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Klaus Wyborny – Bilder vom verlorenen Wort AKA Pictures of the Lost World (1971–1975)

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For 50 minutes or so Pictures presents a series of static, or gently swaying images which are sometimes bucolic landscapes but more often industrial ones (sludgy harbours, power lines, abandoned railway stations or deserted factories). The interplay between the two sets of imagery is not simple. Wyborny photographs his modern ruins at their most ravishing – at dawn or sunset, partially reflected in the water or glimpsed through the trees. Shots recur throughout, optically printed into brilliant colours or else, given the washed out quality of fifth generation Xeroxes. As there are few people shown, one’s impression is of a planet that is populated mainly by cows, barges and hydraulic drills.

On the soundtrack, a pianist improvises a slow, chord-heavy piece that adds to an overall sense of lush melancholy. Towards the end, Wyborny begins to parody his own nostalgia. The images repeat in rapid-fire clusters while the pianist switches to a maddening seven-note phrase, playing it over and over, like a record stuck in a groove. In its mock symphonic form, the film is an ironic exaltation of the ‘pastoral ideal’ (still a strong strain in both British and German avant-garde films) as it celebrates the entropic beauty of the same infernal mills that drove Wordsworth in the countryside and Schiller to decry the ‘degeneration’ of European culture.’

DVD includes two version of the film, one with English voice-over, the other with German voice-over; note that only part of the film has spoken voice-over.






http://nitroflare.com/view/7827E9C83BAC012/Part_1.mkv
http://nitroflare.com/view/82D7CA392C53C8A/Part_2.mkv

https://uploadgig.com/file/download/f9c9B2b9aB442700/Part 1.mkv
https://uploadgig.com/file/download/D2e943dC3b1f2Fd0/Part 2.mkv

Language(s):English, German
Subtitles:None


Massoud Bakhshi – Tehran Anar Nadarad AKA Tehran Has No More Pomegranates! (2007)

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Tehran is a large village near the city of Rey, full of gardens and fruit trees.  Its inhabitants live in anthill-like underground holes.  The village’s several districts are constantly at war.  Tehranis’ main occupations are theft and crime, though the king pretends they are subject to him.  They grow excellent fruits, notably an excellent pomegranate, which is found only in Tehran.
– Asar-o-Lblab, 1241 A.D

Tehran Has No More Pomegranates! is a postmodern documentary that is as witty and engaging as it is informative.  The style of the film is fun and very visual, with the director, Massoud Bakhshi, using incredible archival footage, an original visual approach and terrific soundtrack that takes us through 150 years of Tehran’s history. Onscreen, Bakhshi may fail to complete his film, but he succeeds in both documenting Tehran’s history and entertaining us with its poignant contradictions.
About The Filmmaker
Massoud Bakshi was born in Tehran, Iran and is part of the new generation of Iranian filmmakers. He earned his high school diploma in photography and cinema in 1990 and his BS in Agriculture Engineering in 1995. He later studied filmmaking in Italy and cultural sector financing in France. He has worked as a film critic, screenwriter, and
producer.  His films have won many international prizes.
Filmography
Bagh Dad Bar Ber (2008)
Tehran Has No More Pomegranates! (2007)
Lost Windows (2004)
Praying for the Rain (2003)
When Behrang Meets Ayoumi (2001)
Festivals
36th Rotterdam International Film Festival, The Netherlands
20th International Documentary Film Festival of Amsterdam IDFA 2007
51st Cork International Film Festival, Ireland
30th Sao Paulo International Film Festival, Brazil
1001 Istanbul Documentary Film Festival, Turkey 2007
Drake International Film Festival, Italy 2007
13th Boston Festival of films from Iran, USA
CINEMA-VERITE International documentary film festival, Iran 2007
Cinema East Film Festival, NY, USA 2007
Doc Point Helsinki International  Film Festival 2007
Ecocinema International Film Festival, Greece 2008
Human Rights International Film Festival, Switzerland 2008
UCLA Iranian Film Festival, USA 2008
Hot Docs International Documentary Festival, Canada 2008
Planete Doc Review International Film Festival , Poland 2008
“Jeu de pomme” International film festival,France 2007
“Well-played” Iran-Arab Film Festival,Germany 2008
Full Frame International Documentary Film Festival USA 2008
“Flandres” International Film Festival Gent-Belgium 2008
15th Alt?nkoza Film, Culture and Art Festival, Turkey 2008
Santiago International Film Festival SANFIC 2008 “Jewels of Middle- East,” Chile
Morelia International Film Festival 2008, Mexico.
San Luis Cine International Festival Competition, Argentina, November 2008
Move Media Right Festival. Thailand, December 2008
Edinburgh: Filmhouse Cinema, January 2009
Portland International Film Festival, Competition, 2009
All Roads International Film Festival, USA, Competition, 2009
Awards
Winner: Best Director, 11th House of Cinema Film Festival, 2007, Iran;
Winner: Best Director, 25th Fajr Int. Film Festival, 2007, Iran;
Winner: AVINI Prize for Best Documentary of the year 2007, Iran;
Winner: Audience Award, CINEMA VERITE International Documentary Film Festival, 2007 Iran.
Nominated for: Cinema Eye Award for Best Documentary Film, IFC 2009








http://nitroflare.com/view/9C704698849E6A7/Tehran_Has_No_More_Pomegrantes%21.avi

https://uploadgig.com/file/download/2d0d86afE3f78f55/Tehran Has No More Pomegrantes.avi

Language(s):Persian
Subtitles:English

Jacques Rivette & Suzanne Schiffman – Out 1, noli me tangere (1971)

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Though Jacques Rivette’s Out 1 is often described as a time capsule, it hardly functions as a medium for concrete historical research. The 1971 film takes place in a major global city (Paris in the late ’60s) for all of its 13 hours, but it’s notable for how radically disconnected it is from the quotidian texture of metropolitan life—from matters like what any of its characters do to make a living, how they get around, what their typical routine is, what they eat or drink, or what they do in their downtime.

Instead, it carves its own peculiar universe out of a cluster of people existing in marginal relationships to conventional daily reality, orbiting around the living, breathing Paris caught in the backgrounds of Rivette’s camera according to their own eccentric priorities and senses of time. In this way, its emblematic image is one in which Jean-Pierre Léaud—as a shapeshifting loner, Colin, who’s by turns a panhandler, a journalist, a hopeless romantic, and an amateur sleuth investigating a nebulous conspiracy—paces through the streets and loudly delivers poetic oratories to no one in particular, all while confused civilians attempt to go about their business around him.

As the architect behind the organization of this peripheral world, Rivette promptly goes about establishing a cinematic time-flow that reflects that of his characters. In the first installment of this eight-part, freely improvised epic, we’re introduced to the two experimental theater troupes that form the film’s primary ensemble, both of which are workshopping texts by the Greek playwright Aeschylus, in a pair of marathon sequences. The first documents a collective led by the spunky and outspoken Lili (Michèle Moretti) in the midst of acrobatic rehearsals for the frontlines tragedy Seven Against Thebes, and the second finds impassioned ringleader Thomas (Michael Lonsdale) guiding his colleagues through a more outré take on the canonical Prometheus.

Neither performance articulates a particularly discernible narrative, nor do they look especially show-ready. Rather, process is key for these actors, and Rivette’s long, observational takes savor their spontaneous energy. The latter scene, in particular, offers one of the more arresting displays of movement and form in the entire film, a protracted record of writhing, moaning bodies intermingling with furious intensity that recalls the kinetic quasi-dance filmmaking of Carolee Schneemann or Amy Greenfield.

Despite these early bursts of dynamism, however, Out 1 is largely a film of conversation, as its prolonged rehearsal vignettes regularly give way to even lengthier scenes of verbal self-analysis. Thomas’s group of players, especially, has a penchant for dwelling in great detail on the beat-to-beat impulses behind their improvisations, discussions that muddy the distinctions between performance and authentic involvement. It gradually becomes evident that the collectives are more interested in working through psychological bewilderments for their own sake than they are in carrying their work into the public sphere, though their reasons for craving this outlet become part of the mystery around which Out 1 dances.

After hours of seemingly arbitrary intercutting between these theater activities and more mundane business in the streets, a chain of enigmas starts to usher the film toward something resembling a plot. After spending the first few episodes as a harmonica-tooting mute annoying café patrons until they slip him money, Colin stumbles upon, then obsesses over, a series of cryptic letters during one of his afternoon wanderings. Meanwhile, Frédérique (Juliet Berto), who busies herself with her own form of vagabond mooching (feigning interest in men before robbing them), ends up on an analogous mission after interacting with an ostensibly benign fellow (Jacques Doniol-Valcroze) who’s the current holder of similar letters.

Much of Out 1’s midsection, therefore, consists of Léaud and Berto reclusively practicing oddball investigative tactics: counting exercises, dress-up acts, and zombified brainstorms that find them, for instance, crossing busy intersections like they’re peaceful poppy fields. Against all odds, these methods lead them to “The Thirteen,” a curious secret society—or is it?—that seems to be on the tip of everyone’s tongue yet whose exact nature is never disclosed. More recognizable New Wavers—Bulle Ogier, Barbet Schroeder, and Françoise Fabian, among others—enter the mix as characters who may or may not have connections to this network of possible significance, though none are easy to get a handle on, as their personas often shift from wide-eyed obliviousness to devious hints of large-scale criminality.

Even the ostensible main characters aren’t to be blindly trusted: Colin arhythmically slithers in and out of frame as if trying out some variation on Inspector Clouseau and only deviates from his default blankness during one memorable laughing fit in a hippy den; Berto’s baby-faced gentleness is complicated by her all-too-casual commitment to underhanded petty offenses, not to mention an animalistic tussle with a guy on a sidewalk; and Thomas, whom Lonsdale plays as part political extremist, part randy philanderer, and part tender patriarch, is the slipperiest of all.

Even less graspable, though, is the vague conspiracy that binds them all. In a hushed sequence in the penultimate installment where one character begins to explain the “dangerous things” Colin has gotten himself into, Rivette discreetly reverses the dialogue track when it seems crucial revelations are on the horizon. The result is an unintelligible, uncanny garble (one imagines David Lynch had this effect on his mind when he conceived of the Red Room dialect in Twin Peaks) that singlehandedly puts to rest any and all expectations that this mounting mystery will be “solved.”

In doing so, Out 1 subtly pivots into a more reflective mode for its final hours, one that officially dissolves the concrete details into ciphers and red herrings and redirects attention to the sources of the anxieties driving them. It’s here that the film most deeply fascinates, where it digs into the hitherto unclear connections between its various wandering souls and insinuates the faiths and fears that either brought them together or drove them apart.

Unfortunately, this progression does little to shed new light on the preceding hours, which remain roundabout distractions from the core collective psychology that eventually surfaces. It doesn’t help that Rivette’s mise-en-scène is often crushingly one-note: A typical setup consists of a frontal, nonchalantly framed master shot that places anywhere from two characters to an entire cluster of folks against sparse backgrounds, many of which play little to no role in the drama playing out in front of them.

In addition to praising Rivette’s improvisatory emphasis on actor agency, Adrian Martin’s recent book, Mise en Scène and Film Style: From Classical Hollywood to New Media Art, is instructive in this regard. Martin discusses the director as someone who’s sensitive to the many atmospheric variables and contingencies in a given scene, and who ideally finds ways to encourage those elements to interact with and inform the dramatic artifice. Rivette’s images, meanwhile, feel segregated from one another (the blips and bumps of the direct sound recording go a long way to augmenting this impression) and hermetically sealed off from the world beyond the production space. Indeed, there’s even a moment when the unseen end of a phone line is represented by the cues of an actor just off screen.

Combined with Rivette’s utter, radical disregard for narrative compression (sometimes hours pass before a thread started in one scene gets continued), this aesthetic distance often makes the film itself feel as provisional as the Aeschylus adaptations Out 1 depicts. And when characters are more or less talking in what amounts to a highly coded language about things that may or may not even exist, alienation can be a natural response.

It’s with some consolation to the frustrated viewer, then, that Out 1 features a cameo from Eric Rohmer (whose current standing as a more controlled and rational-minded director than Rivette would probably have come to neither man’s surprise or shame) in which he eloquently and comprehensively chides Colin’s “poor grasp of reality.” Thankfully, Out 1 is good for an occasional chuckle, and this little nugget provides droll evidence that Rivette intends the film more as an experiential exploration than a statement in stone.














http://nitroflare.com/view/DB89F875CCA8C56/Episode_1.mkv
http://nitroflare.com/view/1F266F8E101B584/Episode_2.mkv
http://nitroflare.com/view/44011D33811C0ED/Episode_3.mkv
http://nitroflare.com/view/D2AE6EDA42EE1BD/Episode_4.mkv
http://nitroflare.com/view/07A1FA1D35EBBE8/Episode_5.mkv
http://nitroflare.com/view/086969ADF850A6B/Episode_6.mkv
http://nitroflare.com/view/0501D7D0BDBD70D/Episode_7.mkv
http://nitroflare.com/view/332DA90B3089A77/Episode_8.mkv

https://uploadgig.com/file/download/10a07645e8103C07/Episode 1.mkv
https://uploadgig.com/file/download/d8aAb4bb076E920B/Episode 2.mkv
https://uploadgig.com/file/download/85b0491504137b42/Episode 3.mkv
https://uploadgig.com/file/download/bc2300147Cd4c4F1/Episode 4.mkv
https://uploadgig.com/file/download/016938c90e144548/Episode 5.mkv
https://uploadgig.com/file/download/9913f18dA457036E/Episode 6.mkv
https://uploadgig.com/file/download/4bfd0cc0d7ff196c/Episode 7.mkv
https://uploadgig.com/file/download/45c532cBb837a401/Episode 8.mkv

Language(s):French
Subtitles:English

Dominik Spritzendorfer & Elena Tikhonova – Elektro Moskva (2013)

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Elektro Moskva is an essayistic documentary about the Soviet electronic age and its legacy. The story begins with the inventor of the world’s first electronic instrument, Leon Theremin, unveiling the KGB’s huge pile of fascinating devices, some of which were musical. They all came into existence as a by-product of a rampant defense industry. Nowadays, those aged and abandoned ‘musical coffins’, as solidly made as a Kalashnikov, are being recycled and reinterpreted by the post-Soviet generations of musicians, sound collectors and circuit benders. The story of the Soviet synthesizers as an allegory to the everyday life under the Soviet system: nothing works, but you have to make the best out of it. An electronic fairy tale about the inventive spirit of the free mind inside the iron curtain- and beyond.

* The archival footage with Leon Theremin was shot by Sergey Zezjulkov in 1993, a few months before Theremin’s death. However, the planned documentary about the great Russian inventor was never completed and Zezjulkov stored the rushes underneath his bed for almost twenty years. Now these scenes can be seen for the first time.

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ELEKTRO MOSKVA tells the strange but true story of the evolution of electronic music against a backdrop of revolutionary politics, social upheaval, and totalitarian control.
From the invention of the world’s first electronic instrument by Leon Theremin in 1928, to avant-garde musicians of the 1970s scavenging contraband parts from KGB spying equipment, to modern day circuit-benders in cramped Moscow flats turning discarded toys into bizarre instruments, ELEKTRO MOSKVA chronicles almost a century of freethinking musicians, artists, and inventors who turned the economic hardships of the Soviet system into some of the strangest and most mind-expanding sounds and instruments ever devised.
Meet gregarious junk peddlers who specialize in scouring the countryside for long-forgotten analog synths from the days of Sputnik. Learn about the bizarre ANS synthesizer, which is “played” by scratching images onto glass plates that are then turned into music. Hear some of the weirdest and most haunting music ever electrified into existence.
ELEKTRO MOSKVA is the story of the Soviet synthesizer turned into an allegory of everyday life under the Soviet system: nothing works, but you have to make the best of it. – Maurice Moore

This film sketches a portrait of the experimental scene in Moscow and also includes rare footage of the godfather of electronic music, Leon Theremin. There are two types of machines. Western ones that always work and Russian ones, which you never know if they are going to work or not. So it is said in the documentary Electro Moscow, which takes us back to a fabulous piece of musical history that will surprise even true music buffs. The Austrian filmmakers Tikhonova and Spritzendorfer managed to track down some of these musical devices and tell the often bizarre stories behind them. Electro Moscow is a lively documentary that puts a big smile on your face. – IFFR

“The Shrewish Taming of the Current” would be an appropriate subtitle of Elektro Moskva. This documentary by Elena Tikhonova and Dominik Spritzendorfer provides nothing less than the first concise analysis of Russian electronic music from the early 1910s to the present, and is much more than just a music film: Embedded in discourses about everyday matters, technology and philosophy, Elektro Moskva portrays these musical experiments as an allegory for sociopolitical terrain that has remained unexplored until now.
With a trove of archival material and location shots, this is the story of how the current was brought under control, to the accompaniment of synthesizers and drum machines, since the birth of the Soviet Union under Lenin. The history of Russian electronic music has always been a story of privations and appropriation. No two synthesizers are identical; instead, they´re “living organisms” in the sound of which oscillate inventiveness, political influence and Communist fantasies of what´s doable. The futuristic furor continues into the ´60s with projections of space colonization, and when such groups as Notchnoi Prospekt made New Wave compatible with the USSR in the ´80s. Today, these machines are in great demand, with collectors going to the country´s most remote corners to perform interactive historical research. Three protagonists of contemporary Russian experimental electronic music, Alexey Borisov, Richardas Norvila a.k.a. Benzo, and Dmitriy Morozov a.k.a. Vtol are given a chance to speak.
This “electromagnetic fairytale” tells of an intellectual curiosity whose poetry turns nothing into something, in spite of, or because of, repression. Elektro Moskva fills in the map of music production in the past in an equally informative and entertaining way, at the same time making a passionate call for autodidactic creativity: sonic utopias. – Heinrich Deisl








http://nitroflare.com/view/170B4F30922B081/Elektro.Moskva.mkv

https://uploadgig.com/file/download/5078c8891F0e2e03/Elektro.Moskva.mkv

Language(s):Russian
Subtitles:English hardsub

Pere Portabella – Nocturno 29 (1968)

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Synopsis:
A woman walks by her home and finally takes a shower – She buy colored fabrics in a trade. A man visiting a post office – Succession of scenic pictures and semi-autonomous fading almost always unexpected. A series of situations or suite, though apparently unrelated, revolve around a thematic development that gives body and drive the story without resorting to the use of an anecdote as plot continuity.

Review:
The narrative approach of Nocturn 29 is based on a series or suites of apparently unconnected situations, that always turn around the development of a subject that gives “body” and unity to the story without resorting to the use of an anecdote as plot continuity. At the center of its story, Nocturn 29 has a main character (Lucía Bosé), whose presence is like a linking thread through which the spectator manages to reach a thematic coherence and the meaning of the film, with a broken view, syncopated and caustic, but also poetic. It is a realistic film in the sense that when speaking of realism I am always referring to a realism in results. This is what makes it coherent.











http://nitroflare.com/view/025A1B44265F258/Nocturno_29_%281968%29_–_Pere_Portabella.mkv

https://uploadgig.com/file/download/623b91138c417D1f/Nocturno 29 1968 — Pere Portabella.mkv

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

Klaus Wyborny – Studien zum Untergang des Abendlands AKA Studies for the Decay of the West (Song of the Earth, Appendix) (1979–2010)

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In Wyborny’s ‘musical film’, every new sound triggers a new image: 6,299 shots, all directly edited within his Super-8 camera. An intoxicating, stroboscopic trip to industrial, natural and urban landscapes in East Africa, New York, the Ruhr district and Rimini.

This experimental music film refers to Oswald Spengler’s world-famous philosophical work Der Untergang des Abendslandes (The Decay of the West, 1918). Culture pessimist Spengler argues that progress is an illusion and that the modern era brings little good. People are no longer able to understand the rationality of the world. Wyborny did not set out to make a film version of Spengler’s theories, but rather a visual reflection on the modern age; a stroboscopic journey in five parts to industrial, natural and urban landscapes. He uses 6,299 shots, edited directly in a Super8 camera. Each piano note and violin vibrato evokes a new image: demolished buildings, rubble, destruction and nature, all shot between 1979 and 2010 in locations such as New York, the Ruhr, Hamburg, East Africa and Rimini. This film forms a counterpart to Wyborny’s previous films series Eine andere Welt. Lieder der Erde II (2004/2005).





http://nitroflare.com/view/C5C4A665786211C/Klaus_Wyborny_-_%281979%E2%80%932010%29_Studies_for_the_Decay_of_the_West_%28Song_of_the_Earth%2C_Appendix%29.mkv

https://uploadgig.com/file/download/f0e5aA3712C6bdb2/Klaus Wyborny – 19792010 Studies for the Decay of the West Song of the Earth Appendix.mkv

Language(s):English
Subtitles:None

Bing Wang – Caiyou riji (pt. 1a) AKA Crude Oil (pt. 1a) (2008)

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In the film-festival catalogues of Rotterdam and Hong Kong, it says that Wang Bing was filming on a plateau in the Gobi Desert, but in reality he had to move to a different mountainous region about 500 kilometers away, a journey on unmade snow-covered roads. The terrain that now plays the leading role in the film is in the province of Qinghai, a similar landscape to that of the neighboring province of Tibet (which of course is not regarded by everyone as a province). A high, empty, rough, windy, and desolate landscape. Yes, making films can still be adventurous. The filmmaker found that out at first hand. He started to have altitude sickness at the high oil installation. It was so severe that the had to stop shooting prematurely while the crew continued to film the rest of the material. When he was a guest in Rotterdam, the committed filmmaker had still not entirely recovered, but he did not seem to regret his adventure…. The idea was obviously that the whole work should be seen. That was not a punishment (apart from spending fourteen hours on folding chairs, maybe) because the work includes beautiful moments. For instance, the slow breaking of dawn above the rocky landscape while the men had already been at work for hours is an almost breathtaking spectacle. The question of whether Crude Oil by Wang Bing is an installation or a film screening is basically trivial. It is an important and grand work and the label is not that relevant. What is relevant is how an exhausting work like this can best be presented. And how can it live on. — International Film Festival Rotterdam



http://nitroflare.com/view/4AB251547A4C04A/crude_oil_pt_1a.avi

https://uploadgig.com/file/download/0302a112aaa9E457/crude_oil_pt_1a.avi

Language(s):Mandarin
Subtitles:English (hard coded)

Bing Wang – Caiyou riji (pt. 1b) AKA Crude Oil (pt. 1b) (2008)

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Quote:
“In the film-festival catalogues of Rotterdam and Hong Kong, it says that Wang Bing was filming on a plateau in the Gobi Desert, but in reality he had to move to a different mountainous region about 500 kilometers away, a journey on unmade snow-covered roads. The terrain that now plays the leading role in the film is in the province of Qinghai, a similar landscape to that of the neighboring province of Tibet (which of course is not regarded by everyone as a province). A high, empty, rough, windy, and desolate landscape. Yes, making films can still be adventurous. The filmmaker found that out at first hand. He started to have altitude sickness at the high oil installation.It was so severe that the had to stop shooting prematurely while the crew continued to film the rest of the material. When he was a guest in Rotterdam, the committed filmmaker had still not entirely recovered, but he did not seem to regret his adventure…. The idea was obviously that the whole work should be seen. That was not a punishment (apart from spending fourteen hours on folding chairs, maybe) because the work includes beautiful moments. For instance, the slow breaking of dawn above the rocky landscape while the men had already been at work for hours is an almost breathtaking spectacle. The question of whether Crude Oil by Wang Bing is an installation or a film screening is basically trivial. It is an important and grand work and the label is not that relevant. What is relevant is how an exhausting work like this can best be presented. And how can it live on.” — International Film Festival Rotterdam



http://nitroflare.com/view/5B6B0729FEB17A1/crude_oil_pt_1b.avi

https://uploadgig.com/file/download/68959d3f04da88F4/crude_oil_pt_1b.avi

Language(s):Mandarin
Subtitles:English (hard coded)


Ken Jacobs – Star Spangled to Death (2004)

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STAR SPANGLED TO DEATH is an epic film shot for hundreds of dollars! combining found-films with my own more-or-less staged filming, it pictures a stolen and dangerously sold-out America, allowing examples of popular culture to self-indict. Racial and religious insanity, monopolization of wealth and the purposeful dumbing down of citizens and addiction to war oppose a Beat playfulness.

A handful of artists costumed and performing unconvincingly appeal to audience imagination and understanding to complete the picture. Jack Smith’s pre-FLAMING CREATURES performance as The Spirit Not Of Life But Of Living (the movie has raggedly cosmic pretensions), celebrating Suffering (rattled impoverished artist Jerry Sims) at the crux of sentient existence, is a visitation of the divine.
K.J.




http://nitroflare.com/view/699ADB0AA48D761/STAR_SPANGLED_IAa.avi
http://nitroflare.com/view/4768F4EBB22158E/STAR_SPANGLED_IB.avi
http://nitroflare.com/view/0B2630C58198BD1/STAR_SPANGLED_IIA.avi
http://nitroflare.com/view/929445172B98F77/STAR_SPANGLED_TO_DEATH_IIB.avi

https://uploadgig.com/file/download/0498e956b37123f0/STAR_SPANGLED_IAa.avi
https://uploadgig.com/file/download/5b735dcb8aaCA3Ac/STAR_SPANGLED_IB.avi
https://uploadgig.com/file/download/e6376d378eD7ddA0/STAR_SPANGLED_IIA.avi
https://uploadgig.com/file/download/443619B6d89b3248/STAR_SPANGLED_TO_DEATH_IIB.avi

Language(s):English
Subtitles:eng subs

Bing Wang – Caiyou riji (pt. 2a) (2008)

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Quote:
In the film-festival catalogues of Rotterdam and Hong Kong, it says that Wang Bing was filming on a plateau in the Gobi Desert, but in reality he had to move to a different mountainous region about 500 kilometers away, a journey on unmade snow-covered roads. The terrain that now plays the leading role in the film is in the province of Qinghai, a similar landscape to that of the neighboring province of Tibet (which of course is not regarded by everyone as a province). A high, empty, rough, windy, and desolate landscape. Yes, making films can still be adventurous. The filmmaker found that out at first hand. He started to have altitude sickness at the high oil installation. It was so severe that the had to stop shooting prematurely while the crew continued to film the rest of the material. When he was a guest in Rotterdam, the committed filmmaker had still not entirely recovered, but he did not seem to regret his adventure…. The idea was obviously that the whole work should be seen. That was not a punishment (apart from spending fourteen hours on folding chairs, maybe) because the work includes beautiful moments. For instance, the slow breaking of dawn above the rocky landscape while the men had already been at work for hours is an almost breathtaking spectacle. The question of whether Crude Oil by Wang Bing is an installation or a film screening is basically trivial. It is an important and grand work and the label is not that relevant. What is relevant is how an exhausting work like this can best be presented. And how can it live on. — International Film Festival Rotterdam



http://nitroflare.com/view/0B833D2FC90A69C/curde_oil_pt_2a.avi

https://uploadgig.com/file/download/6e2cd10D97efcf01/curde_oil_pt_2a.avi

Language(s):Mandarin
Subtitles:English (hard coded)

Bing Wang – Caiyou riji (pt. 2b) (2008)

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Quote:
In the film-festival catalogues of Rotterdam and Hong Kong, it says that Wang Bing was filming on a plateau in the Gobi Desert, but in reality he had to move to a different mountainous region about 500 kilometers away, a journey on unmade snow-covered roads. The terrain that now plays the leading role in the film is in the province of Qinghai, a similar landscape to that of the neighboring province of Tibet (which of course is not regarded by everyone as a province). A high, empty, rough, windy, and desolate landscape. Yes, making films can still be adventurous. The filmmaker found that out at first hand. He started to have altitude sickness at the high oil installation. It was so severe that the had to stop shooting prematurely while the crew continued to film the rest of the material. When he was a guest in Rotterdam, the committed filmmaker had still not entirely recovered, but he did not seem to regret his adventure…. The idea was obviously that the whole work should be seen. That was not a punishment (apart from spending fourteen hours on folding chairs, maybe) because the work includes beautiful moments. For instance, the slow breaking of dawn above the rocky landscape while the men had already been at work for hours is an almost breathtaking spectacle. The question of whether Crude Oil by Wang Bing is an installation or a film screening is basically trivial. It is an important and grand work and the label is not that relevant. What is relevant is how an exhausting work like this can best be presented. And how can it live on. — International Film Festival Rotterdam




http://nitroflare.com/view/60F2D1B43B41D58/crude_oil_pt_2b.avi

https://uploadgig.com/file/download/65e742fB165efc6a/crude_oil_pt_2b.avi

Language(s):Mandarin
Subtitles:English (hard coded)

Maureen Blackwood – Perfect Image? (1989)

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Bright and imaginative in its approach to its subject, PERFECT IMAGE? exposes stereotypical images of Black women and explores women’s own ideas of self worth. Using two actresses who constantly change their personae, the film poses questions about how Black women see themselves and each other and the pitfalls that await those who internalize the search for the “perfect image”!



http://nitroflare.com/view/558FB7B8E2B962C/Perfect_Image_%28Blackwood%2C_1988%29.mkv

https://uploadgig.com/file/download/ae4bdd7811F9c95b/Perfect Image Blackwood 1988.mkv

Language(s):English
Subtitles:None

Bill Viola – The Passing (1992)

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A man between daydreaming and nightmaring, between the call of life and the call of death; his night in mid-water, apnea, perfored by a succession of visions…




Or/and an autobiographical essay whose antagonist strenghs, depression and power of liberation can be compared, for ex., with the mental somptuousness of Otto e mezzo (and with the same tint of science-fiction, btw.)




Electronic Arts Intermix wrote:
The Passing hauntingly travels the terrains of the conscious, the subconscious, and the desert landscapes of the Southwest, melding sleep, dreams and the drama of waking life into a stunning masterpiece. Viola, placed at the center of this personal exploration of altered time and space, represents his mortality in such forms as a glistening newborn baby, his deceased mother, and the artist himself, floating, submerged under water. Starkly yet poignantly rendered in black and white, The Passing re-enforces the notion of a permeable conduit between reality and surreality. An irrepressible soundtrack of Viola’s labored breathing in sleeping and wakefulness serves to pull the viewer through an otherworldly topography. Amy Taubin of the Village Voice hails The Passing as “awesomely beautiful” and deems Bill Viola “a world-class video artist.” She writes, “Some of the images… burst out of the darkness, shimmer and fade as radiant and ephemeral as shooting stars.”

Quote:
(…) video medium, fully used by Viola in its liquid materiality, its atomic restlessness and permanent scintilations and shimmerings, appears here as the perfect interface – the passing could be the camcorder too ? – between life and death as if the electronic vibrations of the image were the matter we’re made of… water bubbles, stardusts, seeds, germs, electric skies that travel all along the tape are here to remind us and mirror our mental structure.

http://nitroflare.com/view/B627C0E3B398999/The_passing_-_Bill_Viola_%281991%29.mkv

https://uploadgig.com/file/download/97fE0B4532c42200/The passing – Bill Viola 1991.mkv

Language(s):Spectral sounds
Subtitles:Spectral

Jem Cohen – Chain (2004)

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“Jem Cohen’s Chain is a hypnotic, highly original piece about what
it’s like to live in the new global corporate landscape.”

Daily Telegraph
“Dreamlike… transforms a mundane world into something strange and
new… formidable power… fierce political intelligence.”

Village Voice

Synopsis:
As regional character disappears and corporate culture homogenizes our surroundings, it’s increasingly hard to tell where you are. In Chain, malls, theme parks, hotels and corporate centers worldwide are joined into one monolithic contemporary “superlandscape” that shapes the lives of two women caught within it. One is a corporate businesswoman set adrift by her corporation while she researches the international theme park industry. The other is a young drifter, living and working illegally on the fringes of a shopping mall. Cohen contrives to turn the entire planet into a stretch of New Jersey commercial property–a universe that feels entirely real yet has the distinct smack of J.G. Ballard otherness.

With music by Godspeed You! Black Emperor
From empathetic and impressionistic portraits of cities, people and places, to his enduring relationships and collaborations with musicians such as Patti Smith, REM, Godspeed You! Black Emperor, Elliot Smith and Fugazi, Cohen’s prolific body of work – more than 70 films over three decades – is widely considered as one of the most significant in international independent cinema. Including features, essay and diary films, documentaries, installations and music works, Cohen’s output is rooted in experimental film, the traditions of street photography and urban aesthetics, and the collaborative qualities of the American alternative music scene.
Chain is presented to co-incide with Compass and Magnet, a retrospective of Jem Cohen’s work at the Whitechapel Gallery and Hackney Picturehouse (April – May 2015)







http://nitroflare.com/view/D886C726C7779D4/Chain_720p.mkv

https://uploadgig.com/file/download/e64623e867358604/Chain 720p.mkv

Language(s):English
Subtitles:None

Christopher Maclaine – The End (1953)

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Description from Beat Cinema
The End is in six numbered sections, each separated by long stretches of darkness during which Maclaine speaks directly to the audience. Each of the sections is a tale of a different person on the last day of his or her life. The characters in the first three sections meet their end either through random acts of violence or suicide (none depicted graphically), after which Maclaine (in dark humor mode) acknowledges that the audience may not yet be identifying with his characters (“These people are all violent!”). The characters in the second half seem to meet their end through a large-scale disaster, unspecified in Maclaine’s narration but undoubtedly the atomic explosion shown at the beginning and end of the film. The two halves of the film are bridged by Maclaine’s narrator, who equates the self-destruction of the first three characters with a complacent world awaiting “the grand suicide of the human race.” The finale of the film is the end of the world as Maclaine imagines it might look, set to the tune of Beethoven’s ninth symphony – presaging Stanley Kubrick, who would also juxtapose an atomic explosion with ironically uplifting music in Dr. Strangelove a decade later. The End is not just a stern warning, but a prophecy of absolute doom – Maclaine seems to have believed the world was ending before his very eyes, and the eyes of his audience.

That’s the basic structure of the film – the details are another matter altogether. Each of the stories is constantly interrupted by discordant images: shots of arms flexing, pigeons flying or flocked together on the ground, mannequins, dancing feet, a street person lying on a sidewalk, flowers, crashing waves. Very few of the images relate in a directly metaphorical way to the action on screen – instead they only reveal their importance gradually as the film moves from story to story. Meanwhile the action on screen is often edited to create a sense of frustration and helpless repetition: one character runs endlessly through the streets, another repeatedly puts a gun to his head and pulls it away, another approaches a house, but the footage of his approach is edited in jump-cut style so he never seems to reach it. Meanwhile, the narrator doubles back on his stories, starting and suddenly stopping them, repeatedly uses the phrase “for reasons we know nothing about,” insists that he “know[s] no more about this story than you do.” It’s like walking on a tightrope, under the constant threat of vertigo.

The End was first shown in San Francisco in October 1953. It’s not hard to imagine how chaotic the film must have looked to contemporary audiences. In a letter published in Film Culture in 1963, Stan Brakhage, who was at the premiere, articulated the complexity of the crowd’s reaction that night:

“[The] audience was about as restless, and occasionally hysterical with laughter, as I’ve ever seen as American audience get; but I knew even then that what touched-off the audience was the absolute uniqueness of the film and that it laughed just to the extent that the film extends an almost unbearable love to the eyes AND ears of the viewing world…I marveled that Christopher Maclaine had made such a gesture without once, visually or audioly [sic], covering himself in shields of intellectual protect-and-pretensions, that he had been willing and able EVEN THEN to gesture in a way he must have known would be open to the worst, most painful, laughter if even 2 dozen members of the audience chose to vent their embarrassment by making the gesture seem foolish.”






http://nitroflare.com/view/01E757A6C7E11C8/The.End.Christopher.Maclaine.1953.avi

https://uploadgig.com/file/download/Df47f601258a6552/The.End.Christopher.Maclaine.1953.avi

Language(s):English
Subtitles:None


Christopher Maclaine – The Man Who Invented Gold (1957)

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The Man Who Invented Gold, very different from The End, is fully as masterful. It focuses on a modern-day alchemist whose zombielike neighbors think of him as “madman” while he aspires to become “goldman.” Again Maclaine narrates, likening the quest to create gold to a quest for the “world of light”; the editing is as disjunctive as in The End but arguably has a much more optimistic meaning, bringing to the forefront the Gnostic longing to escape substance and recover light that underlies parts of The End.

The filmmaker Jordan Belson, who shot The End, shot part of The Man Who Invented Gold before he tired of Maclaine’s antics and quit. Forced to operate the camera himself, Maclaine could no longer play the alchemist. His “solution” was to have not one but two other actors play the lead. Further, while Belson filmed Maclaine in color, Maclaine filmed his actors in black and white, later intercutting color, black-and-white, and black-and-white negative images of the “madman.” He also cut from one actor to the other as if they were the same man, even appearing to match motions across the cuts. Of course all these techniques undercut viewer identification with the alchemist, though they’re entirely appropriate to a film by and about a madman. The narrator’s references to alchemy are accompanied by cuts to abstract images, scratches made directly on the film or colored powders dropped on the floor in what look like abstract expressionist patterns — images that make it clear that destructive cutting can also transform. Maclaine realizes the alchemist’s gnostic goal not in the film’s story — the protagonist ultimately turns only eyeballs into gold — but in the film itself: abstract bursts of color, light streaming in through a window, or the tiny yo-yo a character carries near the end represent the brief moments of visual magic that lift us out of imprisonment in the material world…


http://nitroflare.com/view/59F1F77765D2394/the_man_who_invented_gold.avi

https://uploadgig.com/file/download/336f7d108D0D397f/the man who invented gold.avi

Language(s):English
Subtitles:None

Christopher Maclaine – Scotch Hop (1959)

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The wonderful Scotch Hop (1959) [ imdb says 1953] is something of a letdown only after seeing his first two staggering, shattering masterpieces. In that film Maclaine intercuts a small band of bagpipers with other scenes, making some costumed young women appear to dance to the bagpipes’ rhythms. Scotch Hop is animated by a tension between synchronicity and asynchronicity — the rhythms of the images and the music converge, then diverge. Each image feels as if it were perched on a knife-edge between a world of smooth, lyrical dance and a world about to be torn apart.


However, according to one of Stan Brakhage’s former students, Brakhage “thought SCOTCH HOP was Maclaine’s greatest work, the mature fruition of his filmmaking efforts.”

http://nitroflare.com/view/E7FDFFA8D366432/scotch_hop.avi

https://uploadgig.com/file/download/5d9447ee0e267A02/scotch hop.avi

Language(s):English
Subtitles:none

Manuela de Laborde – As Without So Within (2016)

Christoph Girardet & Matthias Müller – Cut (2013)

Dziga Vertov – Chelovek s kino-apparatom aka Man with a movie camera (1929)

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Quote:
This playful film is at once a documentary of a day in the life of the Soviet Union, a documentary of the filming of said documentary, and a depiction of an audience watching the film. Even the editing of the film is documented. We often see the cameraman who is purportedly making the film, but we rarely, if ever, see any of the footage he seems to be in the act of shooting!


Quote:
This film is famous for the range of cinematic techniques Vertov invents, deploys or develops, such as double exposure, fast motion, slow motion, freeze frames, jump cuts, split screens, Dutch angles, extreme close-ups, tracking shots, footage played backwards, stop motion animations and a self-reflexive style (at one point it features a split screen tracking shot; the sides have opposite Dutch angles).

In the 2012 Sight and Sound poll, film critics voted Man with a Movie Camera the 8th best film ever made.

In 2014 Sight and Sound also named the film the best documentary film of all time.







http://nitroflare.com/view/A9ADBAD566941AC/Chelovek_s_kino-apparatom_-_Dziga_Vertov_%281929%29_7soundtracks_%2B_2_commentaries.mkv

Language(s):Russian and Ukrainian titles, intertitles and writing
Subtitles:English

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