1971-1980

  • Stan Brakhage – Sincerity III (1978)

    1971-1980ExperimentalStan BrakhageUSA

    In the autobiographical traditional of earlier SINCERITIES, this film takes up the light-threads of our living 14 years ago when the Brakhage family found Home and ‘settled’, like they say, into some sense of permanence. This quality of living in one place tends to destroy most senses of chronology; thus, along lines-of-thought of growing and shifting physicality, events CAN seem to be occurring simultaneously (a thought-process ‘kin to that of THE DOMAIN OF THE MOMENT), and the memory of such a time IS prompted and sustained by details of living usually overlooked or taken-for-granted (such as Proust’s cookie which prompted ‘The Remembrance of Things Past’). Michael McClure’s ‘Fleas’ and Andrew Noren’s THE EXQUISITE CORPSE III were additional sources of inspiration for the making of this work.Read More »

  • Stan Brakhage – Sincerity II (1975)

    1971-1980ExperimentalStan BrakhageUSA

    Made with assistance from the National Endowment for the Arts. This continuation of my autobiography is composed of film photographed by many people: Bruce Baillie, Jane Brakhage, Larry Jordan, and Stan Phillips, among others. Most of the footage is drawn from some 2,000 feet of ‘home movies,’ ‘out takes,’ and the like, salvaged from my photography over the years. It is of the Brakhage family’s coming into being. It is composed in the light of those electrical traces we call ‘memory’; and it is as true to that ‘thought process’ as I was enabled to make it.Read More »

  • Stan Brakhage – Sincerity I (1973)

    1971-1980ExperimentalShort FilmStan BrakhageUSA

    This, the first completed reel of work-in-progress, draws on autobiographical energies and images which reflect the first 20 years of my living. I have three definitions of the word Sincerity to sustain my working along these lines of thought with this autobiographical material: (1) Ezra Pound’s marvelous mistranslation of a Chinese ideogram – Sincerity… the sun’s lance coming to rest on the precise spot verbally…(of which I would change, for my purposes, the last word to visually), (2) Robert Creeley’s trace-of-the-word for me on the back of a Buffalo restaurant menu Sym-keros… same-growth (Ceres) CREATE… of the same growth, and (3) Hollis Frampton’s track-of-it to ‘the greek’, viz – ‘a glazed pot (i. e. one which will hold water).’ This film might best be seen, then, as a graph of light equivalent to autobiographical thought process.Read More »

  • Absis – Cygne II (1976)

    1971-1980AbsisExperimentalFrance

    Constructed like an animated painting in a single fixed shot where light, voice, music and movements interfere.Read More »

  • Absis – Cygne I (1976) 

    1971-1980AbsisExperimentalFrance

    Stages a double persona on a music of Monteverdi (Ariadne’s lamento interpreted by Janet Baker).

    A Reading of Absis’ Text by Marguerite DurasRead More »

  • Lasse Hallström – Jag är med barn AKA Father To Be (1979)

    1971-1980ComedyLasse HallströmSweden

    Bosse works at an advertising agency while working on the novel of the century. At a burger restaurant he meets Lena, and before he knows it, she is pregnant. Bosse starts thinking that his life is all over, he won’t get any more career opportunities, and never again will he have time for late night parties.Read More »

  • Ted Post – Dr. Cook’s Garden (1971)

    1971-1980MysteryTed PostTVUSA

    An uncharacteristic Bing Crosby plays Dr. Cook, a small town physician with a little something to hide. Outwardly gentle and compassionate, Cook is less politely inclined to those in his Vermont community whom he regards as disposable. When a young man (Frank Converse) whom Cook has raised as a son returns to the community, he begins to suspect that his father-figure is keeping secrets. The young man learns that the good Doctor has been murdering those patients whom he regards as useless, and then burying the victims in his meticulously kept garden. Made for TV, Dr. Cook’s Garden was adapted from a Broadway play by Ira Levin, in which Burl Ives starred in the title role. – All Movie GuideRead More »

  • Walter Boos – Das Wirtshaus der sündigen Töchter (1978)

    1971-1980ComedyEroticaGermanyWalter Boos

    Lilli and Christl, blonde twins, live in the Upper Bavarian countryside. While Lilli is the prettier of the two and attracts a lot of male attention, Christl is a real country girl.Read More »

  • Dharmasiri Bandaranayake – Hansa Vilak AKA Swan Lake (1980)

    1971-1980ArthouseDharmasiri BandaranayakeDrama

    Quote:
    A married man and woman find their lives disrupted after their affair is exposed by the police. Leaving their respective families, the two decide to live together.

    Hansa Vilak was ahead of its time and a movie like none other before in Sri Lanka Cinema. Sometimes quite experimental, it is most overall a movie of high sensibility. It shows like no other movie in Cinema History the sentiment of guilt and the consequences of an adultery affair.Read More »

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