Film Society BuyTickets membership Sponsorship about search  
  Walter Reade Theater
  Film Comment
  New York Film Fetival
  New Director New Films
  Special Events
   

What's Showing


Film Comment Selects
Young Friends of Film
Independents Night
Open-Captioned

Calendar
Upcoming Programs
Past Programs
Furman Gallery
Theater Rental
Theater Information
Press Office
Sign up for filmlinc email bulletin


The Ninth Annual Views from the Avant-Garde

A Special Presentation of the 43rd New York Film Festival
Saturday and Sunday, October 1 & 2


Curated by Mark McElhatten and Gavin Smith.

Click on thumbnails below to enlarge photos.




Program 4: THE TERRESTRIAL OBSERVATORY

And I Make Short Films
S.N.S. Sastry (India, 1968, 16m)




Made in Chinatown

Jim Jennings (U.S., 2005, 12m)
“This film was shot in winter and early spring ’05. Most was edited out. What remains is a condensation of an emotion related to being on the outside looking in.”—J.J.




Louis Aimé Augustin Le Prince – Leeds Bridge

Ken Jacobs (U.S., 2005, 10m) (photo above - click to enlarge)
“Louis-Aimé-Augustin Le Prince was the first person to create, in 1885, a single recording apparatus that photographed images in quick succession on George Eastman’s new paper roll film. Le Prince applied for patents but the fix was in, leaving Edison and the Lumière Brothers to profit from his invention. He vanished under mysterious circumstances in 1890. Well, that’s business, but I’m sure personal malice was not involved. In 1888 he made a number of short recordings. Here we see Leeds Bridge on a day like any other, its foot and carriage traffic as portentous or as casual as the crisscrossings of the stars. Looped, we Tom Tom some of its infinity of captured gesture.—Ken Jacobs




Kosmos

Thorsten Fleisch (Germany, 2005, 5m) (photo above - click to enlarge)
“The mystery of the crystals under closer examination.  What is it that makes them possess magic powers as claimed by mystics thorough the ages? By growing crystals directly on film, their mystical qualities shine straight to the screen. Unfiltered, only aided by light which gracefully breaks its rays into rich visual textures.”—Thorsten Fleisch




Here

Fred Worden (U.S., 2005, 11m) (photo above - click to enlarge)
Here is a place, an optical location brought into being through conjuring to accommodate a clandestine rendezvous between Sir Laurence Olivier and Georges Méliès. Méliès appears to get the upper hand, confirming that magic will always trump mere performance. Early cinema audiences, we are told, were mesmerized by the cinematic apparitions and impossible cavortings realized by the sly Méliès. Those first paying customers had, apparently, no need for plots, movie stars, or sharp ideas. Direct conjuring was more than enough. Could that work HERE?—Fred Worden




The Relentless Fury of the Pounding Waves

Apichatpong Weerasethakul (Thailand, 1995, 23m)
One of the most significant films from the early period of experimental work by the maker of Tropical Malady, Blissfully Yours and Mysterious Object at Noon.

“The documentary leisurely examines the shifting focus of image and sound. It was a hot day in a small town where a mystic radio filled the air. Lives were trapped in the time of the radio play, of the photograph, and of the film. The narrative form is broken, sometimes improvised, and sometimes structured. The radio wave is transmitted from one place to many others, delivering a melodramatic play, The Sea Goddess. The film juxtaposes the time and the memory worlds. The transportation (the car, the ship, the passing plane) in this film is the vehicle that runs through both worlds.”—Apichatpong Weerasethakul

“The radio sound and the discussions between the people who listen to the radio is a mixture of fiction and reality and sometimes it is not possible to say if the spoken words belong to the real or the fictional world. It seems that the subtitles can be linked to both text levels. And repeatedly, the machine, the source of the sound, is shown. The film is not about the contrast between every day life and illusion, but rather Apichatpong’s idea is to delete the difference between the hierarchies that exist between the (re)production of a film and the film itself. Like The Relentless Fury of the Pounding Waves ends with takes in a film studio, where a film shoot is prepared in front of wallpaper showing exotic landscapes. In this way the production of the film images is disclosed as a cut between illusion, or fiction, and fact. At the same time it is an act of creating production levels. This method is an integral part of and preeminent in all the films by Apichatpong Weerasethakul. His film productions are always discourses about the possibilities of filmmaking, through the use of different narrative perspectives and image production strategies...”—Ulrike Kremeire, “Leveled Narratives”


The Relentless Fury of the Pounding Waves creates a rich confusion and a moving boundary between documentary and construct. Radio waves pervade the scene like unseen rain, while the contents of the mythological soap opera are possibly audible within the world of these images, sometimes providing a glancing description of what appears before our eyes. The transmitted broadcast momentarily substitutes as dialogue between filmed characters or as kind of allegorical daydream amidst languor and dramatic tensions, the tides of everyday life.—Mark McElhatten.

September Song
Luther Price (U.S., 2005, 4m)
“september song...a cut and paste s.o.s./...fragments of celluloid ....a ribbon faded ..muted...muting...color and sound...transparant renderings and tape travel intermittent through time and space...projecting light and image....rest on the physical.... temporary anxious fragile vignette.”—Luther Price




Kolkata

Mark LaPore (U.S./India 2005, 35m) (photo above - click to enlarge)
"A portrait of North Kolkata (Calcutta), this film searches the streets for the ebb and flow of humanity and reflects the changing landscape of a city at once medieval and modern." M.L.

Total running time: 116m


Program 1: STRAUB-HUILLET’S A TRIP TO THE LOUVRE
Program 2: THE DAILY PLANET (Unearthed)
Program 3: DAVID GATTEN’S SECRET HISTORY OF THE DIVIDING LINE: A TRUE ACCOUNT IN NINE PARTS
Program 4: THE TERRESTRIAL OBSERVATORY
Program 5: BLUE MOVIE with special guest VIVA
Program 6: ALLEN ROSS’S GRANDFATHER TRILOGY
Program 7: LARRY GOTTHEIM
Program 8: MANUAL OVERRIDE (“Slip Inside this House”)
Program 9: SHADOWHUNGER
Program 10: HEINZ EMIGHOLZ
Buy Tickets
Sat Oct 1: 5:30 PM