TIE
Retrospective - 2008 Denver Edition:
Saturday, December 20, 2008 (6:00 PM & 8:00 PM) at Denver Darkroom
(4037 Tejon St, Denver, CO 80211)
Filmmaker, Standish Lawder and TIE Curator/Founder, Chritopher May in-person.
About
the Program:
This Christmas, the Denver Darkroom hosts one program featuring highlights
from TIE's previous film festivals. TIE has quickly become an exemplary
festival celebrating contemporary and historical avant-garde cinema.
Taking as its mission the preservation of the fundamental qualities
of cinema and film exhibition, TIE produces festivals which, to date
have screened over 600 films and hosted over 200 artists. TIE is renowned
for artistic vision and an exaltation of the direct viewing experience
of original-format film works.
The
Films:
The
Influence of Ocular Light Perception on Metabolism in Man and in Animal
Thomas Draschan and Stella Friedrichs
(2005, 16mm, optical, 6min, 24fps, Austria/Germany)
Filmmaker, Draschan and Sociologist, Friedrichs made this brilliant found-footage
piece which appropriates popular images from the 1960's and 70's. The
result is an active visual test directed at the audience. The film is
synchronized to an Italian sort porn soundtrack from the sixties.
Shudder (top and bottom)
Michael Gitlin
(2001, 16mm, optical, 3min, 24fps, USA)
The film is a kind of shuddering optical toy, with a dense, collagist
soundtrack that rubs against the complicated visual weave of the images.
It scratches at the fiction of the original footage, leaving behind, in
its phosphene-laden after-image, a throbbing world of lonely danger.
Vom Innen; von Aussen
Albert Sackl
(2006, 16mm, silent, 20min, 24fps, Austria)
This film is a wonderfully unnerving, scrutinized, study of the human
body within the context of its environment. Implications of the revolution
within man's own self image and man's historic worldview seem to be the
larger conceptual concerns of the work.
Anodyne
Sheri Wills
(2001, 16mm, optical, 4min, 24fps, USA)
"A lyrical abstraction, Anodyne explores red-gold and sepia-cyan
color fields created with photograms, then animated through 16mm rephotography
and digital manipulation. My fascination with the handmade, the awkward
and sentimental is at odds with the contemporary medium with which I work."
Whirl
Scott Banning
(2007, 16mm, digital sound, 8min, 24fps, USA)
A whirl of carnival lights beckon; stirring memories of the first time
you let your feet leave the ground. Ephemera, fear and wonder linger.
Colorfilm
Standish Lawder
(1972, 16mm, optical, 3 min, 24fps, USA)
After failing to achieve the desired sensation of color pulsing dramatically
on the screen, Lawder switched his perspective, capturing a dance of vibrantly
colored film swatches running through the projector, instead. The 16mm
footage is brought alive, beautifully animated with movement, rhythm and
music, by means of au natural techniques that leaves the viewer jubilant.
Necrology
Standish Lawder
(1969-70, 16mm, optical, 12min, 24fps, USA)
The film is one of the strongest and grimmest comments upon the contemporary
society that cinema has produced." - Jonas Mekas, The Village Voice
Web:
experimentalcinema.org
Phone: 303-408-4623
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