Movie news on your iPhone today!
Advertisement
Coverage of what is truly interesting in the film world

TOP STORY:

Chick Strand Dies

Karina Longworth
By Karina Longworth posted 4 months ago
  • del.icio.us
  • Technorati
  • Reddit
  • Ma.gnolia
  • YahooMyWeb
  • Facebook
  • StumbleUpon

Via the Flaherty Seminar’s Twitter comes the news that West Coast nonfiction filmmaking legend Chick Strand passed away over the weekend at the age of 78. A force behind the formation of art/underground film distributor Canyon Cinema and founding editor of the influential Canyon Cinemanews journal, as a filmmaker Strand (real name: moved fluidly from found footage collages (like Loose Ends, which you can watch on Vimeo) to impressionistic ethnographic documents shot in various parts of Mexico to not-quite-feminist portraits of female experience.

An example of the latter, Strand’s 1979 feature Soft Fiction was a huge early eye opener for me when I first saw it in art school ten years ago. A sort of narrative built out of five women’s first-person stories about their sex lives shot in Strand’s inimitably intimate style, it’s the kind of film that reveals the arbitrariness of the lines that we draw between genres.

There was an excellent story about Strand in the LA Weekly a couple of years ago which offers a sense of her personality; I’ve excerpted a section about her teaching style after the jump.

…Read more

Bruce Conner Dies at 75

Karina Longworth
By Karina Longworth posted 1 year ago
  • del.icio.us
  • Technorati
  • Reddit
  • Ma.gnolia
  • YahooMyWeb
  • Facebook
  • StumbleUpon

Artist and experimental filmmaker Bruce Conner has died at the age of 75. He’s maybe best known for his first film, the 1958 assemblage A Movie; his most recent film, Easter Morning, a pure cinema short shot in the 60s and recently released to celebrate Conner’s 50th anniversary, screened in competition last month at CineVegas. Ray Pride has much, much more at Movie City Indie. I’ve embedded one of Conner’s more surprising works, a short set to Devo’s “Mongoloid,” above.

Sonic Youth by Claire Denis. Clip of the Day.

Karina Longworth
By Karina Longworth posted 1 year ago
  • del.icio.us
  • Technorati
  • Reddit
  • Ma.gnolia
  • YahooMyWeb
  • Facebook
  • StumbleUpon

Above: a video for Sonic Youth’s “Jams Run Free”, from their Rather Ripped album, shot by French cinema bad girl Claire Denis. Daniel Stuyck writes about this, and the four other videos Denis has made for the band, in the new issue of Film Comment:

The antecedent to these pieces is not so much Denis’s previous films as Bruce Conner’s Cosmic Ray. Conner’s 1961 short, an essential demonstration of the maxim that pop songs are teenage symphonies to God, reads like a list of chemical ingredients for any of these videos: rock and roll; erotic tension (as P. Adams Sitney is at pains to point out, Cosmic Ray predominantly features the “irreverent dance of a naked woman, which he [Conner] photographed himself”); bland images of daily life and consumer culture (Mickey Mouse, hitchhiking Indians, neon signs, the H-bomb) transformed into something surreal. In other words, a strange alchemy—an area where science and religion meet, not unlike drugs. And that ultimate drug state—ecstasy—is what Conner and Denis are ultimately fixed on: Denis’s unfocused whip pans as Sonic Youth slams into its chorus create the same sensation as Conner’s image of skulls birthing from crotches in an instant between two shots, a revelation of new meanings created by a strange combination of elements.

[Via Vinyl is Heavy]