Avant Garde Influences Mainstream Movies! 49th NYFF Forums Welcomes Jon Gartenberg as Guest Speaker

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AVANT GARDE INFLUENCES MAINSTREAM MOVIES!

VENUE: FILM CENTER AMPHITHEATER

CATEGORIES: NYFF

Presented by New York Women in Film and Television. Organized by Terry Lawler, Executive Directorand NYWIFT Board Members Anne Hubbell and Eileen Newman.

For generations experimental filmmakers have been developing new cinematic techniques that haveredefined cinema. This panel of filmmakers, curators and educators looks at how the experiments andground-breaking new filmmaking by the avant garde have influenced and been adopted by mainstreamcinema.

Speakers include Ina Archer, Independent Media Artist; Sara Driver, director and producer, whose newlyrestored film, You Are Not I, is playing at the New York Film Festival; Roberta Friedman, independent producer and post production supervisor; Jon Gartenberg, independent curator and President, Gartenberg  Media; and MM Serra, Executive Director, Filmmakers Coop. The panel will be moderated by Drake Stutesman, Editor, Framework: The Journal of Cinema and Media.

SERIES: NYFF FORUMS

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    SHOWTIMES

     Thu Oct. 6: 7:00 pm - AMP 

Open Event  

Couldn't make it to the forum? Check out our archived livestream video below.

Watch 

live streaming video

 from 

filmlinc

 at livestream.com

Experimental Film Programs at Tribeca Film Festival, April 20 – May 1, 2011

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Experimental Film Programs at Tribeca Film Festival, April 20 – May 1, 2011

Jon Gartenberg has programmed experimental and avant-garde films for the Tribeca Film Festival since 2003.   This year’s four programs consist of two new features, by Marie Losier and Bill Morrison, and two shorts programs, "Impressions of Memory" and special program celebrating the preservation work of the Women’s Film Preservation Fund of New York Women in Film & Television (NYWIFT).                              

The Ballad of Genesis and Lady Jaye

[BALLA] 

Viewpoints

Feature Documentary,

2011, 70 min 

Directed by: Marie Losier 

Filmmaker and TFF alum Marie Losier, who has created engaging short films on avant-garde artists like George Kuchar and Guy Maddin, makes her feature documentary debut with a mesmerizing and deeply romantic love story between pioneering musician and performance artist Genesis P-Orridge and soul mate Lady Jaye. Breaking new ground in its depiction of gender identity,

 Ballad

 chronicles the physical and spiritual merging of two beings into one.

Read More

Public Screenings

Mon, Apr 25, 7:00PM

AMC Loews Village 7 - 2

Wed, Apr 27, 9:00PM

SVA Theater 2 Beatrice

Thu, Apr 28, 3:00PM

Clearview Cinemas Chelsea 7

.

The Miners' Hymns

[MINER] 

Viewpoints

Feature Documentary

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2011, 52 min 

Directed by: Bill Morrison

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Experimental filmmaker and frequent TFF alum Bill Morrison combines newly shot aerial scenes that he filmed himself with historic found-footage images of the mining communities of Northeast England that he culled from the British national archives. Morrison creates a moving and formally elegant tribute to this vanished era of working-class life, enriched by an original score by avant-garde Icelandic composer Jóhann Jóhannsson.

Read More

Public Screenings

Fri, Apr 22, 7:00PM

Clearview Cinemas Chelsea 5

Mon, Apr 25, 7:30PM

Clearview Cinemas Chelsea 9

Thu, Apr 28, 12:45PM

Clearview Cinemas Chelsea 8

.

Shorts: Impressions of Memory

[SIMPR] 

Short Film Program

Program

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2011, 69 min  

These talented artists address, in both thematically and stylistically distinct ways, the manner in which images evoke memory. This is achieved through the use of text, the presence of previously filmed "found" footage, a scenic train ride bleeding into digital pixels, single frame printing devices, evocations of 9/11, a tribute to a deceased filmmaker, peripheral vision, recall of sleep via animation, seascape imagery folding back on itself in time, and bittersweet remembrances of now-extinct Kodachrome film stock.Read More

Public Screenings

Thu, Apr 21, 7:30PM

Clearview Cinemas Chelsea 9

Sun, Apr 24, 10:30PM

Clearview Cinemas Chelsea 9

Fri, Apr 29, 2:30PM

Clearview Cinemas Chelsea 4

Sun, May 01, 11:00AM

Tribeca Cinemas Theater 1

Independent Women: 15 Years Of NYWIFT-Funded Film Preservation

[NYWIF]

Tribeca Talks

Program

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2011, 84 min 

Dating from 1950 to 1984, these 11 short films contain experimental narratives, personal documentaries, and abstract animation from the likes of Mary Ellen Bute, Storm de Hirsch, Faith Hubley, and Marie Menken, as well as contemporary voices of living female artists. Asserting the contributions of women filmmakers in the canon of the American experimental avant-garde, this program also celebrates 15 years of direct financial support for preservation of historically under-recognized films by women through the Women's Film Preservation Fund of New York Women in Film & Television. 

Special thanks to Academy Film Archive, Anthology Film Archives, Emily Hubley, The Museum of Modern Art Department of Film, Cecile Starr, and the individual filmmakers for their participation. 

Tribeca Talks: Join us for a conversation with an eclectic group of women filmmakers who helped shape avant-garde cinema. Panelists to include: directors Liane Brandon, Lisa Crafts,Barbara HammerJane AaronBette GordonCaroline Mouris, as well as Bute films curator/collector Cecile Starr, animator Emily Hubley, and Tribeca's experimental film programmer Jon Gartenberg. Moderated by Drake Stutesman, Co-Chair of The Women's Film Preservation Fund and editor of Framework: The Journal of Cinema and Media.Read More

Public Screenings

Sat, Apr 30, 7:00PM

SVA Theater 1 Silas

DZIGA VERTOV Subject of Retrospective @ MoMA, in collaboration with The Austrian Film Museum, Vienna

Dziga Vertov

April 15–June 4, 2011

The Museum of Modern Art                                                                                             11 West 53 Street  New York, NY 10019  

View related film screenings

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Ukrainian poster for Enthusiasm: Symphony of the Donbass. 1930 (poster 1931). USSR. Directed by Dziga Vertov

Of all the masters of Soviet cinema—most notably Sergei Eisenstein, Lev Kuleshov, Vsevolod Pudovkin, and Grigori Aleksandrov—Dziga Vertov (né Denis Arkadievitch Kaufman, 1896–1954) is arguably the one whose still-radical experiments in image and sound, and enduring influence among an astonishing range of contemporary filmmakers and artists, from Jean-Luc Godard to Richard Serra to Steve McQueen, have yet to be fully appreciated or celebrated. MoMA’s retrospective, the most comprehensive ever assembled in the United States, seeks to redress this with an extensive selection of Vertov’s silent films, sound features, and related work by collaborators and rivals in what he called his “factory of facts.” International Vertov scholars, artists, and filmmakers including William Kentridge, Peter Kubelka, Guy Maddin, and Michael Nyman will offer a contemporary perspective on Vertov’s work and legacy by introducing screenings and participating in a panel discussion on May 7. 

The exhibition opens on April 15 with the U.S. premiere of Man with a Movie Camera (1929), newly restored in its original full-frame version by the EYE Institute Netherlands and with live musical accompaniment by Dennis James & Filmharmonia Ensemble. A breathtaking and often startlingly funny vision of cosmopolitan life in Moscow, Kiev, and Odessa, Man with a Movie Camera remains among the most dynamic, and imitated, city symphonies in film history. Also featured are 11 programs of Vertov’s silent films, drawn primarily from the Austrian Film Museum’s unparalleled collection, including the premieres of fourteen Kino-Week films from 1918–19, and, for the first time together, all of his extant Kino-Pravda films from 1922–25, several of which are famous for Vertov and Aleksandr Rodchenko’s ingenious experiments in graphic design. 

The exhibition continues with such masterworks as Stride, Soviet!(1926), A Sixth Part of the World (1926), The Eleventh Year (1928),Enthusiasm: Symphony of the Donbass (1930), Three Songs of Lenin (1935/38), and other sound films. Films by Vertov’s brothers, Mikhail and Boris Kaufman, as well as films by Joris Ivens and Albrecht Viktor Blum, are also presented. Among the exhibition’s many rediscoveries is the work of certain largely forgotten women filmmakers of the Soviet avant-garde, including Elizaveta Svilova, Vertov’s editor and wife, and Esfir Shub, who pioneered “found footage” cinema and was instrumental in the development of dialectical montage. Vertov’s exhilarating body of work must be seen not as a succession of individual films, but as one continuously evolving movie; “free of the limits of time and space,” he wrote, it would lead to “a fresh perception of the world” and a revolutionary passage from the Old to the New. 

All films directed by Vertov, except where noted, and with simultaneous English translation or electronic subtitles. Screening descriptions adapted from texts by Yuri Tsivian and others, principally from the 23rd Pordenone Silent Film Festival catalogue.

Organized by Yuri Tsivian, William Colvin Professor at The University of Chicago, and Joshua Siegel, Associate Curator, Department of Film, The Museum of Modern Art, in close collaboration with the Austrian Film Museum, Vienna. Organized in cooperation with the Austrian Cultural Forum New York. 

The exhibition is made possible by The International Council of The Museum of Modern Art.

DZIGA VERTOV Available on DVD for INSTITUTIONAL SALES

1215680370588

     ENTUZIAZM

      (1930)                   2-Disc Set

      Format: DVD PAL / Region 0, No Regional Code.

      Institutional Sale Price: $300.00 plus shipping & handling.

1259782902881

     A SIXTH PART OF THE WORLD /

     THE ELEVENTH YEAR

      (1926/1928)2-Disc Set

       Format: DVD PAL / Region 0, No Regional Code.

       Institutional Sale Price: $300.00 plus shipping & handling.

These DVDs are available on an exclusive basis for sale to educational organizations in North America (universities, libraries, & other cultural institutions), and include public performance rights. Public performance rights extend to use in classrooms and in other non-commercial settings where no admission is charged.

For more information on the titles we proudly represent visit here.

For information on ordering by fax, email or post visit here.

To order by phone please call: 212.280.8654

Jon Gartenberg as Guest Panelist for the 15th International Saguenay Short Film Festival

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Saguenay

THE DISTRIBUTION OF SHORT FILMS

My films shown everywhere

Saturday march 12th > 10 h 30 à 12 h > Café Cambio

The distribution of short films

As a much-expected rendezvous which gathers buyers and programming officers from Europe and the United States around a same table, this workshop provides directors with the necessary tools for making their films travel around. It is an unparalleled opportunity to have an access to professionals who reveal their trade’s inner workings. A privileged encounter which allows you to ask questions and establish first contacts.

Discussion leader

Maxence Bradley acts as independent producer and consultant for various firms. He notably participated in the production and distribution of the film Next Floor by Denis Villeneuve and presently works as executive producer for Pedro Pires and Robert Lepage’s next feature film, inspired from the theatre play Lipsynch.

Panellists

Christophe Taudière – Programming counselor to France Télévisions and responsible of "Histoires Courtes" on France 2

Augusti Argelich Girones – Buyer and programmer, TV3 televisio de Catalunya, Spain

Jon Gartenberg – Experimental films programmer, Tribeca Film Festival, USA

Todd Luoto – Short films programmer, Sundance Festival, USA

Florence Keller – Buyer, Régie TV Cable - Agence du court métrage, France

Laurent Guerrier – Buying responsible and international selection comitee member, Clermont-Ferrand’s international short film festival, France

Michael Pilz Honored at 2011 Berlin Film Festival with Screening of HIMMEL UND ERDE

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Himmel und Erde

Heaven and Earth

Austria, 1979-1982, 285 min

German

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    Director: Michael Pilz

    Section: Forum

    Screenings at the festival

    Fri       Feb 11  11:00    CineStar 8 (E)

    Thu     Feb 17  20:00    Kino Arsenal 1 (E)

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Download Festival Catalogue, PDF

Download Festival Catalogue, PDF

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    Michael Pilz’s epic two-part                 

    documentary tells of life in a                        

    mountain village in the Aust

rian 

    state of Styria. "Give it a chance

    and this film will soon draw you into     

    its own cosmos; it can be counted

    among those works that teach you

    to see and hear things in a

    completely new way."

    (Ulrich Gregor, Forum 1983) 

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"Take what is before you as it is and do not wish it to be different, simply

exist." This motto from the Chinese poet Lao-tzu precedes the film and is

programmatic for Michael Pilz’s open concept, devoid as it is of a

sociological motive. His almost five-hour-long cinematic essay was a

milestone in the making of independent documentary films. And even

today it is still extraordinary owing to its aesthetic waywardness and its free

form – a mixture of compassionate observation, the self-reflective

disclosure of the filmmaker’s presence and procedures, the contrapuntal

use of sound and comments in the form of off-screen texts from sources as

far-ranging as Lao-tzu to the Bible to Stanislaw Lem. The film shows the

process of plowing on steep slopes as a concerted effort by man and

beast. Pilz asks a farmer where he would prefer to stand for a shot. Himmel

und Erde is both a historic document and modern cinema at the same time.

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Michael Pilz's HIMMEL UND ERDE

Available on DVD for INSTITUTIONAL SALE

HIMMEL_Cover

    HIMMEL UND ERDE (HEAVEN AND EARTH)

     (1979 - 1982)      2-Disc Set

     Format: DVD PAL / Region 0, No Regional Code.

     Institutional Sale Price: $300.00 plus shipping & handling.

These DVDs are available on an exclusive basis for sale to educational organizations in North America (universities, libraries, & other cultural institutions), and include public performance rights. Public performance rights extend to use in classrooms and in other non-commercial settings where no admission is charged.

For more information on the titles we proudly represent visit here.

For information on ordering by fax, email or post visit here.

To order by phone please call: 212.280.8654

Kuleshov's BY THE LAW Premieres as "Live Cinema" Event at IFFR - Available on DVD For North American Institutional Sales from Gartenberg Media

International Film Festival Rotterdam

40

th

 edition 26 January - 6 February 2011 

Home

/

Films

/

By the LawRW-2011

OEFM_Po zakonu_03_low

Kuleshov’s adaptation of a Jack London novel follows gold-diggers on the banks of the Yukon in Alaska. This silent film has been restored by the Austrian Film Museum and will be accompanied by live music composed by Franz Reisecker. Closing film of the Red Western programme.

Three men, one couple, one dog; all searching for gold on the banks of the Yukon in Alaska, the home of the gold rush. Everything runs smoothly at first, then Dennin suddenly shoots two of the prospectors. And then there were three. Nelson and his wife Edith (Alexandra Khokhlova) subdue the murderer. The corpses are taken away and buried; Dennin is tied up in the cabin and kept under constant guard. None can leave, as the ice and snow have begun to melt, flooding the Klondike Fields.

By the Lawis an absolute masterpiece, the greatness of which stems from its very minimalism. One can label By the Law a formalist action film, a Western psychodrama or an experimental study in bigotry. There is as much of the silent Westerns of John Ford as there is of Erich von Stroheim’s Greed and Charles Chaplin’s The Gold Rush in By the Law

SCREENINGS

Cinerama 1

Sat 05 Feb

17:00

tickets

The Österreichisches Filmmuseum (Austrian Film Museum) holds an extraordinarily beautiful print of Lev Kuleshov's 1926 film PO ZAKONU (BY THE LAW), which they preserved in 2009. Franz Reisecker, a central figure of Austria’s crossover-music scene, was commissioned to write a new score and chose to interpret the filmmaker’s highly refined aesthetic with both analog and digital means.  His musical dialogue with Kuleshov is being presented as a “Live Cinema” event, and it has also been recorded for the new Edition Filmmuseum DVD publication.  Apart from BY THE LAWthe DVD also contains the only surviving fragment of Kuleshov's VASA ZNAKOMAJA / YOUR ACQUAINTANCE (1927).

The Live version of the project receives its International Premiere at the Rotterdam Film Festival on February 5, 2011.

The Edition Filmmuseum DVD of PO ZAKONU (BY THE LAW) is Available

From Gartenberg Media Exclusively for North American Institutional Sales.

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   PO ZAKONU (BY THE LAW)

(1926)  Lev Kuleshov.

    Format: DVD PAL / Region 0, No Regional Code.   

    Institutional Sale Price: $200.00 plus shipping & handling.

These DVDs are available on an exclusive basis for sale to educational organizations in North America (universities, libraries, & other cultural institutions), and include public performance rights. Public performance rights extend to use in classrooms and in other non-commercial settings where no admission is charged.

For more information on the titles we proudly represent visit here.

For information on ordering by fax, email or post visit here.

To order by phone please call:  212.280.8654

indieWIRE Profiles Tribeca Film Festival Programmers

Indiewire a

Toolkit I Meet the Tribeca Film Festival Programmers (In Their Own Words)

by Brian Brooks (December 8, 2010)    [

Excerpt

]

Among the many festivals indieWIRE covers yearly, April’s Tribeca Film Festival is one of the most anticipated and largest. As part of iW‘s ongoing series profiling film festival programmers in the iW Toolkit, the thoughts and advice of the Tribeca Film Festival‘s programmers take the spotlight below. Born out of the 9/11 attacks early last decade, Robert De Niro, Jane Rosenthal and Craig Hatkoff created a film event in part to help revitalize the neighboring Ground Zero neighborhood of TriBeCA. Since its 2002 launch, TFF has grown to say the least (...)                                                               

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                    Tribeca Film Festival co-founders Rober De Niro and Jane Rosenthal at the                    festival's awards ceremony last Spring. Photo by Brian Brooks/indieWIRE.

Tribeca Film Festival programmer profiles:

Jon Gartenberg, Experimental Film Programmer

Gartenberg on the approach Tribeca takes…

In each edition of the Tribeca Film Festival, the experimental works are included in all the various festival sections. Our approach is different from other festivals, where avant-garde films are segregated into their own area, and therefore tend to be marginalized.

This distinct approach at Tribeca enables our general audience to become engaged with these formally cutting edge and more personal kinds of films. Moreover, the experimental films compete for awards on an equal playing field against other kinds of movies.  Two experimental films have won major prizes at Tribeca:  Jennifer Reeves’ “The Time We Killed” (best New York narrative, TFF ’04) and Steve Bilich’s “Native New Yorker” (best documentary short, TFF ’06).

And on the evolving nature of the festival, and experimental films…

The shift in the economics of film distribution away from the model of theatrical releases, advances, and extensive print and advertising campaigns is in the process of producing some significant transformations in the ways that film companies, boutique distributors, and even film festivals operate.  For a number of film festivals, this currently involves outreach via digital distribution means to a public residing in more remote locations than the festivals brick-and-mortar screening locales.

Experimental films and videos historically have been shown to limited audiences in an array of nonprofit and alternative spaces.  These include museums, universities, libraries, galleries, microcinemas, lofts, storefronts, clubs, independent theaters, and informal gatherings of filmmakers showing new works to each other.  Their films have been self-distributed, primarily through nonprofit filmmaker cooperatives.

With the advent of digital technology, experimental filmmakers have been in the vanguard to avail themselves of the digital distribution methods, immediately recognizing the vastly wider audience that is available to see their works. As younger generations have shaped their digital universe with a “sampling” mindset, they are more predisposed to comprehend the non-linear narrative approach of many experimental films.  I think this means that younger generations of moving image viewers are intuitively receptive to the fractured narratives so present in many avant-garde films.                                                                                                                                  

Jon_Seated

Two Films by Warren Sonbert at LIGHT INDUSTRY

Newlightindustrylogo

Wednesday, December 15, 2010 at 7pm

Light Industry at ISSUE Project Room: 

Two Films by Warren Sonbert

ISSUE Project Room

The Old American Can Factory

232 3rd Street

Brooklyn, New York

Friendlywitness

The Cup and the Lip, Warren Sonbert, 16mm, 1986, 20 mins

Friendly Witness, Warren Sonbert, 16mm, 1989, 32 mins

With readings by Charles Bernstein, Corrine Fitzpatrick, and Carla Harryman.

Though Warren Sonbert has frequently been described as a maker of diary films, the label fails to capture the emotional and formal intricacies at play in his work. In less than twenty films made from 1966 to the mid-90s—his career caught short by his death from AIDS at age 47—Sonbert’s primary method was indeed the creation of dense montages from 16mm shot in the course of daily life. The same images and ideas were often reused in different permutations for new films and, through this process, footage of his friends and colleagues attains an iconic status that transcends its documentary valence, becoming vibrant evocations of Sirkian melodrama. "I think the films I make are, hopefully, a series of arguments,” Sonbert said of his own work, “with each image, shot, a statement to be read and digested in turn." The rich use of color and delicately punctuated editing also point to the influence of his mentor, Gregory Markopoulos, and Sonbert’s love of Hitchcock, Kenneth Anger, and opera.

The Cup and the Lip and Friendly Witness both date from the late 1980s, when Sonbert was refining and deepening his use of montage. Amy Taubin noted that The Cup and the Lip “is so dense it's impossible to apprehend it at a single viewing,” calling it “Sonbert's darkest work." Precisely composed of 645 individual shots over 22 minutes, set to girl-group songs and the overture to Christoph Willibald von Gluck’s 18th-century opera Iphigeneia in AulisFriendly Witness was Sonbert’s return to sound after two decades of purely silent films. Tonight’s event pairs Sonbert with readings by three poets—Charles Bernstein, Corrine Fitzpatrick, and Carla Harryman—a testament to the fact that, though long-admired as a filmmaker’s filmmaker, he always worked in conversation with other forms, literary and otherwise.

Charles Bernstein is author of All the Whiskey in Heaven: Selected Poems (Farrar, Straus, and Giroux, 2010), Blind Witness: Three American Operas (Factory School, 2008); Girly Man (University of Chicago Press, 2006), and My Way: Speeches and Poems (Chicago, 1999). From 1978-1981 he co-edited, with Bruce Andrews L=A=N=G=U=A=G=Emagazine. In the 1990s, he co-founded and directed the Poetics Program at the State University of New York Buffalo. He teaches at the University of Pennsylvania, where he is co-director of PennSound.

Corrine Fitzpatrick is a Brooklyn-based poet, and former Program Coordinator of the Poetry Project at St. Mark’s Church. She is the author of two chapbooks – On Melody Dispatch and Zamboangueña, and her poetry appears in numerous print and online journals. She recently completed the MFA program at Bard College.

Carla Harryman is a poet, essayist, and playwright. Recent books include Adorno's Noise (Essay Press, 2008), Open Box (Belladonna, 2007), Baby (2005), and Gardener of Stars (Atelos, 2001), an experimental novel dedicated to the memory of Warren Sonbert. Forthcoming books include The Wide Road, an erotic picaresque written in collaboration with Lyn Hejinian (Belladonna). She is co-contributor to The Grand Piano, a project that focuses on the emergence of Language Writing, art, politics, and culture of the San Francisco Bay area between 1975-1980. She lives in the Detroit Area and serves on the faculty of the Creative Writing Program at Eastern Michigan University.

Presented as part of Couchsurfing.

Tickets - $7, available at door.

John McKay on Dziga Vertov at LIGHT INDUSTRY

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Tuesday, December 7, 2010 at 7pm                                                                             Light Industry at Cleopatra's:John MacKay on Dziga VertovCleopatra's110 Meserole AvenueBrooklyn, New York 

Mwmc

Dziga Vertov and the Rhythm of the Proletariat

A lecture by John MacKay

Dziga Vertov's films have long been known for their dazzling visual rhythms; in the case of his 1929 film Man with a Movie Camera, several sequences culminate in flurries of single-frame shots that all but overwhelm the spectator's perceptual capacities. But what motivated, or justified, Vertov's rhythmical practice, especially given the kind of stress that it placed on viewers? Drawing on materials from Vertov's archive, late 19th/early 20th century thought about rhythm, and close analysis of specific films, this talk will probe Vertov's "metrical montage" as a way of mediating between elite filmmakers (or "art workers") on one hand, and the "proletarian" audience on the other. Rhythmical structuring of film acts, for Vertov, was a way of organizing visual data in a way that makes even the most seemingly excessive barrages of images graspable. At the same time, it provides a (figurative) means of linking the radical but non-proletarian filmmaker to proletarian spectators, by taking images drawn from the proletarian machine-milieu as the content of the shots, and by using a fundamentally mechanical/industrial quantum - the individual film frame - as the basic rhythmic unit. It will be argued that the work of the German economist Karl Bücher (especially his 1896 Arbeit und Rhythmus [Labor and Rhythm], a book influential in Russia during Vertov's time) possibly had an impact on Vertov through its conceptualization of the origins of rhythm in bodily processes of work, and by questioning the persistence of older modes of rhythmical culture in a context of heavy industrial, mechanized production.

John MacKay is Professor of Slavic Languages and Literatures and Chair of Film Studies at Yale University. He is the author of Inscription and Modernity: From Wordsworth to MandelstamFour Russian Serf Narratives, and numerous articles and translations. His book on Dziga Vertov's life and work is forthcoming from Indiana University Press.

Presented as part of Couchsurfing.

FREE

DZIGA VERTOV Available on DVD for INSTITUTIONAL SALES

1215680370588

     ENTUZIAZM

(1930)                   2-Disc Set

      Format: DVD PAL / Region 0, No Regional Code.

      Institutional Sale Price: $300.00 plus shipping & handling.

1259782902881

     A SIXTH PART OF THE WORLD /                                THE ELEVENTH YEAR

      (1926/1928)2-Disc Set

       Format: DVD PAL / Region 0, No Regional Code.

       Institutional Sale Price: $300.00 plus shipping & handling.

These DVDs are available on an exclusive basis for sale to educational organizations in North America (universities, libraries, & other cultural institutions), and include public performance rights. Public performance rights extend to use in classrooms and in other non-commercial settings where no admission is charged.

For more information on the titles we proudly represent visit here.

For information on ordering by fax, email or post visit here.

To order by phone please call: 212.280.8654

ACF PRESENTS: THE FILMS OF JOHN COOK at Anthology Film Archives, Dec 3 - Dec 5

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ACF PRESENTS: THE FILMS OF JOHN COOKDec 3 – Dec 5

Anthology presents a long-overdue retrospective devoted to John Cook, a key figure in Austrian cinema whose films – several of which have recently been restored by the Austrian Film Museum – are virtually unknown in the U.S. The Canadian-born Cook almost single-handedly introduced a type of freewheeling auteur cinema in his adopted homeland, reminiscent of both Italian neorealism and the works of the French nouvelle vague. A truly independent artist, Cook never repeated himself – his four feature (or medium-length) films (three of which are screening here) are each made in an entirely different register, running the gamut from relatively straightforward cinema-vérité-inflected non-fiction to full-on narrative drama, with perhaps his greatest film, SLOW SUMMER, a particularly striking hybrid of documentary and fiction. Thanks to the Film Museum’s efforts, Cook’s work is currently enjoying a revival in Europe, and this retrospective will hopefully spread the word on this side of the Atlantic as well.

“One of the crucial figures of Austrian cinema was Canadian: John Cook, self-confessed ‘Viennese by choice’ made only four films in his adopted country, which have achieved nearly mythical status in Austrian film circles. It is easy to see why: the groundbreaking, unforced realism of [his films] still startles, even as ‘realistic’ filmmaking has become the national cinema’s norm. You could even call it a cliché, since your average Austrian slice of depressive realism is clearly geared toward certain expectations of the arthouse and festival circuits – by comparison, the almost preternatural pull of Cook’s unprejudiced vérité seems even more exceptional.” –Christoph Huber, MOVING IMAGE SOURCE

All three prints in the series were preserved and loaned by the Austrian Film Museum, Vienna; SLOW SUMMER was jointly preserved by the Austrian Film Museum and the film’s producer Michael Pilz in 2006. A DVD featuring all three films is available from the Austrian Film Museum (www.filmmuseum.at/en); institutional sales in North America are handled by Gartenberg Media Enterprises (www.gartenbergmedia.com).

The new print of SLOW SUMMER will have its NY premiere as part of the Museum of Modern Art’s TO SAVE AND PROJECT series on November 3 & 5, immediately preceding our retrospective.

Special thanks to Martin Rauchbauer & Andreas Stadler (Austrian Cultural Forum NY), Alexander Horwath, Regina Schlagnitweit, Markus Wessolowski & Michael Loebenstein (Austrian Film Museum), and Josh Siegel (MoMA).

Upcoming Screenings

John Cook

I JUST CAN’T GO ON / ICH SCHAFF’S EINFACH NIMMER

Dec 3 at 7:15 PM

Dec 4 at 9:15 PM

John Cook

SLOW SUMMER / LANGSAMER SOMMER

Dec 3 at 8:45 PM

Dec 5 at 6:30 PM

John Cook

CLINCH / SCHWITZKASTEN

Dec 4 at 7:00 PM

Dec 5 at 8:30 PM

THE FILMS OF JOHN COOK  Available on DVD for INSTITUTIONAL SALES

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  SLOW SUMMER / CLINCH / I JUST CAN'T GO ON

(1972 - 1978)       2-Disc Set

  Format: DVD PAL / Region 0, No Regional Code.

  Institutional Sale Price: $300.00 plus shipping & handling.

These DVDs are available on an exclusive basis for sale to educational organizations in North America (universities, libraries, & other cultural institutions), and include public performance rights. Public performance rights extend to use in classrooms and in other non-commercial settings where no admission is charged.

For more information on the titles we proudly represent visit here.

For information on ordering by fax, email or post visit here.

To order by phone please call: 212.280.8654