Date: 2 November 2003 | Season: London Film Festival 2003 | Tags: London Film Festival
UNKNOWN PARTS OF THE WORLD
Sunday 2 November 2003, at 9pm
London National Film Theatre NFT3
Thomas Comerford, Figures in the Landscape, USA, 2002, 11 min
Grainy, undefined images shot with a pinhole camera accompany recitations of texts tracing the history of suburban housing from the rudimentary dwellings of Native Americans and the early settlers. An inquiry into human interaction with the landscape and notions of land development.
David Gatten, Secret History of the Dividing Line, USA, 2002, 20 min
Text-based, hand-processed treatment of Colonel William Byrd II’s 1728 expedition to settle disputes on the boundary between two American states, as chronicled in his ‘Histories of the Dividing Line Betwixt Virginia and North Carolina’.
Ben Russell, Terra Incognita, USA, 2002, 10 min
‘A lenseless film, whose cloudy images produce a memory of history. Ancient and modern explorer’s texts on Easter Island are garbled together by a computer narrator, resulting in a forever repeating narrative of discovery, colonialism, loss and departure.’
Phil Solomon, Psalm III: Night of the Meek, USA, 2002, 23 min
Obscure, ghostly faces emerge from a degraded, murky image, not through animation, but chemical and optical treatments of re-photographed and original material. A transcendental nightmare vision based on the legend of the golem. ‘A Kindertotenlieder in black and silver, on a night of gods and monsters.’
Naoyuki Tsuji, A Feather Stare at the Dark, Japan, 2003, 17 min
Pencil animation telling the mystical pre-history of the world through surreal, transformational drawings which depict the struggle between good and evil at the origins of evolution.
PROGRAMME NOTES
UNKNOWN PARTS OF THE WORLD
Sunday 2 November 2003, at 9pm
London National Film Theatre NFT3
FIGURES IN THE LANDSCAPE
Thomas Comerford, USA, 2002, 16mm, colour, sound, 11 min
In making films with a pinhole camera, returning to a technology that predates the invention of cinema, Thomas Comerford uses consciously archaic means to comment on cinema’s technology and on technological progress in general. The fragile, fuzzy images that result from the replacement of the camera lens by a tiny hole have a wispy, almost virtual quality that refers back to the camera obscura of the Renaissance. Figures in the Landscape, set in Schaumburg, one of the Chicago area’s more sprawling suburbs, includes town maps and plans as well as images of people standing amid empty, almost soul-less spaces. Comerford uses found texts to describe the nature of suburban development and the way high-tech homes have replaced the more ‘primitive’ dwellings of Indians and early European pioneers, thus comparing his pinhole technique with early residents’ primitive homes on the one hand while the slicker and higher-tech cinema which he eschews is implicitly paralleled to the new homes of Schaumburg on the other. Comerford’s ironic point about ‘progress’ is reinforced when we hear about the Indians’ use of trees as trail markers while seeing a giant pole, and hear about early pioneer homes while seeing a particularly vulgar oversized modern dwelling. —Fred Camper
SECRET HISTORY OF THE DIVIDING LINE
David Gatten, USA, 2002, 16mm, b/w, silent, 20 min
When using tape to make a splice the cut pieces of film are placed end to end and the tape itself covers the gap: it is a band-aid and a bridge. But as the splice ages a line becomes visible; eventually the adhesive dries and the connection dissolves. When making a cement splice, there is more violence involved. The films are not placed end to end but instead are crushed into one another. Frames are lost, emulsions are scraped. But the well made splice is strong: in fact, it is permanent. Unlike tape, there is no going back. And it leaves a mark – a line – covering a third of one of the frames. A splice marks difference and defines duration. To suppress that mark is to pretend that we will live forever. Instead, take your splicer and knock the blade out of alignment. Forego the B-roll in favour of a single strand of faith. Hold your breath and count the hours since you were last together. Blow softly on a wet face and watch the smile form. Float your hand across the surface and find all the words you need. Unfold the splicer and separate your image from your dream; you will feel bound, as if tied down until you are fully awake. Only then will you know for sure: this may not be final but it is definite. The landscape you see can change only when you pass through it. Regard your new object: a union: silent, tiny and bright. Paired texts as duelling histories; a journey imagined and remembered; 57 mileage markers produce an equal number of prospects. The latest in a series of films about the division of landscapes, objects, people, ideas and the Byrd family of Virginia during the early 18th century. —David Gatten
TERRA INCOGNITA
Ben Russell, USA, 2002, 16mm, colour, sound, 10 min
In the in-between of history and memory lies the Unknown Part of the World. I have seen it, however briefly – projected out in front of my eyes like some old-timey silent film. I knew the place immediately, what with its rusted factories , fallen statues , floating figurines, but the image was lost as soon as the reel ran out. Played it back. Mapped out the sounds. Grabbed a camera, a makeshift recording device, played it back. And again. Each time I cobbled together a newer world, cut and spliced out of words and images from this one; but they seem to accumulate, these geographies – each one charted proposes an entirely different set of islands , continents , planets moving about just beyond the horizon. Therein lies the joy and terror; and throughout all of it, this camera here is but a minor tool in sifting through this shifting terrain. —Ben Russell
PSALM III: NIGHT OF THE MEEK
Phil Solomon, USA, 2002, 16mm, b/w, sound, 23 min
It is Berlin, November 9, 1938, and, as the night air is shattered throughout the city, the Rabbi of Prague is summoned from a dark slumber, called upon once again to invoke the magic letters from the Great Biij that will bring his creatures made from earth back to life, in the hour of need. A Kindertotenlieder in black and silver, on a night of gods and monsters …
In Germany, Before the War:
I’m looking at the river,
but I’m thinking of the sea,
thinking of the sea,
thinking of the sea …
I’m looking at the river,
but I’m thinking of the sea,
thinking of the sea,
thinking of the sea … —Phil Solomon
A FEATHER STARE AT THE DARK
Naoyuki Tsuji, Japan, 2003, 16mm, b/w, sound, 17 min
This is the tale in the pre-world before bearing our earth. There is the world in chaos with the existence of the force of the good and evil that has interfered with each other. And it is going to build the chance of birth in the New World. The pre-world is carrying out a growth expansion at the same time, going to decay. However, the force of the decay sets up birth in the coming world. —Naoyuki Tsuji
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