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Affichage des articles dont le libellé est nouveautés. Afficher tous les articles

17/04/2015

Takahiko Iimura Early Film Poems 1962-1971

Takahiko Iimura
Early Film Poems 1962-1971

(6 films, color & black and white, sound & silent, 44 min, DVD NTSC/region free),
public price: 50.00 euros

The Pacific Ocean (1971) 7min. music: Akiko Samuwaka (2012)
Kiri (The Fog) (1970) 3min, silent
Honey Moon (1966) 7min. music: Akiko Samuwaka (2012)
I Saw the Shadow (1966) 7min, silent
Iro (Colours) (1962) 10min. music: Yasunao Tone (1962)
Dada 62 (1962) 10min. music: Haruyuki Suzuki (2012)


I made these six short films during a decade of 1962 through 1971, the first 10 years of my filmmaking though the order in the DVD goes backward from 1971 to 1962. Besides this collection I have already published another package of the films made in the 1960 "60s Experiments" consisted of four films made during 1962-64. The films of this new collection have not shown much during past decades and myself re-discovered lately these ones as a sort of "film poem." "Film poem" is a term used in the 1960 for experimental film burrowing from literature field. It means non-narrative and short form mostly. Also it often meant lyrical as well though not necessarily so. In this collection it starts from lyrical "The Pacific Ocean"(1971) and ends up not lyrical, "DADA62" which is descriptive and often metaphorical at the same time. Between them there are varied sense of poem. -(T.I) 

The Pacific Ocean (1971)
Shot on 8mm on the 12-day boat journey between Yokohama and San Francisco, Iimura's The Pacific Ocean consumes the anticipation and uncertainties of a voyage on waves with an obsessive attention on the ripples. An added score by Akiko Samukawa (2012) deepens the anxiety as it sinks in that we are no longer aware of the direction in which we are heading.
 

Kiri (The Fog) (1970)
Shot on 8mm on a mountain in Japan, the abrasive winds that drift the fog in Iimura's Kiri are so fierce we almost believe it to have grazed the filmstrip. The scratches, however, emerge as dust particles that submerge in and out of the mist. A comparative piece to Larry Gottheim's Fog Line (1970), Kiri shows rare patience in such situations.
   

Honey Moon (1966)
A touching portrait of his partner Akiko and the days following their wedding, Iimura's conceptual rigor loosens in favor of intimacy in Honey Moon.

I Saw the Shadow (1966) 7min, silent

A painting by Jiro Takamatsu
A precedent to Iimura's video work where he becomes his own subject, I Saw the Shadow sees Iimura follow his own shadow in and out of vision as he roams around streets, steps and fields. As the film progresses, it becomes increasingly unclear whether it is his shadow or camera that is guiding his steps.


Iro (Colors) (1962)
First projected onto Jiro Takamatsu's naked back at the legendary Sogetsu Art Center for the performance Screen Play, Colors is an experiment in concoction. Iimura drops paint into oil and water and melts wax as he films the colors take shape whilst simultaneously dissolving into one another. An eerie soundtrack by Yasunao Tone of Group Ongaku and Fluxus creates an impression of music being the witch behind the craft.
-Julian Ross, University of Leeds

Dada 62 (1962)
Yomiuri Independent was an annual show between 1949-1963 that exhibited all art that was submitted. Artists in the early 60s began to take advantage of the challenge by provoking the organisers with their submissions that cast a question on the framework of art within the gallery space. The objet d'art and performances we see in Dada 62 are fragments of what 
was shown in its 1962 version with pieces by Genpei Akasegawa, Jiro Takamatsu and Shinmei Kojima making an appearance.(In case of the performance in 1963, Iimura interpreted a graphic score by Yasunao Tone in his projection of the film at the Naiqua Gallery where he performed the projector as an instrument. As usual for Iimura, the piece is not simply a document but an interaction with the art he films.)
-Julian Ross, University of Leeds

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31/10/2012

JONAS MEKAS THE MAJOR WORKS


JONAS MEKAS
THE MAJOR WORKS
(six DVD Boxset PAL interzone), public price: 79.95 euros
English, French and Lithuanian subtitles
DVD single titles, public price: 19.90 euros each

Co-edition: Potemkine, Re:Voir and Agnès B DVD
Distribution Belgium, France, Spain, Switzerland: Potemkine
Distribution the rest of the world: Re:Voir

In addition the following five titles by Jonas Mekas are forthcoming from Re:Voir:
Guns of the Trees (1962) - Sixties Quartet (Andy Warhol, John and Yoko, George Maciunas, Kennedy) (1964-1999)
- Scenes from Allen's Last Three Days on Earth as a Spirit (Allen Ginsberg) (1997) - Letter from Greenpoint (2004) - Sleepless Nights Stories (2011)

Jonas Mekas - Six-DVD Box Set: The Major Works:
The Brig (1964) -  Walden (1969) - Reminiscences of a Jouney to Lithuania (1972) - Lost Lost Lost (1976) -
As I Was Moving Ahead Occasionally I Saw Brief Glimpses of Beauty (2000) - Short Film Works

This box brings together the key works of Jonas Mekas, one of the most prolific avant-garde film artists and an acclaimed poet. Born in Lithuania in 1922, chased west by Soviet and Nazi forces, Mekas and his brother spent four years in German displaced persons' camps before arriving in New York in 1949 where they started shooting 16mm films on exile, military domination and poetic freedom. Jonas developed his diary style of filmmaking while busying himself as a film critic, programmer, organizer and distributor.

LOST LOST LOST
(DVD PAL interzone) 19,90 euros
16mm, 1976, color and black & white, 178'

"These six reels of my film diaries come from the years 1949-1963. They begin with my arrival in New York in November 1949. The first and second reels deal with my life as a Young Poet and a Displaced Person in Brooklyn. It shows the Lithuanian immigrant community, their attempts to adapt themselves to a new land and their tragic efforts to regain independence for their native country. It shows my own frustrations and anxieties and the decision to leave Brooklyn and move to Manhattan. Reel three and reel four deal with my life in Manhattan on Orchard Street and East 13th St. First contacts with New York poetry and filmmaking communities. Robert Frank shooting The Sin of Jesus. LeRoy Jones, Ginsberg, Frank O'Hara reading at The Living Theatre. Documentation of the political protests of the late fifties and early sixties. First World Strike for Peace. Vigil in Times Square. Women for Peace. Air Raid protests. Reel five includes Rabbit Shit Haikus, a series of Haikus filmed in Vermont; scenes at the Film-Maker's Cooperative; filming Hallelujah the Hills; scenes of New York City. Reel six contains a trip to Flaherty Seminar, a visit to the seashore in Stony Brook; a portrait of Tiny Tim; opening of Twice a Man; excursions to the countryside seen from two different views; that of my own and that of Ken Jacobs whose footage is incorporated into this reel.

The period I am dealing with in these six reels was a period of desperation, of attempts to desperately grow roots into the new ground, to create new memories. In these six painful reels I tried to indicate how it feels to be in exile, how I felt in those years. These reels carry the title Lost Lost Lost, the title of a film myself and my brother wanted to make in 1949, and it indicates the mood we were in, in those years. It describes the mood of a Displaced Person who hasn't yet forgotten the native country but hasn't gained a new one. The sixth reel is a transitional reel where we begin to see some relaxation, where I begin to find moments of happiness. New life begins. What happens later, you'll have to see the next installment of reels ..."
- Jonas Mekas

THE BRIG
(DVD PAL interzone) 19,90 euros
16mm, 1964, black & white, 65'

"I went to see The Brig, the play, the night it closed. The Becks were told to shut down and get out. The performance, by this time, was so precisely acted that it moved with the inevitability of life itself. As I watched it I thought: Suppose this was a real brig; suppose I was a newsreel reporter; suppose I got permission from the U.S. Marine Corps to go into one of their brigs and film the goings-on: What a document one could bring to the eyes of humanity! The way The Brig was being played now, it was a real brig, as far as I was concerned. This idea took possession of my mind and my senses so thoroughly that I walked out of the play. I didn't want to know anything about what would happen next in the play; I wanted to see it with my camera. I had to film it."
-- Jonas Mekas


REMINISCENCES OF A JOURNEY TO LITHUANIA
(DVD PAL interzone) 19,90 euros
16mm, 1972, color, 82'

After a twenty-seven year absence, Adolfas and his brother Jonas returned to their birthplace in Lithuania. They had left Lithuania as young men, destined for a German labor camp. Now they came home for a visit, Adolfas with his wife, the singer Pola Chapelle.

"The film consists of three parts.
The first part is made up of footage I shot with my first Bolex, during my first years in America, mostly from 1950-1953. It shows me and my brother Adolfas, how we looked in those days; miscellaneous footage of immigrants in Brooklyn, picnicking, dancing, singing; the streets of Williamsburg.

The second part was shot in August 1971, in Lithuania. Almost all of the footage comes from Semeniskiai, the village I was born in. You see the old house, my mother (born 1887), all the brothers, goofing, celebrating our homecoming. You don't really see how Lithuania is today: you see it only through the memories of a Displaced Person back home for the first time in twenty-five years.

The third part begins with a parenthesis in Elmshorn, a suburb of Hamburg, where we spent a year in a forced labor camp during the war. After the parenthesis closes, we are in Vienna where I see some of my best friends - Peter Kubelka, Hermann Nitsch, Annette Michelson, Ken Jacobs. The film ends with the burning of the Vienna fruit market, August, 1971.

The soundtrack: For most of the film I speak of myself as a "displaced person," about my relationship to Home, Memory, Culture, Roots, Childhood. There are also a few Lithuanian songs sung by all the Mekas brothers."  - Jonas Mekas

WALDEN: DIARIES, NOTES, AND SKETCHES
(DVD PAL interzone) 19,90 euros
16mm, 1969, color, 180'

"Since 1950 I have been keeping a film diary. I have been walking around with my Bolex and reacting to the immediate reality: situations, friends, New York, seasons of the year. On some days I shot ten frames, on others ten seconds, still on others ten minutes. Or I shot nothing. When one writes diaries, it's a retrospective process: you sit down, you look back at your day, and you write it all down. To keep a film (camera) diary, is to react (with your camera) immediately, now, this instant: either you get it now, or you don't get it at all. To go back and shoot it later, it would mean restaging, be it events or feelings. To get it now, as it happens, demands the total mastery of one's tools (in this case, Bolex): it has to register the reality to which I react and also it has to register my state of feeling (and all the memories) as I react. Which also means, that I had to do all the structuring (editing) right there, during the shooting, in the camera. All footage that you'll see in the Diaries is exactly as it came out from the camera: there was no way of achieving it in the editing room without destroying its form and content.
Walden contains materials from the years 1965-69, strung together in chronological order. For the soundtrack I used some of the sounds that I collected during the same period: voices, subways, much street noise, bits of Chopin (I am a romantic), and other significant and insignificant sounds."
-- Jonas Mekas

AS I WAS MOVING AHEAD OCCASIONALLY I SAW BRIEF GLIMPSES OF BEAUTY
(DVD PAL interzone) 19,90 euros
16mm, 2000, color, 288'

"As I Was Moving Ahead... is a record of subtle feelings, emotions, daily joys of people as recorded in the voices, faces and small everyday activities of people I have met, or lived with, or observed -- something that I have been recording for many years. This, as opposed to the spectacular, entertaining, sensational, dramatic activities which dominate much of the contemporary film-making.
"Now, all this has to do with my understanding and belief of what acts really affect the positive changes in man, society, humanity. I am interested in recording the subtle, almost invisible acts, experiences, feelings, as opposed to the tough, harsh, loud, violent activities and political actions, and especially, political systems of our time. As a film-maker, I am taking a stand for the politics that have been practiced by some of the artists of my generation who believe that more essential, positive contributions to the upholding and furthering of the best in humanity, have been made, say, by John Cage or Albert Camus, and not by the great political figures of the 20th century.

The film is not conceived as a documentary film, however. It follows a tradition established by modern film poets. I am interested in intensifying the fleeting moments of reality by a personal way of filming and structuring my material. A lot of importance is being given to color, movement, rhythm and structure -- all very essential to the subject matter I am pursuing. I have spent many years developing and perfecting a way of catching the immediacy without interfering with it, without destroying it. I believe that some of the content that I am trying to record with my camera and share with others, can be caught only very indirectly though the intensity of personal involvement."
-- Jonas Mekas

SHORT FILM WORKS
(DVD PAL interzone) 19,90 euros

Cassis (1966, 4 min.)
Notes on the Circus (1966, 12 min.)
Hare Krishna (1966, 4 min.)
Report from Millbrook (1965-66, 12 min.)
Time and Fortune Vietnam Newsreel (1968, 4 min.)
Travel Songs (1967-81, 25 min.)
Quartet Number One (1991, 8 min.)
Imperfect Three-Image Films (1995, 6 min.)
Song of Avignon (1998, 5 min.)
Mozart, Wien & Elvis (2000, 3 min.)
Williamsburg (1949-2002, 15 min.)

This compilation of short film works brings together Jonas Mekas' many forms of expression throughout his career. At times funny, subversive, provocative, ironic, and fundamentally free, this panorama also shows us the sharp eye and acerbic wit that makes Jonas Mekas more than a filmmaker: a lover of life and people that he embraces with his camera, whose montages sing of eternity.

07/08/2012

BORIS LEHMAN : Histoire de mes cheveux


BORIS LEHMAN
HISTOIRE DE MES CHEVEUX
de la brièveté de la vie

STORY OF MY HAIR
on the shortness of Life

(DVD PAL interzone) 22,90 euros
V.O. Fr. & Ru.
English subtitles - Deutsch Untertite
16mm, color, 91 minutes, 2011



Production: DOVFILM et LA FONDATION BORIS LEHMAN en coproduction avec la RTBF (télévision belge) / ARTE GEIE, le Centre audiovisuel à Bruxelles (CBA) Good and Bad News, le Ministère de la Communauté française. Avec l'aide du Fresnoy, Studio des Arts contemporains.

Image : Antoine Meert — Son : Jacques Dapoz — Assistanat : Juliette Achard — Voix : Boris Lehman et Alexandre von Sivers —

Montage : Ariane Mellet — Mixage : Simon Apostolou — Texte et réalisation : Boris Lehman — Avec entre autres : Nadine Wandel, Marie Duez, Igor Pototsky, Ludmilla Samodayeva, Olgied Kuryllo.

Produit avec l'aide du Centre du cinéma et de l'audiovisuel de la Fédération Wallonie-Bruxelles.



The story of my hair can be told in two lines. My hair was long and black. It has turned white. It hasn't been cut since 1982, almost thirty years ago. Story of my Hair is a journey, both in space and in time. Anyone looking for truths, whether geographical, scientific or historical, will be disappointed. After looking at real events and real places the film very soon distances itself from them, preferring poetry and fiction. In his own fashion the auteur has combined the story of Samson and Delilah, the journey of those condemned to the death camps, the science of hair and a few thoughts about the meaning and fragility of life.

Includes a 24-page full-color booklet.


L'histoire de mes cheveux tient en deux lignes. Ils étaient noirs et longs. Ils sont devenus blancs. Je ne les ai plus cou-pés depuis 1982, il y a donc près de trente ans. Histoire de mes cheveux est un voyage, aussi bien dans l’espace que dans le temps. Ceux qui cherchent dans ce film quel- que vérité tant géographique que scientifique ou historique seront déçus. Le film prend conscience des faits et lieux réels pour aussitôt s’en distancier, par le biais de la poésie et de la fiction. L’auteur a mélangé à sa façon l’histoire de Samson et Dalila, le voyage des condam-nés à mort jusque dans les camps, la science des cheveux et quelques réflex- ions sur le sens et la fragilité de la vie.

Contient un livret de 24 pages en couleur.


20/07/2012

TONY CONRAD & MARIE LOSIER : The Flicker & DreaMinimalist


TONY CONRAD & MARIE LOSIER
THE FLICKER & DREAMINIMALIST
(DVD Pal Interzone, sous-titres français) 19,90 euros

Tony Conrad, The Flicker, 16mm, b & w, 1966, sound, 30 min
Marie Losier, Tony Conrad: DreaMinimalist, 16mm, color, 2008, sound, 26 min

 


"The Flicker sweeps away reality, transports us into another environment and acts as a sort of instrument of perceptual experimentation. The filmmaker himself considers it as a kind of science fiction film which, instead of entering us into strange worlds – which have everything to do with this world and the development of conventional narrative structures –, proposes to transport us into a totally different dimension which is abstract and structured in a manner radically different from our environment. (…) In The Flicker, Tony Conrad uses cinematographic devices to develop relationships between impossible harmonic frequencies using an ordinary stroboscope. At the root of this film are a musical, a visual and a psychological interest."
 Victor Gresard



“Marie Losier has already made portraits of Richard Foreman, Mike and George Kuchar, Guy Maddin, and now also Genesis P-Orridge and Lady Jaye. In her very first film, she slipped completely into the role of Joan of Arc, becoming one with her. Today she develops a razor sharp overlapping of the language of those portrayed with her own, which consists of uncompromising empathy and joy in the research. Marie Losier has managed to make the history of the underground alive again for her audience. Drawing on Brion Gysin’s Dream Machine, DreaMinimalist portrays an artist that always stages the boundaries of the medium – and they appear most perceptibly in low budget dreams.”

— Stefanie Schulte Strathaus



Contains a 24-page booklet by Victor Gresard.



« The Flicker balaie la réalité et nous transporte dans un autre environnement ; c'est une sorte d'instrument d'expérimentation de la perception. Le réalisateur le considère lui-même comme un genre de film de science-fiction, mais qui, au lieu de nous faire pénétrer dans des mondes méconnus ayant en fait tout à voir avec la terre et développant des structures narratives conventionnelles, nous propose de nous transporter dans une dimension totalement différente, abstraite, et structurée de manière radicalement étrangère à notre environnement. (…) Avec The Flicker, Tony Conrad use du dispositif cinématographique pour développer des relations de fréquences harmoniques impossibles avec un stroboscope ordinaire. Il y avait, à la base de ce film, un intérêt musical, un intérêt visuel, et un intérêt psychologique.» 
 Victor Gresard




« Marie Losier a déjà réalisé des portraits de Richard Foreman, Mike et George Kuchar, Guy Maddin et, aujourd’hui, Genesis P-Orridge et Lady Jaye. Dans son tout premier film, elle se glissait totalement dans le rôle de Jeanne d’Arc et fusionnait avec elle. Elle développe aujourd’hui une superposition du langage des cinéastes dont elle dresse le portrait avec son propre langage, caractérisé par une empathie sans compromis et une joie de la recherche. Marie Losier a su faire revivre l’histoire de l’underground pour ses spectateurs. S’inspirant de la Dream Machine de Brion Gysin, DreamMinimalist présente un artiste qui repousse sans cesse les frontières des mediums. Frontières qui apparaissent d’autant plus visibles dans des rêves à petit budget. » 
Stefanie Schulte Strathaus


Contient un livret de 24 pages par Victor Gresard.

11/06/2012

DVD The Films of Jay Rosenblatt Volume 2



JAY ROSENBLATT
The Films of Jay Rosenblatt Volume 2
A collection of 9 collage films (2001-2011)

(DVD NTSC) 30,00 euros

Produced and Directed by Jay Rosenblatt
Total Running Time: 81 Minutes

“An exquisite artist who makes beautifully crafted miniatures.”
— Atom Egoyan
"A transcendent channel-surfing passion play... Rosenblatt turns celluloïd water into wine."
— Time Out, New York
"Rosenblatt has the humanity of a Lubitsch... combined with the analytical sensibility of a Bergman. His films are not merely good. Rosenblatt is seriously gifted, a significant artist."
— San Francisco Chronicle

Jay Rosenblatt, who has been making short films since the early 1980s, makes films that deal with a variety of themes — from birth and childhood to religious faith, tyranny and death. Frequently screened on public television and film festivals, Rosenblatt ’s films are consistently recognized for their unique style and his commitment to taking risks.

"I had been making traditional narrative films using actors and found it stressful. (...) I happened to be working on a project -- it was a film sequence for a theatre piece -- that required some archival footage. The need to use existing footage led me to the optical printer, which is a machine that allows a filmmaker to manipulate existing footage in different, new ways. This was a real discovery for me and I began moving more and more toward the use of found footage to create my films.

(...) I wasn't trying to mask the found-footage aspect, to deliver a throughline but with the pieces in a kind of juxtaposition.
(excerpts from the SAN FRANCISCO EXAMINER-OCTOBER 29-30, 2005 & the MIAMI NEW TIMES - July 26, 2001)


Depuis les années 80, Jay Rosenblatt, à travers la pratique du found footage, aborde dans ses courts métrages une grande variété de thèmes (la naissance, l'enfance, la foi religieuse, la tyrannie, la mort).
Docteur en Psychologie, il a exercé pendant de nombreuses années le métier de thérapeuthe.
Jay Rosenblatt enseigne le cinéma à san Francisco.

"J'ai fait des films narratifs "traditionnels" avec des acteurs et j'ai trouvé ça fatigant.
(...) J'ai eu à travailler sur un projet - une séquence filmique pour une pièce de théatre - qui nécessitait de travailler avec des films d'archive. Le besoin d'utiliser des films déjà existants m'a mené à la tireuse optique qui permet de manipuler les films d'une façon nouvelle, différente. Ça a été une découverte pour moi et j'ai commencé m'avancer de plus en plus dans l'usage du found footage.
(...) Je n'essaie pas de masquer l'aspect found footage (le disparité des séquences, NDT), mais par leur juxtapositions d'obtenir une ligne directrice."
Jay Rosenblatt
(extraits d'une interview du MIAMI NEW TIMES - July 26, 2001)


Afraid So (2003) 3 minutes
A film about fear and anxiety. 

Official Selection, Toronto International Film Festival 



Phantom Limb (2005) 

28 minutes

A poetic documentary about grief and loss. 

Distinguished Documentary Award Nomination - International 
Documentary Association

Winner of 13 awards 



I Just Wanted To Be Somebody (2006) 10 minutes

Part document, part poem about Anita Bryant and her anti- gay 
campaign.

Official Selection, Sundance Film Festival 



The Darkness of Day (2009) 
26 minutes
A found footage collage about suicide.

Best Documentary - Tampere Film Festival, Finland

Winner of 9 awards



Prayer (2002) 3 minutes

Faith and fear. Duck and cover. One response to 9/11.

Official Selection, Toronto International Film Festival 



The D Train (2011) 5 minutes

An old man reflects on his entire life. How quickly it all goes by.

Official Selection, SXSW 



EXTRA FILMS

Nine Lives: The Eternal Moment of Now

Worm

Way To Your Heart