Sección dedicada al cine experimental. Largometrajes, cortos, series y material raro, prácticamente desconocido o de interés muy minoritario.
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Fitzcarraldo
- Mensajes: 662
- Registrado: Sab 10 Ene, 2004 01:00
- Ubicación: on a blooming cherry tree
Mensaje
por Fitzcarraldo » Dom 21 Ago, 2005 02:32
SYGM@ in FH escribió:Movies have so much in common with dreams that one of Hollywood's most enduring nicknames has been "the dream factory." Of course, there's a downside to every dream, and something closer to the nightmare evolved alongside the safe thrills and romantic fantasies of cinema from the beginning. While some audiences were mesmerized by the novelty of early filmmaking, others bolted at the sight of a giant cinematic locomotive steaming fearlessly toward them. And this trend never really let up. In the '70s, stoic theater managers had to spread kitty litter in the aisles at screenings of The Exorcist to catch patrons' vomit as they stormed out of the theater. Even supposedly seasoned audiences can still be frightened by the power of 24 frames per second: witness the queer stampede from Todd Verow's grim Frisk at the Lesbian and Gay Film Festival a few years ago, or war vets' tales of grisly flashbacks at screenings of Saving Private Ryan.
Filmmaker Martin Arnold, born in Vienna in 1959, takes this trend in bizarre new directions in a series of short black-and-white experimental films that restore much of the novelty, terror, and surprisingly, humor, of early cinema. Using elaborate optical and aural manipulations, he turns scenes from old Hollywood movies starring the likes of Judy Garland and Gregory Peck into hilariously weird, black-comic nightmares. The footage he quotes is in itself unremarkable — a man walking into a room where a woman is reading, a middle-class meal, a romantic interlude between Judy Garland and Mickey Rooney — but he does ultra-precise (frame-by-frame) edits that endlessly repeat the characters' tiniest movements, so they're constantly, frustratingly on the verge of something that never seems to materialize. For some viewers, these "compulsive repetitions" will have the effect The Exorcist did on some terrified Catholics; others will find Arnold's sleight-of-hand hypnotic and rewarding.
piece touchee (1989) is a brief exegesis of a woman reading and a man coming to visit her. This footage comes from an unidentified movie from the 1940s, and opens innocently enough with the woman sitting in a chair enjoying her book. There's no movement at first, but this is deceptive; an almost imperceptible motion starts to happen with her hand moving slightly up and down, a sign of the slight agitation that eventually explodes as something attempts to open the door. Suddenly this homely scene takes on the feel of a horror film, with what may be a monster repeatedly, terrifyingly straining at the door. Arnold builds on this arid atmosphere of entrapment and incipient chaos to the point where a kind of vertigo sets in. In a literally dizzying sequence, Arnold introduces maniacal flash-cuts and repeatedly replays and interrupts a scene in which the camera pans across the woman rising and the man walking; this will have some viewers holding their chairs.
passage a l'acte (1993) makes a simple breakfast scene from To Kill a Mockingbird look like a surrealist nightmare. The 1950s family is the target here. Those who know the film will recognize the characters as a father, his two kids, and a neighbor woman, but the film transforms them into a crazed version of the postwar family. While "Mother" sits with a frozen smile and Father (Gregory Peck) reads the paper, sonny boy gets up from the table and opens and closes the screen door repeatedly. The slamming of the door sounds like gunfire, hinting at an unnamed aggression occurring somewhere just outside this sacred space of the '50s home and perhaps at disturbing forces at work within this family. Arnold's exploitation of these characters is pitiless; like an evil puppeteer he repeats a shot of Gregory Peck screaming words and parts of words to stultifying effect, while the son twitches back and forth with some unknowable frustration and the daughter makes gutteral noises that attain a kind of robot rhythm.
Arnold's most recent work, Alone. Life Wastes Andy Hardy (1998), stitches together a strange sexual scenario from three of the Judy Garland-Mickey Rooney vehicles. In the opening scenes, Andy embraces his aging mother, but subtle repetitions give this homespun scene an unexpected erotic charge. Arnold brazenly rechoreographs Andy's movements to make it appear he's humping the old gal from behind. Meanwhile Judy is singing in another room, but it's no ordinary song. She's made to emit disturbing "peeping" noises, sing backwards, and lingers on phrases like a stuck record: "There must be someone waiting … waiting … waiting … waiting …" The effect is both comic and chilling, as she stands pathetically with outstretched arms waiting for Mickey, who, perhaps because he's just left his mother's bed, never quite connects with poor, frustrated Judy.
Quote:
4:00 PM, Vinegar Hill
piéce touchèe (1989), 12 min. passage á l’acte (1993)/ 16 min.; Alone. Life Wastes Andy Hardy (1998), 15 min.
Arnold is renowned among experimental film afficionados for his ability to transform short, ostensibly insignificant shots from old Hollywood movies into modern experimental works of hyperactive genius. By working with extreme slow motion, Arnold is able to unearth submerged footage within these very familiar scenes. Arnold’s breakthrough film, piece touché, is based on a single 18-second shot, diligently edited frame-by-frame into an elaborately choreographed, chaotically fractured dance. Perhaps the most intriguing aspect of Arnold’s films is their effect on audiences. The subconscious becomes reality as viewers embrace the ambiguity of Arnold’s reimaginations to formulate their many unique interpretations. Arnold will screen three of his films as well as documentation of his recent video installations.
link :
Cinemnesis - 3 experimental films by Martin ARNOLD - vhs-rip by SYGM@.ogm
File : 361 Mo (361 Mo), durée 0:41:02, type OGG, 1 flux audio, qualité 52 %
Vidéo : 333 Mo, 1135 Kbps, 25.0 fps, res. 688*528 (4:3), XVID = XVID Mpeg-4
Audio : 28 Mo, 96 Kbps, 48000 Hz, 2 canaux, 0x674F = Ogg Vorbis (mode 1)
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akopletas
- Mensajes: 37
- Registrado: Mar 19 Jul, 2005 02:00
- Ubicación: zaragotham city
Mensaje
por akopletas » Dom 21 Ago, 2005 12:52
Thanks a lot..... The best experimental film, i've ever seen
Saludetes
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by_MaRio
- Mensajes: 993
- Registrado: Mié 30 Abr, 2003 02:00
- Ubicación: León
Mensaje
por by_MaRio » Dom 21 Ago, 2005 13:47
Vamos a ello, gracias por el aviso,
Fitz
(también está el
pièce touché en
éste hilo)
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tethor
- Mensajes: 2905
- Registrado: Sab 15 Nov, 2003 01:00
- Ubicación: Miami Beach
Mensaje
por tethor » Dom 21 Ago, 2005 13:51
let's rock
gracias fitz
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Faeton
- Mensajes: 979
- Registrado: Sab 01 Mar, 2003 01:00
- Ubicación: Madrid
Mensaje
por Faeton » Dom 21 Ago, 2005 14:15
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auess
- Mensajes: 1133
- Registrado: Sab 22 Nov, 2003 01:00
- Ubicación: a lost city in the south of china
Mensaje
por auess » Lun 22 Ago, 2005 01:38
8O 8O 8O
What a wonderful find!

how could I resist it?
Thanks again, Fitz.

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el_saturn
- Mensajes: 362
- Registrado: Vie 17 Dic, 2004 01:00
Mensaje
por el_saturn » Jue 25 Ago, 2005 13:00
Wow, thanks Fitz

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Nalekh
- Mensajes: 1803
- Registrado: Mar 18 Mar, 2003 01:00
- Ubicación: Dentro de una esfera virtual
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por Nalekh » Jue 25 Ago, 2005 22:02
Thanx!!!!
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LauRíSTiCa
- Mensajes: 1849
- Registrado: Lun 19 May, 2003 02:00
- Ubicación: Madrid
Mensaje
por LauRíSTiCa » Mié 31 Ago, 2005 11:24
¡Genial! Por fin más cositas de martin Arnold!
Bajando por aquí también.

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lapsus
- Mensajes: 545
- Registrado: Vie 14 Nov, 2003 01:00
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por lapsus » Mié 07 Sep, 2005 21:35