Experimental

  • Vladimir Kobrin – 1991 TYT AKA 1991 Here (1991)

    1991-2000ArthouseExperimentalUSSRVladimir Kobrin

    dEvolution of Homo Sovieticus.

    At the center of the film is a man-monkey inhabiting various anthropogenic spaces, such as a zoo, city streets and a farmyard. But the attributes inherent in human life (work, marriage, military service, leisure) do not release him from an animal form.
    During filming in the Crimea (not far from Gorbachev’s villa), the notorious August coup occurred in Moscow and President Gorbachev was arrested and isolated on his villa. The immediate proximity to the scene could not be without impact on the film – Kobrin processed it in his own grotesque form.Read More »

  • Vladimir Kobrin – Posledniy son Anatoliya Vasilievicha AKA The Last Dream of Anatoly Vasilievich (1990)

    1981-1990ArthouseExperimentalUSSRVladimir Kobrin

    The film in a metaphorical form demonstrates a model of self-devouring in a closed spiritual system, it explores intermediate state between a human and a non-human: a subhuman deprived of a divine spark.
    Quote:
    The hero of the film is a collective image of a criminal consciousness in which we all exist. Since childhood, we live one way or another in a criminal environment.
    But this criminal consciousness, criminal law, or rather, criminal lawlessness, criminal thinking, criminal morality, criminal language, hierarchy of values, in fact, also criminal – all that is our film. The film is so sad because it is a film about Russia…Read More »

  • Vladimir Kobrin – Tretya Realnost 2 AKA Third Reality II (1996)

    1991-2000ArthouseExperimentalRussiaVladimir Kobrin

    Cinematography in allegory. Film is dedicated to the memory of Svyatoslav Valov, the director of documentary films and Kobrin’s colleague.

    Quote:
    In his films, Kobrin elaborates a special, metaphoric style that is “a fully achieved work of imaginative filmmaking, in which special effects, pixilation, and reverse or speed-up motion abound, a philosophical avant-garde film, entirely unexpected in terms of its country of origin”.Read More »

  • Vladimir Kobrin – Tretya Realnost 1 AKA Third Reality I (1995)

    1991-2000ArthouseExperimentalRussiaVladimir Kobrin

    Film is dedicated to the ontological problems of adaptation of the human spirit in the mental world.
    Quote:
    In his films, Kobrin elaborates a special, metaphoric style that is “a fully achieved work of imaginative filmmaking, in which special effects, pixilation, and reverse or speed-up motion abound, a philosophical avant-garde film, entirely unexpected in terms of its country of origin”.Read More »

  • Laida Lertxundi – Laida Lertxundi complete filmography (2004-2018)

    ExperimentalLaida LertxundiShort FilmSpain

    Laida Lertxundi is a Spanish filmmaker

    Quote:
    “I was really into music and photography and art in general growing up. Not really so much into film. I wasn’t drawn to narrative film, and I hadn’t seen any other kind growing up in the Basque Country.”- Laida LertxundiRead More »

  • Wim T. Schippers – Volk en Vaderliefde (1976)

    1971-1980ExperimentalNetherlandsTVWim T. Schippers

    IMDB:
    Otanes is certain that Smerdis, King of Persia is an impostor. He gathers together a group of people to stage a coup, only to face the question of which one of them will be worthy to take the thrown.Read More »

  • Steven Arnold – Luminous Procuress (1972)

    1971-1980CultExperimentalSteven ArnoldUSA

    Dalí considered Luminous Procuress ‘a work of genius’. Featuring members of legendary San Francisco performance troupe The Cockettes, the film was directed by the artist and filmmaker Steven Arnold, a muse and model of Dalí’s. Dalí always referred to Arnold as his ‘prince’, and allegedly co-produced (or at least partly funded) the film, for which he held an elaborate screening at the St. Regis Hotel in New York. Andy Warhol and numerous luminaries of New York society attended the spectacular event, and Dalí projected the film upside down, backwards and sideways. The Village Voice called the film ‘a tour de force of the imagination – a journey through peekboxes of naked tableaux, theatres of mechanical dreams, feasts of monsters and piles of humanity.’Read More »

  • Mani Kaul – Satah Se Uthata Aadmi aka Arising From The Surface (1980)

    Arthouse1971-1980ExperimentalIndiaMani Kaul

    Quote:
    Kaul’s film addresses the writings of Gajanan Madhav Muktibodh (1917-79), one of the main representatives of the Nai Kavita (New Poetry) movement in Hindi. Muktibodh also wrote several short stories, one of which provides the film with its title, and critical essays. The film integrates episodes from Muktibodh’s writings with material from other source, including a reinvented neo-realism derived from Muktibodh’s literary settings. The narrative is constructed around 3 characters. Ramesh (Gopi) iis one who speaks and enacts Muktibodh’s writings, functioning as the first-person voice of the text; his two friends, , Madhav (Jha) and Keshav (Raina), are Ramesh’s antagonists and interlocuters esp. in the debates about modernity. Kaul gradually minimizes the fictional settings until, in the remarkably shot sequences of the factory, the audience is directly confronted with the written text itself.Read More »

  • Richard Kerr – Cruel Rhythm (1991)

    1991-2000CanadaExperimentalRichard KerrShort Film

    Shot during the opening stages of the First Gulf War, Kerr’s “Cruel Rhythm” revisits the American desert for a cinematic tone poem in the vein of ‘The Last Days of Contrition’ A canopy of sound bites of media coverage on the build-up toward the war is juxtaposed with the alienness of windmills in the desert, and a startling sequence of drifting faces of a crowd coming towards the camera in slow motion. A thought-provoking piece on media’s construction of societal paranoia “Cruel Rhythm” is an attempt to make a public, shared feeling intimate, or conversely, to make a subjective feeling of floating anxiety and dread into a shared representation.” Unsettlingly, its ambiance is as poignant today as ever.Read More »

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