Showing posts with label avant garde. Show all posts
Showing posts with label avant garde. Show all posts

2/09/2012

Avant Garde - Experimental Cinema of the 1920s & 1930s (2005) Review

Avant Garde - Experimental Cinema of the 1920s and 1930s (2005)
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This features a number of directors better known as painters (Fernand Leger, Marcel Duchamp) or photographers (Man Ray). For the curious, there is a short Orson Welles film from 1934, fully seven years before Citizen Kane. "The Life and Death of 9413, A Hollywood Extra" is on the Library of Congress's National Film Registry of significant American films, as is "H²O". Ménilmontant, at 37 minutes the longest film in this collection, is considered a masterpiece by some.
Worth exploring, if you like this sort of stuff. You know who you are.
---
It drives me nuts that Amazon doesn't include the bare-bones information about the films in this sort of collection, so I will:
Le Retour à la raison (The Return to Reason)
Directed by Man Ray
France 1923
2 Min.
Emak-Bakia (Leave Me Alone)
Directed by Man Ray
France 1926
16 Min.
L'Étoile de mer (The Starfish)
Directed by Man Ray
France 1928
15 Min.
Les Mystères du Château du Dé (The Mysteries of the Château of Dice)
Directed by Man Ray
France 1929
20 Min.
Ménilmontant
Directed by Dimitri Kirsanoff
France 1926
37 Min.
Brumes d'Automne (Autumn Mists)
Directed by Dimitri Kirsanoff
France 1928
12 Min.
The Life and Death of 9413, A Hollywood Extra
Directed by Robert Florey and Slavko Vorkapich
US 1928
13 Min.
Lot in Sodom
Directed by James Sibley Watson and Melville Webber
US 1933
27 Min.
Rhythmus 21 (Film Is Rhythm)
Directed by Hans Richter
Germany 1921
3 Min.
Vormittagsspuk (Ghosts Before Breakfast)
Directed by Hans Richter
Germany 1928
9 Min.
Anémic Cinéma
Directed by Marcel Duchamp
France 1926
6 Min.
Ballet Mécanique
Directed by Fernand Léger
France 1924
11 Min.

Symphonie Diagonale (Diagonal Symphony)
Directed by Viking Eggeling
Germany 1924
7 Min.
Le Vampire
Directed by Jean Painlevé
France 1939-45
9 Min.
The Hearts of Age
Directed by Orson Welles and William Vance
US 1934
8 Min.

uberfall (Assault)
Directed by Ernö Metzner
Germany 1928
22 Min.
La Glace à trois faces (The Three-Sided Mirror)
Directed by Jean Epstein
France 1927
33 Min.
Le Tempestaire (The Tempest)
Directed by Jean Epstein
France 1947
22 Min.

Romance Sentimentale (Sentimental Romance)
Directed by Sergei Eisenstein and Grigori V. Alexandrov
France 1930
16 Min.
Autumn Fire
Directed by Herman G. Weinberg
US 1931
15 Min.
Manhatta
Directed by Paul Strand and Charles Sheeler
US 1921
10 Min.
La Coquille et le Clergyman (The Seashell and the Clergyman)
Directed by Germaine Dulac
France 1926
31 Min.
Regen (Rain)
Directed by Joris Ivens
Netherlands 1929
14 Min.
H²O
Directed by Ralph Steiner
US 1929
12 Min.
Even -- As You And I
Directed by Roger Barlow, Harry Hay and LeRoy Robbins
US 1937
12 Min.

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AVANT GARDE:EXPERIMENTAL 1920S & 30S - DVD Movie

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12/26/2011

The Theatre of Tadeusz Kantor (1991) Review

The Theatre of Tadeusz Kantor (1991)
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This is an eye openner for anyone interested in serious theatre. Get it right now, you wont be disappointed.

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10/15/2011

Unseen Cinema - Early American Avant Garde Film 1894-1941 (1910) Review

Unseen Cinema - Early American Avant Garde Film 1894-1941 (1910)
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The contents below are from unseen-cinema; they include the contents of a 160-page softcover Series Catalog, which is sold separately, but I think you would want. This is clearly a labor of love; though I can't imagine trying to watch all this in a month of Sundays, I could see dipping into it from time to time.
=====================================
Disk 1: THE MECHANIZED EYE
Experiments in Technique and Form
The dynamic qualities of motion pictures are explored by cameramen and filmmakers through novel experiments in technique and form. Early cinematographers James White, "Billy" Bitzer, and Frederick Armitage display experimental shooting styles that wowed audiences. Other independent companies further image manipulation through creative staging, editing, and printing, such as a stunning three-screen film that predates Gance's Napoleon. Experiments by photographer Walker Evans, painter Emlen Etting, musician Jerome Hill, and the film collectives Nykino and Artkino record the world in a continual process of flux. A most extreme approach is realized by Henwar Rodakiewicz with Portrait of a Young Man (1925-31), a monumental study of natural and abstract motions.
18 FILMS:
5 Paris Exposition Films (1900)-James White
Eiffel Tower from Trocadero Palace (1900)
Palace of Electricity (1900)
Champs de Mars (1900)
Panorama of Eiffel Tower (1900)
Scene from Elevator Ascending Eiffel Tower (1900)
Captain Nissen Going through Whirpool Rapids, Niagra Falls (1901)-creators unknown
Down the Hudson (1903)-Frederick Armitage & A.E. Weed
The Ghost Train (1903)-creators unknown
Westinghouse Works, Panorama View Street Car Motor Room (1904)-G.W. "Billy" Bitzer
In Youth, Beside the Lonely Sea (c. 1924-25)-creators unknown
Melody on Parade (c. 1936)-creators unknown
La Cartomancienne (The Fortune Teller) (1932)-Jerome Hill
Pie in the Sky (1934-35)-Nykino: Elia Kazan, Ralph Steiner & Irving Lerner
Travel Notes (1932)-Walker Evans
Oil: A Symphony in Motion (1930-33)-Artkino: M.G. MacPherson & Jean Michelson
Poem 8 (1932-33)-Emlen Etting
Storm (1941-43)-Paul Burnford
Portrait of a Young Man (1925-31)-Henwar RodakiewiczDisk 2: THE DEVIL'S PLAYTHING
American Surrealism
Edwin S. Porter and other early filmmakers used bizarre sets, fantastic costumes, and magic lantern tricks to illuminate their fantasy films. American parody supplied Douglas Fairbanks with enough unusual material to produce the truly surreal When the Clouds Roll By (1919). The expressionistic Cabinet of Dr. Calagari (1919) influenced American sensibilities throughout the 1920s as seen in Beggar of Horseback (1925), The Life and Death of 9413-A Hollywood Extra (1927) and The Telltale Heart (1928). The emphasis shifted when amateurs J.S. Watson, Jr., Joseph Cornell, and Orson Welles crafted a unique variety of American surrealism on film unfettered by European concerns.
17 FILMS:
Jack and the Beanstalk (1902)-Edwin S. Porter
Dream of a Rarebit Fiend (1906)-Edwin S. Porter
The Thieving Hand (1907)-creator unknown, Vitagraph
Impossible Convicts (1905)-G.W. "Billy" Bitzer
When the Clouds Roll By (1919)-Douglas Fairbanks & Victor Fleming (excerpt)
Beggar on Horseback (1925)-James Cruze (excerpt)
The Fall of the House of Usher (1926-27)-J.S. Watson, Jr. & Melville Webber
The Life and Death of 9413: A Hollywood Extra (1927)- Robert Florey & Slavko Vorkapich
The Love of Zero (1928)-Robert Florey & William Cameron Menzies
The Telltale Heart (1928)-Charles Klein
Tomatos Another Day (1930/1933)-J.S. Watson, Jr. & Alec Wilder
The Hearts of Age (1934)- William Vance & Orson Welles
Unreal News Reels (c. 1926)-Weiss Artclass Comedies (excerpt)
The Children's Jury (c. 1938)-attributed Joseph Cornell
Thimble Theater (c. 1938)-Joseph Cornell
Carousel: Animal Opera (c. 1938)-Joseph Cornell
Jack's Dream (c. 1938)-Joseph CornellDisk 3: LIGHT RHYTHMS
Music and Abstraction
The rhythmic elements of cinema are explored by artists and filmmakers fascinated by the abstract qualities of light. The American authors of avant-garde classics Le Retour á la raison (1923), Ballet mécanique (1923-24), Anémic cinéma (1926), and Une Nuit sur le Mont Chauve (1934), are finally acknowledged for their seminal artistic achievements made in Europe. Pioneer abstract films by Ralph Steiner, Mary Ellen Bute, Douglass Crockwell, Dwinnell Grant, and George Morris are compared and contrasted with Hollywood montages created by Ernst Lubitsch, Slavko Vorkapich, and Busby Berkeley. For the first time on video, composer George Antheil's original 1924 score accompanies Fernand Léger and Dudley Murphy's film Ballet mécanique, a truly avant-garde cacophony of image and sound.
29 FILMS:
Le Retour à la raison (1923)-Man Ray
Ballet mécanique (1923-24)-Fernand Léger & Dudley Murphy
Anémic cinéma (1924-26)-Rrose Sélavy (Marcel Duchamp)
Looney Lens: Anamorphic People (1927)-Al Brick
Out of the Melting Pot (1927)-W.J. Ganz Studio
H20 (1929)-Ralph Steiner
Surf and Seaweed (1929-30)-Ralph Steiner
7 Vorkapich Montage Sequences (1928-37)-Slavko Vorkapich
The Furies (1934)
Skyline Dance (1928)
Money Machine (1929)
Prohibition (1929)
The Firefly- Vorkapich edit (1937)
The Firefly-MGM release version (1937)
Maytime (1937)
So This Is Paris (1926)-Ernst Lubitsch (excerpt)
Light Rhythms (1930)-Francis Bruguière & Oswell Blakeston
Une Nuit sur le Mont Chauve (Night on Bald Mountain) (1934)-Alexandre Alexeieff & Claire Parker
Rhythm in Light (1934)-Mary Ellen Bute, Ted Nemeth & Melville Webber
Synchromy No. 2 (1936)-Mary Ellen Bute & Ted Nemeth
Parabola (1937)-Mary Ellen Bute & Ted Nemeth
Footlight Parade - "By a Waterfall" (1933)-Busby Berkeley
Glen Falls Sequence (1937-46)-Douglass Crockwell
Simple Destiny Abstractions (1937-40)-Douglass Crockwell
Abstract Movies (1937-47)-George L.K. Morris
Scherzo (1939)-Norman McLaren
Themis (1940)-Dwinell Grant
Contrathemis (1941)-Dwinell Grant
1941 (1941)-Francis Lee
Moods of the Sea (1940-42)-Slavko Vorkapich & John HoffmanDisk 4: INVERTED NARRATIVES
New Directions in Story-Telling
Early directors D.W. Griffith and Lois Weber develop the radical language of cinema narrative through audience-friendly melodramas made for nickelodeon theaters. Experimental fantasies are depicted in such independent productions as Moonland (c. 1926), Lullaby (1929), and The Bridge (1929-30). Depression era films by socially-conscious filmmakers reshape drama as demonstrated in Josef Berne's brooding Black Dawn (1933) and Strand and Hurwitz's biting Native Land (1937-41): each pictures a raw reality. Parody and satire find their mark in Theodore Huff's Little Geezer (1932) and Barlow, Hay and Le Roy's Even as You and I (1937). David Bradley's Sredni Vashtar by Saki (1940-43) boasts an inadvertent post-modern attitude.
12 FILMS:
The House with Closed Shutters (1910)-D.W. Griffith & G.W. "Billy" Bitzer
Suspense (1913)-Lois Weber & Philips Smalley
Moonland (c. 1926)-Neil McQuire & William A. O'Connor
Lullaby (1929)-Boris Deutsch
The Bridge (1929-30)-Charles Vidor
Little Geezer (1932)-Theodore Huff
Black Dawn (1933)-Josef Berne & Seymour Stern
Native Land (1937-41)-Frontier Films: Leo Hurwitz & Paul Strand (excerpt)
Black Legion (1936-7)-Nykino: Ralph Steiner & Willard Van Dyke
Even As You and I (1937)-Roger Barlow, Harry Hay & Le Roy Robbins
Object Lesson (1941)-Christoher Young
"Sredni Vashtar" by Saki (1940-43)-David BradleyDisk 5: PICTURING A METROPOLIS
New York City Unveiled
Only Unseen Cinema DVD released as a SINGLE
The DVD depicts dynamic images of New York City and scenes of New Yorkers among the skyscrapers, streets, and night life of America's greatest city during a half century of progress, while at the same time showing changes in film style and the history of cinema experiments. Avant-garde moments pop up in the most unlikely of places including turn-of-the-twentieth-century actualities, commercial and radical newsreels, and Busby Berkeley's "Lullaby of Broadway" from Gold Diggers of 1935. Included are spectacular prints of Charles Sheeler and Paul Strand's Manhatta (1921), Robert Flaherty's Twenty-four-Dollar Island (c. 1926), Robert Florey's Skyscraper Symphony (1929), Jay Leyda's A Bronx Morning (1931), and Rudy Burckhardt's Pursuit of Happiness (1940).
26 FILMS:
The Blizzard (1899)-creators unknown
Lower Broadway (1902)-Robert K. Bonine
Beginning of a Skyscraper (1902)-Robert K. Bonine
Panorama from Times Building, New York (1905)-Wallace McCutcheon
Skyscrapers of NYC from North River (1903)-J.B. Smith
Panorama from Tower of the Brooklyn Bridge (1903)-G.W. "Billy" Bitzer
Building Up and Demolishing the Star Theatre (1902)-Frederick Armitage
Coney Island at Night (1905)-Edwin S. Porter
Interior New York Subway 14th Street to 42nd Street (1905)-G.W. "Billy" Bitzer
Seeing New York by Yacht (1902)-Frederick Armitage & A.E. Weed
2 Looney Lens: Split Skyscrapers (1924) and Tenth Avenue, NYC (1924)-Al Brick
4 Scenes from Ford Educational Weekly (1916-24)-creators unknown
Manhatta (1921)-Charles Sheeler & Paul Strand
Twentyfour-Dollar Island (c. 1926)-Robert...Read more›

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7 DVDs – 20 Hours - 155 Classics of Avant Garde Cinema! "Unseen Cinema: Early American Avant-Garde Film 1894-1941" reveals hitherto unknown accomplishments of American filmmakers working in the United States and abroad from the invention of cinema until World War II, and offers an innovative and often controversial view of experimental film as a product of avant-garde artists, of professional directors, and of amateur movie-makers working collectively and as individuals at all levels of film production. Many of the films have not been available since their creation, some have never been screened in public, and almost all have been unavailable in copies as good as these until now. Sixty of the world's leading film archive collections cooperated with Anthology Film Archives to bring this long-neglected period of film history back to life for modern audiences.

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9/08/2011

Astronome: A Night at the Opera - A Disturbing Initiation (Ontological-Hysteric Theater, Vol. 2) (2010) Review

Astronome: A Night at the Opera - A Disturbing Initiation (Ontological-Hysteric Theater, Vol. 2) (2010)
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Given Richard Foreman's "profound influence" on Zorn, to quote from the accompanying notes, their collaboration on this opera makes it an important release for anyone interested in Zorn's music. As would be expected from the brief but beautiful notes accompanying the CD release of Astronome, this is a non-narrative opera, and neither Zorn nor Foreman has any interest in telling a story. The imagery is not what I would have expected from the "libretto" packaged with the CD, but represents Foreman's unique artistic vision. I probably would have imagined something much darker, but Foreman certainly does provide the sense of ritual and mystery suggested by the libretto, without following it very literally. It has little in common with traditional Western operas (there is no plot, the actors don't sing, and rarely speak), but reminded me more of Chinese opera or traditional Japanese theater.
As usual, the Tzadik packaging is first-rate, but as usual, makes no attempt to explain anything that is presented. While I have never seen Foreman's work before, an accompanying 20-minute bonus film by Henry Hill provides a brief introduction to his philosophy via an interview cut with excerpts from another of his plays, filmed in a kind of You-Tube dancing-cat style. The video quality of the hour-long opera is better than I might have expected, considering that it was filmed with two small consumer video cameras. It was carefully edited from 5 live performances, with some black-level enhancement to compensate for the low-light conditions. (Expanding to a dual layer format may have allowed it to be presented with less compression, but could have caused continuity problems on some players.)
The quality of the stereo soundtrack is excellent, and in spite of the typical AC3 compression, is comparable to the CD release. (A linear PCM track would appear to have fit on the DVD, and would have been a welcome upgrade, however.) Because of another review questioning the audio quality, I took the trouble to view the entire decoded waveform with editing software. There are absolutely no instances of glitches or clipping, apart from a clipped "thump", about 0.2 seconds in duration, that first appears 46 seconds into the opening titles, and is repeated several times later, each time with a precisely identical waveform indicating that it is a probably a recorded sample. There is no audible effect from this clipping, and it could be intentional. See the user-provided images for wave profiles of the entire opera, a one-to-one zoom of the first "musical" passage showing a wide dynamic range and glitch-free recording quality, and a picture of the "thump" to show what clipping would look like. It would be a shame if a questionable review prevented this fine work from reaching its audience.

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8/11/2011

Richard Foreman: Ontological-Hysteric Theater, Vol. 1 (2008) Review

Richard Foreman: Ontological-Hysteric Theater, Vol. 1 (2008)
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Back around 1983 at the Kitchen in New York, I attended a showing of Ernie Gehr's film of the very early Ontological-Hysteric Theater Richard Foreman production "Sophia=Wisdom Part 3: The Cliffs." The play had been produced in 1972-73 and represents a very early production of Foreman's, back before the work sped up, so this was slow, stately, very formal, funny, and amazing to watch. Theater like Richard's is something almost ineffable. If you don't see it nothing can replace that experience. It was amazing for me, as a theater director myself and a student of avant garde thought, to see this work. It certainly didn't make a lot of sense to me, because my mind was busy trying to interpret what I was seeing rather than just weigh each moment for itself -- and because I doubted I would ever have the opportunity to see it again.
Well, thankfully, I was wrong about the latter. To my surprise and pleasure, Foreman has allowed this DVD to be released. Here you get the full Gehr film in all its 16mm flatness -- if you blow up the images they just blur out. But still here is that very film available to watch over and over. Secondly, you get about 80 minutes of clips from a variety of Foreman productions from the 70s to the current decade, all with a commentary track discussing what was going on in each excerpt. This is totally invaluable. Now people all over the world can see what only certain sophisticated theater goers have been wondering about for ages.
From production photos and the published script, I have always had a special fascination for the 1974 production "Pain(t)" so it has special significance to me to see the brief (four minute or so) excerpt offered here, despite the low video quality in which it is preserved. Kate Manheim, Foreman's wife and lead actress in many of the early works, is certainly a brave woman, allowing herself to be placed in such a strange and grotesque physical position on stage ("Oh Rhoda, try stuffing the word painter up your ass"). It's also exciting to see the late Ron Vawter from the Wooster Group as the President in A Symphony of Rats.
All in all, theater students and people who love to see theater pushed to the very edges will not want to miss this DVD.

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