Lewis Klahr – Cinema of the World https://worldscinema.torrentbay.st Wed, 15 Oct 2025 09:28:08 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=7.0 https://worldscinema.torrentbay.st/wp-content/uploads/2018/09/cropped-Vintage-Movie-Camera-Icon-32x32.png Lewis Klahr – Cinema of the World https://worldscinema.torrentbay.st 32 32 Lewis Klahr – Tales of the Forgotten Future, Part 1-4 (1988) https://worldscinema.torrentbay.st/2024/10/lewis-klahr-tales-of-the-forgotten-future-part-1-4-1988/ https://worldscinema.torrentbay.st/2024/10/lewis-klahr-tales-of-the-forgotten-future-part-1-4-1988/#comments Wed, 23 Oct 2024 00:06:00 +0000 https://worldscinema.torrentbay.st/?p=233456 Quote: An epic cycle created on the tiny, domestic medium of Super-8, the film combines the intimacy of its chosen gauge with the evocative sweep of Freudian dreamwork. It’s a moving collage clipped together out of photos and illustrations from the Atomic Age, reconfigured into a private visual language that speaks of both Klahr’s own …

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An epic cycle created on the tiny, domestic medium of Super-8, the film combines the intimacy of its chosen gauge with the evocative sweep of Freudian dreamwork. It’s a moving collage clipped together out of photos and illustrations from the Atomic Age, reconfigured into a private visual language that speaks of both Klahr’s own childhood and a greater strangeness: how images from another era stand as uncanny evidence for a very different stage of development in the American psyche.

Though located in an avant-garde practice of cut-out appropriation that stretches from Harry Smith, Stan VanDerBeek and Lawrence Jordan to later artists like Martha Colburn and Jonathan Schwartz, Klahr’s work creates a system of representation all its own, quivering between the present and the past, reshuffling that potent deck of icons bequeathed to us by our former selves.

“In the age of industrial sound and light, Lewis Klahr makes special-effects movies that are almost insanely artisanal–one man, labor-intensive cut-and-paste animations that are at once crude and poetic, blunt and enigmatic, as funny as they are inventive.

Klahr is even more involved in the reworking of received images than Hollywood is. For the past fifteen years, the 36-year-old New York-based filmmaker has been collaging material foraged mainly from old magazines into brief, evocative, eccentric movies. What sets him apart from underground predecessors such as Stan Vanderbeek and Harry Smith…is his extreme pragmatism. Not only does Klahr work in Super-8 without an animation stand but when it suits his purposes, he employs the three-dimensional world–using, for example, a dollop of grape jelly for blood.

For Klahr, the Super-8 format has strong associations with home movies and childhood. Still, to create Her Fragrant Emulsion (1987), a homage to the ’60s movie star Mimsy Farmer, Klahr used a technique called ‘strip collage,’ in which bits of cut-up film are glued or taped to clear leader. Some of his other films employ a new form of the photo-comics the Italians call fumetti (which Federico Fellini affectionately parodied in The White Sheik). In addition to pillaging back issues of Life, Klahr photographs actors and integrates their images into his pulpish quasi-narratives amid splashes of color and hieroglyphic thought balloons. (His is a world where sounds are often seen rather than heard.)

There’s an obsessional quality to all animation, but Klahr compounds it with a collector’s fetishism. Diving into a sea of musty magazines, he dredges up all manner of forgotten icons–fashion drawings, watercolor washes of idealized housing tracts–and imbues them with a secret life. (His child’s-eye view seems to preclude simple nostalgia.) Klahr’s 1988 break-through, In The Month of Crickets, is a masterpiece of populuxe surrealism that, set in a mysterious hotel-cum-department store, manages to coax a remarkable degree of eroticism out of a few suggestive maneuvers and the escalating soundtrack buzz that gives the movie its title.


Lewis.Klahr.Tales.Of.The.Forgotten.Future.One.1988-POENiR.avi

General
Container: AVI
Runtime: 34mn 26s
Size: 543 MiB
Video
Codec: XviD
Resolution: 640x480
Aspect ratio: 4:3
Frame rate: 23.976 fps
Bit rate: 2 000 Kbps
BPP: 0.272
Audio
#1: 2.0ch MP3 @ 192 Kbps

https://nitro.download/view/E67CC3F7B0A3283/Lewis.Klahr.Tales.Of.The.Forgotten.Future.One.1988-POENiR.avi https://nitro.download/view/98BE5E1BE2E73FD/Lewis.Klahr.Tales.Of.The.Forgotten.Future.Two.1989.1990-POENiR.avi https://nitro.download/view/2A340CA3C40C534/Tales_of_the_Forgotten_Future_Part_3_(Klahr,_1989).avi https://nitro.download/view/EFAF478020B0D38/Tales_of_the_Forgotten_Future_Part_4_(Klahr,_1990).avi

Language(s):No dialogues
Subtitles:not needed

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Lewis Klahr – Sixty Six (2015) https://worldscinema.torrentbay.st/2020/09/lewis-klahr-sixty-six-2015/ https://worldscinema.torrentbay.st/2020/09/lewis-klahr-sixty-six-2015/#comments Tue, 22 Sep 2020 07:30:00 +0000 https://worldscinema.torrentbay.st/?p=133086 Quote:Sixty Six began as a three minute, 16mm film I created in 2002– a pop poetic filled with the lush palette of Daylight Noir and primary color abstraction. For some undefined reason, I never took this little conjuring to the printing stage but would instead occasionally screen it publicly as tape-spliced workprint. In June of …

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Sixty Six began as a three minute, 16mm film I created in 2002– a pop poetic filled with the lush palette of Daylight Noir and primary color abstraction. For some undefined reason, I never took this little conjuring to the printing stage but would instead occasionally screen it publicly as tape-spliced workprint. In June of 2012, I felt compelled to finally complete this short. I decided to re-create it, shot for shot, in digital video, which in the intervening decade had replaced 16mm as my format of choice. But a surprising thing happened as I transposed some of the original shots into video, the piece kept expanding as new images and materials spontaneously folded in.

Sixty Six kept growing throughout 2013 until it was clear to me that I was creating a 12 episode series. My 2009 film Lethe, became the concluding and climactic film of the series, as it had pioneered the mythopoetic splice of 1960’s imagery with Greek Mythology that came to define Sixty Six as a whole. Unlike my previous work in series, I was thinking of many of the individual films more as chapters than standalones. Also many had shorter durations (2-5 minutes) than I usually worked in. As the overall structure defined itself, so did the tonal range, which includes a diverse variety of approaches. It’s a pop associational mindscape where texture and eternal time are the favored intoxicants as vividly colored 60’s comic book figures thread their way through iconic photographic settings that are often B&W and often of mid twentieth century Los Angeles. — Lewis Klahr

1.58GB | 1h 29m | 1280×720 | mkv

https://nitro.download/view/92D24EBE45BDC26/Sixty_Six_(2015).mkv

Language(s):English
Subtitles:None

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