tortured martyr, whether or not we take account of this speculative cause of the defacement of the photograph. Thus, even when he concretizes the personal allusion, Beavers hedges its theatricality. In his lapidary montage the space of the theater suffices, as if that were what the cinema might genuinely offer us, or him. Even the arm draped over the filmmaker’s shoulder as he films himself in a mirror is a reticent or understated moment. Whatever it meant to him when he filmed it—perhaps an allusion to the end of From the Notebook Of . . . , that sense has changed with the death of his mentor and lover.

The coda of the film, centered on La Sassetta’s panel, becomes a palinode to The Painting, the only other locus in his oeuvre where a two-dimensional work of art plays a central role. Again, he hedges the allusion, teasing the viewer to consider the painting an allegory of Markopoulos and himself and at the same time refusing to confirm so bold, so outlandish a leap. The ripping sound that introduces the meditation on San Martino e il povero can be an auditory amplification of the severing of the red cloak held taught between the beggar, who grips one end of it with both his hands, and St. Martin, holding the other end with his left hand as he uses the long horizontal sword in his right hand to slice the cloak in half. Just as the Flemish painter of the St. Hippolytus triptych represented the martyr stretched tight above the ground just before his limbs parted from his torso, Sassetta captures the moment when the separation is nearly completed, as the beggar and the future bishop of Tours exchange gazes. St. Martin’s horse has turned his head toward the beggar and the cloak, almost as if to see the source of the ripping sound Beavers added to the image.

In the reverberations of that sound, we might imagine the tearing of the photograph from The Painting. But now, from the placement of the Sassetta imagery in The Hedge Theater right after the shot of the gesture of affection, and by the location of the fi7 lm itself in My Hand Outstretched, the trope reverses and expands to represent the moment death tore Markopoulos’s companionship from the filmmaker, without annulling the allusion to the extraordinary generosity of Markopoulos toward Beavers, sharing everything with him, from the beginning of their relationship, and coterminous with the whole of Beavers’s artistic career. Alive as well as in his death, he passed his mantle to Beavers. That phrase comes from the Second Book of Kings, where Elijah’s cloak symbolized his prophetic election. In leaving it behind for Elisha when the chariot of fire bore him to heaven, he passed on his powers (2 Kings 2:11–14). Elisha expressed his grief in a traditional Hebraic manner by tearing his clothes, but he also accepted Elijah’s inheritance with that very gesture. Similarly, the rainfall at the conclusion of the film suggests a hyperbolic metaphor for the tears of mourning and a metonomy of cyclic renewal.

Tearing or ripping is an essential moment in the filmmaking process. The filmmaker tears off a piece of the continuous ribbon of a shot to join it to another piece ripped from a different ribbon of film. Thus the sound of tearing that precedes the first image of La Sassetta’s panel is also a sign of the act that brings together the two films Beavers could not complete after shooting them in 1986 and 1987 until he joined them in 2002, even though there is no auditory similarity between the tearing of cloth and celluloid.

http://nitroflare.com/view/F8F6E7E9B5EC032/Robert.Beavers.The.Hedge.Theater.SMz.avi

https://uploadgig.com/file/download/7aFdbBE01cf50C2d/Robert.Beavers.The.Hedge.Theater.SMz.avi

Language(s):N/A
Subtitles:None

Ben Hopkins – The Nine Lives of Tomas Katz (2000)

$
0
0

29f7c043f76a2bde437fd0d52a185152

Quote:
A sadly neglected gem of British Cinema, this stunningly inventive film takes in German Expressionism, the pop promo, the docudrama and film noir. And that’s just for starters. The story of a mysterious man who creates chaos and anarchy in his wake, this has buckets of sly humour and a pleasingly dark edge. With brilliant performances from Thomas Fisher and Ian McNeice, this is an astounding reminder that UK cinema is much more than gangsters and girls in corsets.

Shot largely in black-and-white, The Nine Lives of Thomas Katz tells the story of a mysterious man (Thomas Fisher) who climbs out of a hole and hails a cab to London, where he takes on the identities of various people he encounters over the course of the day. A total eclipse of the sun is due to take place later in the day, and as the stranger assumes various identities, chaos overtakes the capital. It’s all observed literally with a blind eye by a fat police chief (Ian McNeice) who harbors a connection with the Astral Plane.







http://nitroflare.com/view/0A43DC3C1531795/Ben_Hopkins_-_%282000%29_The_Nine_Lives_of_Tomas_Katz.mkv

https://uploadgig.com/file/download/6e0494f8adb68bb6/Ben Hopkins – 2000 The Nine Lives of Tomas Katz.mkv

Language(s):English, French
Subtitles:English, French

Deborah Stratman – The Illinois Parables (2016)

$
0
0

29f7c043f76a2bde437fd0d52a185152

An experimental documentary comprised of regional vignettes about faith, force, technology and exodus. Eleven parables relay histories of settlement, removal, technological breakthrough, violence, messianism and resistance, all occurring somewhere in the state of Illinois. But the state is a structural ruse, and its histories are allegories that ask what belief might teach us about nationhood. In our desire to understand the inscrutable, whom do we end up blaming or endorsing?


Quote:
Shooting on 16mm, Stratman has produced one of the most quietly radiant movies of recent memory, working in the Midwestern palette of gray, green, and brown, relieved by the occasional snowfall. From these sections, which breathe in the aura at scenes of historical import in a manner that recalls the Straubs of From the Clouds to the Resistance or Itinéraire de Jean Bricard, Stratman moves on to other diverse techniques, incorporating archival footage and audio collage to revisit the devastation of the Tri-State Tornado, undertaking a reenactment of a reenactment of the death of Black Panther Fred Hampton at the hands of the FBI and Chicago police, and even seeming to sprout wings to view landscape sculptures by Michael Heizer from on high.

Nick Pinkerton for Film Comment




Quote:
Accrue mythic histories of violence, martyrdom, atomic breakthrough, failed utopias, vigilante justice, telekinesis, expulsion. Let them comprise a suite of Midwestern parables.


http://nitroflare.com/view/9583D0399DA7159/Stratman%2C_Deborah_-_The_Illinois_Parables.mkv

https://uploadgig.com/file/download/957b04752e2c8958/Stratman Deborah – The Illinois Parables.mkv

Language(s):English
Subtitles:None

Kidlat Tahimik – Mababangong bangungot aka Perfumed Nightmare (1977)

$
0
0

29f7c043f76a2bde437fd0d52a185152

Quote:
Upon first glance, Perfumed Nightmare looks amateurish and raw. It is, too, I suppose, but this works to the film’s advantage. This is the semiautobiographical story of a young Filipino man (played by writer/director Kidlat Tahimik) who worships everything about America. He is especially caught up in the space program: he wants to visit Cape Canaveral, and he is the president and founder of his small (300 people) village’s Werner Von Braun fan club. This might just be the only fan club in the world that worships the Bavarian expatriate who is regarded as the father of rocketry. He and his club members have ice cream sales to fund their activities, which include sponsoring the Miss Philippenes pageant.

Kidlat thinks his village is backwards; an opening monologue expresses his wry sadness over the size of his village, and he gently mocks his childhood friend, who is among the last experts in the village on the building of bamboo huts that can withstand the yearly typhoon season. Kidlat wants more–he wants buildings of brick and stone, he wants internationalism, he wants vehicles other than the hand-me-down “Jeepneys” which started life long ago as American military vehicles during the Occupation after the end of the Second World War. There are hints that he isn’t completely convinced, though: we learn that his father, who helped the Americans fight off the Japanese, was killed for trespassing on what he thought was his country’s land by American guards.

Kidlat gets his big chance when an American entrepreneur (he has a string of candy machines in the most unlikely places) invites him to Paris to serve as his driver. Paris overwhelms Kidlat, who gets a first taste of the dark side of growth for growth’s sake when one of his few friends, an elderly pushcart vendor, dies after being put out of business by a supermall. Kidlat starts to question why the world needs supermalls in the first place, when the pushcarts he grew up with serve their purpose. In a striking act of rebellion against internationalism, he throws stones through the windows of the supermall, an event that was as strong a statment of rage as Spike Lee’s throwing a garbage can through Danny Aiello’s pizzeria in “Do the Right Thing.”

My comments: An absolute classic of low-budget auteur cinema, Perfumed Nightmare is less the story of a Jeepney driver with dreams of bigger things than a compendium of things Filipino and an allegory of modernity and Filipino history. It is also one of the most charming films you’ll ever see. Director Kidlat Tahimik brings a laid-back village attitude to the task of representing life in the Philippines and that country’s place in the larger world. A fictionalized version of himself travels to Paris to work for an unscrupulous gum magnate; his observations reveal some important truths about the power of small people and their ability to endure.

Distributor website:
Produced and directed by Kidlat Tahimik, this brilliant semi-autobiographical fable tells the story of a young Filipino born in 1942 (during the Occupation), his awakening to, and reaction against, American cultural colonialism. In his small village, Kidlat dreams of Cape Canaveral and listens to the Voice of America; he’s even the president of his village’s Werner Von Braun fan club. Winner of the Berlin Film Festival International Critics Award and a Blue Ribbon at the American Film Festival.




http://nitroflare.com/view/00A1D292A07FB47/Perfumed_Nightmare.avi

https://uploadgig.com/file/download/29668430e6da552b/Perfumed Nightmare.avi

Language(s):English
Subtitles:none

Marguerite Duras – Son nom de Venise dans Calcutta désert (1976)

$
0
0

29f7c043f76a2bde437fd0d52a185152

Quote:
When the film Son nom de Venise dans Calcutta désert was initially shown in 1976, many viewers found it hauntingly beautiful but deeply perplexing. Some, seeing it as a sign of Duras’ inability to separate herself from the making of India Song, even ascribed the film to a kind of postpartum depression. Since that time, the film has been placed in perspective as an inseparable component of the India cycle as a whole, although little has been written, with certain notable exceptions, on its specific relation to the other works. Son nom de Venise dans Calcutta désert is a purely metanarrative epilogue that culminates the progressive decomposition of spectacle as well as the dismantling of the neocolonial subject conceived as specular identity that was initiated by previous works in the India cycle. The film confirms the paradoxical character of the mimetic illusion, whose mirror functions as an ontological abyss for the desiring subject. Its seductive ideal of absolute identity and mastery in fact results in passivity and impotence. Conceived as a means of guaranteeing individuals the illusion of a form of immortality, it actually removes them from the arena of real action, enslaving them to a sterile fantasy.

Quote:
Son nom de Venise dans Calcutta désert seems at moments to be an elegiac ode to a distant era of elegance and privilege. In fact, however, the film rewrites the story of colonial empire, revealing its authority to be the creation of a culture obsessed by fears of death and impotence. The film negates the pretense to origins, exposing the sinister consequences of the culture’s denial of its source in, and dependence on, the Other. Duras’ film plays out the revolution in consciousness whereby the indentured subject, condemned through false illusions of transgression to live a shadow existence at the edges of an imperial culture, begins to cast its own shadow across the colonial empire. Like the shadow of the beggar woman on the embassy steps at the end of India Song, the shadow’s lengthening form falls across the boundaries demarcating imperial discourse, blocking the light emanating from the culture’s rationalizing gaze.

Quote:
The eye of the camera in this film belongs to a different mode of consciousness, its “writing” to a different use of the sign. It expresses an imagination cut loose from the constraints of presence, free to explore the vestigial remains of intersecting voices and lives. Abandoning the fantasy that history can ever be told or re-presented in unified dramatic form, the camera roams over a deserted mansion littered with the debris of dreams. The decaying Rothschild mansion, the setting for most of India Song, stands now for any structure that once served as the public image of authoritarian rule. The hall of the embassy reception we witnessed as guests in the earlier film we now observe as strangers; we now see the colonial enclave’s fissures, its vulnerability to history and time. The dilapidated condition of the mansion even suggests wanton destruction, leaving us to imagine acts of gratuitous violence committed by passersby. The effect is that of a body violated. Duras is suggesting a complex of associations in which the notion of rape also implies castration, and it finally operates at a metaphorical level as an inverted image of colonial exploitation. What is most important here is that she is not simply portraying the return of violence against its perpetrators but turning the figure around once again to suggest that victimization itself is predicated on a fantasy that exacts the victim’s tacital though unwitting collaboration for its efficacy.

description taken from “Art and politics in Duras’ India cycle” by Lucy Stone McNeece, pg. 151-152.

http://nitroflare.com/view/BB871257C52A062/VeniseCalcutta.avi
http://nitroflare.com/view/7EE313E8F1A6180/VeniseCalcutta.srt

https://uploadgig.com/file/download/77a11B8Cccbd2406/VeniseCalcutta.avi
https://uploadgig.com/file/download/9642ef6D8652b518/VeniseCalcutta.srt

Language(s):French
Subtitles:English .srt subtitles

Marguerite Duras – Il Dialogo di Roma (1982)

$
0
0

29f7c043f76a2bde437fd0d52a185152

“The subject of this film is the conversation between a man and a woman. A couple, maybe lovers, maybe married, it doesn’t matter. (…) During this conversation, we do not see but the city of Rome. I wanted to transmit that what Rome provokes in me, the feeling of an intrinsic matter, indissoluble, in difference with Paris, made of small parks and open spaces, crossed by the sky and the wind. Hand in hand with the film, the difficulty of the two lovers assumes a clearer, more explicit form. But as much as, in my opinion, it is impossible to describe and film Rome, the difficulty in the love of a couple can never be totally understood.”
Marguerite Duras, Venice film festival catalogue, 1982.




http://nitroflare.com/view/AFE012C26EAC090/Il_Dialogo_Di_Roma_%28Marguerite_Duras%2C_1982%29.avi
http://nitroflare.com/view/461B76FF125946F/Il_Dialogo_Di_Roma_%28Marguerite_Duras%2C_1982%29.srt

https://uploadgig.com/file/download/e85a7c40109526f8/Il Dialogo Di Roma Marguerite Duras 1982.avi
https://uploadgig.com/file/download/eb9a8986076fa79f/Il Dialogo Di Roma Marguerite Duras 1982.srt

Language(s):Italian
Subtitles:English

Hans-Jürgen Syberberg – Hitler, ein Film aus Deutschland AKA Hitler: A Film from Germany (1977)

$
0
0

29f7c043f76a2bde437fd0d52a185152

Director Hans-Jurgen Syberberg examines the rise and fall of the Third Reich in this brooding seven-hour masterpiece, which incorporates puppetry, rear-screen projection, and a Wagnerian score into a singular epic vision. Syberberg, who grew up under Nazi tyranny, ruminates on good and evil and the rest of humanity’s complicity in the horrors of the holocaust.

Fernando F. Croce wrote:
Mel Brooks got the ball rolling in The Producers, Hans-Jürgen Syberberg balloons the revue into a symphony. The concept is a mass cultural exorcism (“Primal scream therapy!”), the model is Kienholz — Is Germany a procession of soundstages inside a snow globe, or is she the little cloaked girl wandering through them with strips of celluloid in her hair? A great showman, Syberberg presents four sweeping bonanzas of perorations, allusions, gags, mental states. From the Cosmic Ash-Tree to the Great Oak of Buchenwald is a puppet show hosted by Cabaret’s MC, with Der Führer’s sundry incarnations filling the fairgrounds: Hitler as Little Tramp, Napoleon, Hamlet, mesmerist, builder, destroyer, maniac, a smoke-spewing asshole, pooch, ventriloquist’s dummy. Mythology and history, caldrons and mannequins and mist, Lang the prophet and the witness (M, Mabuse). Part Two: A German Dream until the End of the World. Voices from the past (Goebbels, Churchill, Einstein, Stalin), voices from the present (Harry Baer, Heinz Schubert, Peter Kern). Wagner’s “blood utopias,” the culmination of Germany’s high-strung romanticism, voluptuous guilt (“O felix culpa”). Hitler the cinephile, out of the grave in screen-filling filibuster: “Leonardo, Michelangelo, Beethoven… They weren’t agreeable! Well, maybe Mozart was, but he wasn’t to my taste.” The End of a Winter’s Tale and the Final Victory of Progress surveys the Third Reich’s rotten Versailles and “the Jewish problem” as a litany of atrocities before flickering slideshows. Ruminative speeches, hysterical, evocative, daft, shocking, sleep-inducing. Hitler as wannabe auteur manipulating his own mise en scène, “Whoever controls film controls the future.” Finally, the ruins and ghosts of We Children of Hell Remember the European Age, with its Friedrich landscapes and 8mm home movies. A country divided and haunted, business deals and memorials to cover up charred skeletons. “A German Disneyland on the holy mountain near Berchtesgaden.” The sex doll’s mouth agape as camera obscura, the little girl’s celestial ascension to “Ode to Joy.” Coppola understood it and promoted it as opera, Fassbinder spoofed it mercilessly in the Berlin Alexanderplatz epilogue.








http://nitroflare.com/view/5C597F6E1C8A230/Our.Hitler.A.Film.From.Germany.1977.Part.1.DVDRip.x264-HANDJOB.mkv
http://nitroflare.com/view/1F763838109DDF7/Our.Hitler.A.Film.From.Germany.1977.Part.2.DVDRip.x264-HANDJOB.mkv
http://nitroflare.com/view/063C0571F86F59C/Our.Hitler.A.Film.From.Germany.1977.Part.3.DVDRip.x264-HANDJOB.mkv
http://nitroflare.com/view/ED0B8A904A94316/Our.Hitler.A.Film.From.Germany.1977.Part.4.DVDRip.x264-HANDJOB.mkv

https://uploadgig.com/file/download/f6b8952e260c5789/Our.Hitler.A.Film.From.Germany.1977.Part.1.DVDRip.x264-HANDJOB.mkv
https://uploadgig.com/file/download/7a0256F8d5b136d7/Our.Hitler.A.Film.From.Germany.1977.Part.2.DVDRip.x264-HANDJOB.mkv
https://uploadgig.com/file/download/8246ff725AEFFf6b/Our.Hitler.A.Film.From.Germany.1977.Part.3.DVDRip.x264-HANDJOB.mkv
https://uploadgig.com/file/download/655DD40f99866a4d/Our.Hitler.A.Film.From.Germany.1977.Part.4.DVDRip.x264-HANDJOB.mkv

Language(s):German, English, French, Russian
Subtitles:English


Travis Collins & Amélie Ravalec – Industrial Soundtrack for the Urban Decay (2015)

$
0
0

29f7c043f76a2bde437fd0d52a185152

Industrial Soundtrack for the Urban Decay traces the development of one of music’s most quietly influential genres from the post-industrial cities of Europe to America’s avant-garde scene, and features contributions from members of pioneering outfits : Throbbing Gristle, Cabaret Voltaire, NON, SPK, Test Dept, Clock DVA, Re/Search – V Vale, Z’EV, Click Click, Sordide Sentimental, Hula, The Klinik, Ant-Zen, Orphx, In The Nursery and Prima Linea.

Industrial music emerged in the mid 70’s, providing a vibrant, provocative and artistic soundtrack to the picket lines, economic decline and cultural oppression of the era. Whether factory workers, students or unemployed, industrial music pioneers were all educated, artistically minded and politically aware artists who started with little to no musical background and went on to change musical history.

Industrial musicians found inspiration in Krautrock bands Kraftwerk, Faust and Can, 20th century art movements Dada, Futurism and Surrealism and post-modern writers William Burroughs, Brion Gysin and J.G. Ballard. Combining the do-it-yourself attitude of punk with mail art and underground fanzines, these pioneers were also among the first bands to incorporate tape loops, homemade synthesisers, factory field recordings and cut-up techniques in their music.








http://nitroflare.com/view/99E8CF0FACAED05/Industrial_Soundtrack_for_the_Urban_Decay__%2B_Extras_.rar

https://uploadgig.com/file/download/14b67095B7C22938/Industrial Soundtrack for the Urban Decay Extras.rar

Language(s):English, French
Subtitles:None

Fred Halsted – LA Plays Itself (1972)

$
0
0

http://img155.imageshack.us/img155/803/ehoic4qzezcoonq.jpg

29f7c043f76a2bde437fd0d52a185152

L.A. Plays Itself begins as a mock-pastorale, with a steamy woodland encounter between a long-haired blonde guy and a hunky brunette whose face, typical of the director, we can barely discern. This extended hardcore sequence of outdoor sex gives way to images of bulldozers tearing down parts of the city; noisy, car-choked streets; and opportunistic encounters that occur both onscreen and on the audio track, the latter in the form of a conversation between a hayseed from Texas who’s just arrived in town and a predator who pretends to warn him of the dangers of the “big city” as a kind of nervous foreplay ritual. Halsted’s sex is sweaty and desperate, set against images of cruelty and destruction both in the bedrooms, bathhouses, and casual sexspaces where it occurs and in the grim, trashy world looming just outside. The sardonic commentaries of the director, who’s also usually a participant even when only seen in shadow, add unexpected touches of humanity.L.A. Plays Itself is a film of private rituals publicly exposed

http://img155.imageshack.us/img155/7540/vlcsnap2010071416h28m02.png

L.A. Plays Itself, Fred Halsted’s classic odyssey of Los Angeles men, has been hailed by critics around the globe as a watershed film in the history of gay erotic cinema. L.A. Plays Itself has been chosen for the permanent film collection of The Museum of Modern Art.

http://img703.imageshack.us/img703/2122/vlcsnap2010071416h27m36.png

Fred Halsted spurted onto the gay porn scene just as the genre was gathering momentum as well as a modicum of “real world” respectability. The year was 1972 and groundbreaking adult movies like Gerard Damiano’s THROAT and MISS JONES and the Mitchell Brothers’ decidedly different GREEN DOOR had instigated the all too short-lived “Porno Chic” trend on the straight end of a budding skin flick industry. With his homo hardcore harbinger BOYS IN THE SAND, Broadway choreographer turned erotic “auteur” Wakefield Poole actually preceded what was to become known as the genre’s Big Three by facilitating his film’s first screenings in late ’71. In truth, Halsted beat them all to the punch, or indeed might have if endless delays and difficulties hadn’t kept him from finishing his still astonishing first work a full four (!) years after initial shooting had begun as early as 1968. Staking out his position in a slowly filling market place, he brought a downbeat West Coast sensibility to counteract the idealized imaginings of such early East Coast alumni like Poole and Jack Deveau.

http://img856.imageshack.us/img856/3439/vlcsnap2010071416h30m46.png

[Unlike most of his film-making contemporaries, Fred rarely tried to emulate mainstream narrative structures or production values and prided himself on his lack of formal training. As a result, his movies are much closer in style to underground cinema of the period, its decision to add hardcore penetration probably seeming like a logical extension of an art form which already included rampant male and female nudity at the time. At least some agree with me on this as both L.A. PLAYS ITSELF and SEX GARAGE – the half hour featurette Fred hastily shot to support it on theatrical screenings and subsequently regarded as an integral part of its unit rather than a separate work – have been included in MoMA’s permanent collection and remain to this day the only pornographic titles represented therein.

http://img810.imageshack.us/img810/7929/vlcsnap2010071416h32m00.png

Running a little under an hour, L.A. PLAYS ITSELF consists of two episodes. The first shows an idyllic pastoral encounter between dark-haired drifter Jim Frost and blond nature boy Rick Coates. The latter was a one shot, but Frost appeared in a couple of straight, barely remembered – or, at least, they wouldn’t be if it weren’t for the tireless efforts of Mike Vraney and his ilk – Sandi Carey vehicles entitled THE ELEVATOR and NAKED ENCOUNTERS. In voice-over, we hear two friends debating the merits of city and country life, the latter designated (for the time being at least) as the preferred option. Solemn Japanese ceremonial music accompanies extreme close-ups of butterflies ‘n’ bugs buzzin’ about the natural splendor of a modern day Garden of Eden. Jim complains about having “a heavy load on my mind” with just a smidgen more subtlety than this genre’s dialog generally allows for. Cheerfully, Rick offers to give him head ! They make laid-back love besides a babbling brook as the soundtrack switches to Mozart. Their carnal courtship progresses gradually in blissful harmony with the music. While Frost remains oblivious, reverently plowing Coates’ nether regions, one foot precariously perched on a well-placed boulder, roaring bulldozers clawing the soil brutally interfere in their unfettered Utopia, suggesting that the time of innocence has come to an end.

http://img811.imageshack.us/img811/4997/vlcsnap2010071416h32m14.png

A jarring jump cut introduces audiences to another and far less benevolent drifter, played by the handsome director himself, cruising the grimy L.A. streets in search of a casual pick-up. He spots a naive country lad, straight off the Greyhound, and lures him along, warning him of the dangers that lurk on every street corner. What follows is a lengthy yet deliberately dispassionate sequence of Halsted putting ultimate submissive Joey Yale through his paces in a calmly constructed S&M ritual, including fleeting moments of water sports and fist insertion that have been trimmed from most available copies since. Though it was to become their specialty both privately and on screen, this occasionally gruesome to watch scene established the director’s desire to “tell it like it is” more than anything else, eschewing the glossy, odorless perfection that rival filmmakers were passing off as their version of male sexual union, a vision he almost literally tore apart along with that intervening heavy machinery in the preceding segment. The final images are of Fred in proximity to Joey’s now spent and seemingly lifeless body (an inter-cut newspaper headline suggests as much), frigging himself towards a joyless solitary climax, partly shrouded in dramatic shadows, a sad and pathetic and all too human monster…

http://img442.imageshack.us/img442/6408/vlcsnap2010071417h05m20.png

http://www.nitroflare.com/view/A008DE324EFB21D/LA_Plays_Itself__1972_.avi

https://uploadgig.com/file/download/2a1b5867ca7Ea246/la plays itself.avi

no pass

Roland Lethem – Le sexe enragé aka The Red Cunt (1970)

$
0
0

29f7c043f76a2bde437fd0d52a185152

Quote:
This film was made in the 70’s, with Jean-Pierre Bouyxou. The superimpositions at the end are in some ways influenced by Etienne O’Leary’ stuff : Lethem didn’t saw the films, but Bouyxou was talking to him so much about these movies that if influenced him surely…

This is part of the “belgian underground” with Patrick Hella, Noel Godin, etc…

Quote:
Roland Lethem (born 1942) is a Belgian filmmaker and writer.

Influenced at his beginnings by Buñuel, Cocteau, the surrealists and by the Japanese cinema (Seijun Suzuki, Ishirō Honda, Kōji Wakamatsu, Yoko Ono), stunned by the Festival of the film expérimental of Knokke in 1967 and by May 1968, Roland Lethem wants to push the people to look at the things of which they say they are freed, it’s to say to place them in front of their responsibilities. Even if sometimes the results leaves much to be desired, the idea of each one of his films is seductive and exemplary. A fact is certain, his films are disturbing, they are sometimes unpleasant to look at. The narcissistic and provocative play of the debuts turned itself into direct, visual, and verbal insult, and in slandering. His dream was one moment to be able to film the intimate life of the pope or the sexual plays of the Belgian sovereigns. Through violence, pornography and cruelty of some scenes, Roland Lethem is a gentle, generous man with of a lot of humour. The work of Roland Lethem evolves, becomes political, ecological. La Ballade des amants maudits (The Ballad of the cursed lovers, 1966) or La Fée sanguinaire (The Bloodthirsty Fairy, 1968) still tell stories. Les Souffrances d’un oeuf meurtri (The Sufferings of a ravaged Egg, 1967), poem of love in several parts (Étoiles/Stars, Corps/Bodies, Hymen/Marriage or Hymen (ambiguous in French), Oeuf/Egg) dedicated to all who conceive and to all who are conceived, irresistibly makes you think at the Histoire de l’oeil (Story of the Eye, 1928) of Georges Bataille.

Some of the titles of his films include Le Saigneur est avec nous and Le sexe enragé. There are several thorough studies published on his films (Cinema/London, Skoop/Amsterdam) and Bandes de cons! (Bunch of Assholes!, 1970), his most famous film, was the subject of a seminar at the University of Amsterdam.

He frequently collaborated with Jean-Pierre Bouyxou and Jio Berk.



http://nitroflare.com/view/0BA3C56A10A5797/Roland_Lethem_-_Le_sexe_enrag%C3%A9_%281970%29.VOB

https://uploadgig.com/file/download/4abF27a1153aE744/Roland Lethem – Le sexe enragé 1970.VOB

Language(s):French
Subtitles:None

Morgan Dews – Must Read After My Death (2007)

$
0
0

29f7c043f76a2bde437fd0d52a185152

Synopsis:
A grandmother dies and leaves behind hours of secret film and audio recordings as well as an envelope with the words “Must read after my death”, which reveal a dark history for her family to discover.







Review:

Modern entertainments like Revolutionary Road and Far From Heaven purport to peel back the veneer of the post-war American Dream to reveal the dark, uncomfortable truths below the surface. They succeed to a point, but there’s an artifice that allows us the comfort of knowing we’re only watching a story. Where those films play at drama, Morgan Dews’ disturbing documentary Must Read After My Death delivers the real thing. Taking home movies, photographs and extensive Dictaphone records left behind by his grandmother Allis, Dews has sketched an impressionistic and haunting portrait of a seemingly happy family caught in a downward spiral.

It’s Hartford Connecticut in the 1960s and Allis is a woman a bit ahead of her time. She states matter-of-factly she’s not cut out to be an ordinary housewife and she seems to bristle in the role. Her husband Charley meanwhile travels for a living and spends months out of the year away from home, leaving Allis to tend to the four children Anne, Bruce, Chuck and Douglas. In an effort to bridge the distance, the couple records messages for one another on a Dictaphone, but what begins as a means of communication gradually devolves into a pure confessional, recording each flaw and crack in an imploding marriage.

Over the course of roughly a decade, the children grow up even as the couple grows apart and Dews pieces together their story in vivid fragments. There is a through-line here, but it is subtle, content to follow the contours of ordinary lives rather than hit the beats of an artificial narrative. References are made to alcoholism, infidelity, therapy and tragedy, but they are tantalizing glimpses rather than explicit details. They are brush strokes in a hazy rendering of real lives that shapes up like a mystery with Dews seeking to understand a side of his family he’d never known.

In an age where people are willing to lay bare the most intimate details of their lives on national television, the internal workings of a single damaged family might not seem to offer anything unusual. The difference is that Must Read After My Death is a time capsule created without the reflexive awareness that anyone is watching. Though assembled and edited with the purpose of making a film, the raw materials are more of a personal document with none of the vanity or play acting of people who know they have an audience. To a degree, Allis’ later recordings are made with posterity in mind, but the hungry attention seeking we’ve come to expect from the average television reality program is entirely and refreshingly absent.

Rather than offering human malfunction as entertainment, Dews’ film is an at times devastating reminder of the darkness that infects so many ordinary-seeming families. Yet, as told by a survivor, the film offers an unexpected touch of optimism. Though harrowing and often very sad, Must Read After My Death is in the end a kind of testament to the ability of even the most flawed families to endure and carry on.

http://nitroflare.com/view/488DDB6F5230EFA/Morgan_Dews_-_%282007%29_Must_Read_After_My_Death.mkv

https://uploadgig.com/file/download/9ead565B7d008cea/Morgan Dews – 2007 Must Read After My Death.mkv

Language(s):English
Subtitles:English

Leighton Pierce – White Ash (2014)

$
0
0

29f7c043f76a2bde437fd0d52a185152

Quote:
WHITE ASH is an immersive walk through the edges of consciousness. While firmly grounded in recognizable images and sounds captured from reality, WHITE ASH is designed to scrape through the patina of normal day to day perception, leading to an embodied associational state, something ‘to the side’ of our familiar narratives and perceptions. Pierce meticulously eaves the warp and weft of image and sound to gently lead the viewer into this very conscious yet meditative state. Beginning with the shooting and then the animation of thousands of moving camera, hand held, long exposure digital still photographs into abstractions actual space and events, Pierce then re-articulates and re-contextualizes the video by applying the lever of his judiciously and intentionally composed concrete-music soundtrack.




http://nitroflare.com/view/2C0392BA5A958F8/White.Ash.2014.720p.WEB-DL.AAC2.0.x264.mkv

https://uploadgig.com/file/download/5a3d4991b678D23f/White.Ash.2014.720p.WEB-DL.AAC2.0.x264.mkv

Language(s):None
Subtitles:None

Various director / artists – Kunst im Exil AKA Arts in Exile (1962-1989)

$
0
0

Nine short stories that together amount to a play time of 3h20m.

Presented here are nine short films that feature: film director Slatan Dudow; actor Martin Brandt; authors Erich Fried, Erich Weinert, and Arnold Zweig; photographer Walter Ballhause; cartoonist Leo Haas; and journalist Egon Erwin Kisch. Original interviews with the artists, close family members, and friends are combined with little-known historic film material. All produced in the GDR.

“Arnold Zweig” (Joop Huisken, 1962)

“Malik” (Giovanni Angella, 1967)

“Leo Haas: Artist and Witness of His Times” (Jörg d’Bomba, 1971)

“Slatan Dudow: A Film Essay about a Marxist Artist” (Volker Koepp, 1974)

“Even Today He’d Speak His Mind” (Volker Koepp, 1975)

“Walter Ballhause: One Among Millions” (Karlheinz Mund, 1982)

“Do You Know Where Herr Kisch Is?” (Eduard Schreiber, 1985)

“Erich Fried: The Whole World Should Endure” (Roland Steiner, 1988)

Traces (Eduard Schreiber, 1989)

http://nitroflare.com/view/D5043B0A62DEA9A/ARTS_in_EXILE_%28KUNST_im_EXIL%29_DVDRip_h264.rar

https://uploadgig.com/file/download/6ea87Ddc8dd67b4F/ARTS in EXILE KUNST im EXIL DVDRip h264.rar

Language(s):German
Subtitles:English (muxed)

Hy Hirsh – Gyromorphosis (1954)

$
0
0

29f7c043f76a2bde437fd0d52a185152

The inherent kinetic qualities are brought into actuality in GYROMORPHOSIS, as seen in the construction-sculpture of Constant Nieuwenhuys of Amsterdam. To realize this aim I have put into motion, one by one, pieces of this sculpture and, with color lighting, filmed them in various detail, overlaying the images on the film as they appear and disappear. In this way I have hoped to produce sensations of acceleration and suspension which are suggested to me by the sculpture itself. – Hy Hirsh


http://nitroflare.com/view/BF3C9131A15B52C/Gyromorphosis.1954.720p.BluRay.AAC.x264-NCmt.mkv

https://uploadgig.com/file/download/0feb0C32438bbeD0/Gyromorphosis.1954.720p.BluRay.AAC.x264-NCmt.mkv

Language(s):None
Subtitles:No


Stan Brakhage – Anticipation of the Night (1962)

$
0
0

29f7c043f76a2bde437fd0d52a185152

Notes of journey life of Stan Brakhage like a befits of a diary book in a very strong sense of experimentation, romantic, modernist and abstract.

From IMDB:
a stunning memory-in-progress
5 March 2006 | by nataloff (Los Angeles)

“Anticipation of the Night” is a memory piece set in the present tense. It is best described — I think by the filmmaker, for I saw this work when it was new — as “the day’s events as recalled by an infant who is, as yet, unable to organize his thoughts.” Thus we are shown not only a series of concrete shots of activities that the kid has just been through, but also a number of recurring abstract images that he cannot quite put into context because he doesn’t have a sense of time. One goes into a trance while watching it and, amazingly, the film takes hold only when it’s over when the viewer tries to sort it out — exactly as the child has done as it anticipates the night. (See also Jim Shedden’s intimate profile of Stan Brakhage in the 1998 documentary “Brakhage”).



http://nitroflare.com/view/68EE34B53BEDB06/Stan.Brakhage_-_Anticipation_of_the_Night_-_1958.mpg

https://uploadgig.com/file/download/5736834661bb568b/Stan.Brakhage – Anticipation of the Night – 1958.mpg

Language(s):English
Subtitles:None

Ian Hugo – Bells of Atlantis (1952)

$
0
0

29f7c043f76a2bde437fd0d52a185152

+ BELLS OF ATLANTIS (Ian Hugo 1952 16mm 10 mins)
A perfect fusion of poetry and film, with dense layered imagery and music from electro pioneers Louise and Bebe Barron. The writer Anais Nin provides dialogue from her novella ‘House of Incest’ and appears adrift in the undersea realm of Atlantis before ascending to dry land.

This is the most influential film by Ian Hugo, inspired by the house of incest by his wife Anaïs Nin, Len Lye was involved and features one of the first electronic music scores. The quality of the files is quite bad, it comes from an old vhs tape, and as you can see, time left its mark, but i’m afraid its as good as it gets…




http://nitroflare.com/view/AA840B76DDA5F48/Ian_Hugo_-_Bells_of_Atlantis_%281952%29.avi

https://uploadgig.com/file/download/64c24Ac50763390D/Ian Hugo – Bells of Atlantis 1952.avi

Language(s):None
Subtitles:None

Marjorie Keller – Objection (1974)

Manoel de Oliveira – Acto da Primavera AKA Rite of Spring (1963)

$
0
0

29f7c043f76a2bde437fd0d52a185152

Quote:
Oliveira returned to the center of Portugal’s film scene in the 1960s with Acto da Primavera (Rite of spring; 1963), a work that marks a significant change in the director’s trajectory and that initiates some of the cinematic strategies that he would develop more fully in later films. In Acto da Primavera, Oliveira offers a version of a popular representation of the Passion of Christ, enacted by members of a rural community in northern Portugal, derived from the Auto da Paixão de Jesus Cristo (1559), by Francisco Vaz de Guimarães. He came across the annual Easter drama in the small town of Curalha when he was looking for locations for “O Pão,” and he was so taken by it that he wanted to return and register it on film.





Quote:
Acto has often been referred to as a documentary. While it includes documentary elements, Oliveira did not simply record the popular drama as it took place. Rather, he staged a reenactment in many of the same locales and with the same nonprofessional actors as its “real” representation. In this sense it is a re-presentation of a representation, In documentary fashion, the film includes scenes of townspeople preparing for their roles, shots of flyers announcing the spectacle, and other aspects of the town’s daily life. It also inserts additional fictional elements into the narrative, as when a family of middle-class tourists stops to gawk condescendingly at the rural people engaged in their religious reenactment, Oliveira also turns the camera on himself and his small crew as they prepare to film. Acto is thus neither exclusively fiction nor documentary, but both at the same time, Jose Manuel Costa has written that the film’s “modernity lies not in the creation of a space between ‘documentary’ and ‘fiction’—as was to a certain extent the case of [Jean] Rouch’s ‘improvised’ or ‘spontaneous’ fictions—but rather in the exact opposite: the deliberate choice of the extremes of these two areas, constructing its essence in the juxtaposition of two irreducible zones” (“Acto”).




Quotes from “Manoel de Olivera” by Randal Johnson

http://nitroflare.com/view/C189800A1A073AD/Acto.da.Primavera.1963.720p.WEBRip.x264-MaZ.mkv
http://nitroflare.com/view/FF39BE771CCA8BA/Acto.da.Primavera.1963.WEBRip.x264-MaZ.en.srt

https://uploadgig.com/file/download/5cd418f9c788c3a3/Acto.da.Primavera.1963.720p.WEBRip.x264-MaZ.mkv
https://uploadgig.com/file/download/1E1905d37700Cbc8/Acto.da.Primavera.1963.WEBRip.x264-MaZ.en.srt

Language(s):Portuguese
Subtitles:English

Klaus Wyborny – Die Geburt der Nation AKA The Birth of a Nation (1973)

$
0
0

29f7c043f76a2bde437fd0d52a185152

Quote:
Authentically ‘New’ German Cinema, and, simultaneously, an archaeology of narrative film itself, Wyborny’s avant-garde landmark defines cinema as a ‘nation’ that has perversely acquired rulers, laws and hierarchies before it has even been physically mapped out. At first appearing to spin an elementary yarn of social organisation (the predictably fraught establishment of a rudimentary commune in the Moroccan desert of 1911) in the ‘authoritative’ film language of DW Griffith, Wyborny proceeds to break down that language to its constituent elements and produce fragmentary hints of alternatives. Structural film-making of a rare wit and accessibility results, with flashes of appropriate absurdity highlighting the redundancy of closed systems, whether social or cinematic.









http://nitroflare.com/view/D95A6333FC76674/The_Birth_of_a_Nation_Disk_1_Part_1.mkv
http://nitroflare.com/view/FC4DF6F937C87E1/The_Birth_of_a_Nation_Disk_1_Part_2.mkv
http://nitroflare.com/view/75CF652CB59CF28/The_Birth_of_a_Nation_Disk_2_Part_1.mkv
http://nitroflare.com/view/92FF124F667AC34/The_Birth_of_a_Nation_Disk_2_Part_2.mkv

https://uploadgig.com/file/download/7769dfD5729b0737/The Birth of a Nation Disk 1 Part 1.mkv
https://uploadgig.com/file/download/96A7a96806c9e602/The Birth of a Nation Disk 1 Part 2.mkv
https://uploadgig.com/file/download/c04c1f8edc6a5c2D/The Birth of a Nation Disk 2 Part 1.mkv
https://uploadgig.com/file/download/63Adb15A6303bba5/The Birth of a Nation Disk 2 Part 2.mkv

Language(s):German, English
Subtitles:None

Viewing all 1664 articles
Browse latest View live