Showing posts with label Experimental film. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Experimental film. Show all posts

Friday, 2 December 2022

URGENT NEWS (2) - Experimental film-maker and curator David King continues his online event at the Exploratory Visions Film Festival

Curator David King

This information was first published on Peter Tammer's
 blog Friends of the Armchair Traveller . The weekend's program starts on 03 December and runs until end of 04 December - Dutch time). The link to the program is provided at the end of the Program Information.

***************************************


Animation + Experimental + Avant Garde

film program

03 – 04 December

2022

(Weekend #2)

David King writes: The second weekend of Exploratory Visions animation + experimental + avant garde film program focuses on the avant garde, or films with some kind of narrative even if barely recognisable as such. 


The individual films are mostly longer than last weekend but there are fewer of them.


The multi-award-winning collage animation Once I Passed, a collaboration between Germany’s Martin Gerigk and Serbia’s Nikola Gocic opens a stylish window to the past and a poem by Walt Whitman, followed by Debjit Bagchi’s fascinating Memoir from India which explores the fragmented memories of a man we never see.




                 










                                                 Once I passed






                                                          





                                     

                                     


                                                       Memoir


Spain’s Luis Carlos Rodriguez gives us a new take on a classic Hollywood narrative with a brand new version of his award-winning Collage 37, while Italy’s Emanuele Dainotti allows us an almost Godardian glimpse into the mind of a filmmaker in Hedgehog’s Dilemma.





                                                              









                                                          Collage #37




                                       



       







                                                      Hedgehog's Dilemma



Blast from the Past takes us back to 1995 Australia and Margaret Haselgrove’s black-and-white experimental narrative Replay, described as a cinematic etude informed by questions of sexual identity.






                                                                  









                                                              Replay


For a complete change of pace, we plunge into the mesmerising Almost Forgotten by Canada’s Charles Tashiro. And for the grand finale, we have brain-stomping sci-fi fashion show LED3Times from Italy’s Alessandro Amaducci.






                                                              








                                                       Almost Forgotten





                                                              






          




                                                             LED3Times


So put aside an hour over 03 – 04 December and get blown away by some of the world’s finest risk-taking filmmakers, streaming internationally from The Screening Room 

 www.salto.nl/programma/the-screening-room/


or click here 

 




Saturday, 26 November 2022

URGENT LATEBREAKING NEWS - Experimental film-maker and curator David King invites you to participate online at the Exploratory Visions Film Festival

This information was first published on Peter Tammer's blog Friends of the Armchair Traveller . The program finishes this weekend at close of Sunday 27 November - Dutch time - and next weekend's program starts on 03 December and runs until end of 04 December - also Dutch time). The link to the program is provided at the end of the Program Information. I guess one day we'll learn why an Australian film-maker and curator is screening out of the Netherlands instead of from his own country.

*****************************

David King writes: Echoes of war reverberate through the first weekend’s Exploratory Visions animation + experimental + avant garde film program this year.


From Finland, Eija Temiseva’s abstract but powerful Feelings of War is followed by Indian director Debraj Naiya’s Seedlings which looks at the trauma suffered by children in an unnamed theatre of war, followed by Janja Rakus’s Song For Haron (Slovenia) which evokes a ferry taking the dead across the River Styx.





 'Feelings of War' - Eija Temiseva






'Seedlings' - Debraj Maiya




'Song or Haron' - Janja Rakus


But it’s not all doom and gloom. This is the first time the program will open with a student film – Yuzuki Tachibana’s Deduce from Genjipai is a delightful and intriguing experimental animation from Japan which evokes the spirit of Rene Magritte.



'Deduce from Gejapai' -Yuzuki Tachibana

Australia’s Ian Gibbins gives us a haunting and visually seductive video poem in After Image while the USA’s Dee Hood explodes our minds with Fragments of Knowable Truth, and Canada’s Deb Ethier - Best Film award winner at the 2021 Hell Chess Film Festival – brings us her award-winning animation Once There was a Girl.



 'After Image' - Ian Gibbins





'Fragments of Knowable Truth' - Dee Hood





 'Once There was a Girl' - Deborah Ethier

There’s also a special presentation of ABODE – a series of films made by an international collective of filmmakers who took Ito Takashi’s 1985 experimental horror film GRIM as a source of inspiration for their own films about a place of residence, work or refuge. The filmmakers are Kunal Biwas (India), Camelia Mirescu (Italy), Rrose Present (Spain), Hiroshi Atobe (Japan), Anna Grigorian (Armenia-Canada), Debjit Bagchi (India), David King (Australia – also curator) and Serge Maslov-Szymarski (Stateless).







And for the trance-pumping grand finale we welcome the return of Dean Winkler and Don Butler (USA) with their eye-popping and mind-bending blend of live action, 2D, 3D and CGI animation in Our America.






'Our America' - Dean Winkler & Don Butler


And all this in just one hour. So put aside an hour over 26 – 27 November and tune in to The Screening Room at www.salto.nl/programma/the-screening-room/  for the first weekend’s edition of Exploratory Visions animation + experimental + avant garde film program for 2022.

See Trailer below.

https://vimeo.com/773141996


Thursday, 14 July 2022

An Overlooked Australian Film (2) - David Hare remembers, in graphic detail, THE PHALLIC FOREST (Kit Guyatt, 1970) and also remembers author Michael Wilding.


Now probably forgotten but a huge breakthrough in Oz cinema from 1970.

As far as I can remember The Phallic Forest was written by Michael Wilding, then in professorial residence at Sydney University on the Leavisite faction of the then warring English Department. He co-produced it with Kit Guyatt who directed it.
I attended in 1970 at Sydney Uni what was probably its only screening, given the explicit nudity and a last-scene erect cock poking through a fence. The credits for the movie are exhaustive but leave two mysteries unanswered: where was it shot (Kit lived in Balmain at the time.) and who owned the quite splendid cock which finally ends the tensions between Female Lawrentian cock worship (always displaced from D.H. Himself.) And the lead actress’ clarifying laughter in the final shots at the Freuduan absurdity.
In 1970 the film in public screening would have instantly attracted vice squad raids and legal punishment. But a mere year away, Australia introduced the “R” certifucate in September 1971. In the year following, 1972 United Artists commercial distribution would bring in Pasolini’s Decameron, for public screening intact, including female frontal nudity and yet another erect cock. Another year later my friend Jennifer Sabine would import a copy of Genet’s Un Chant d’Amour for deposit at the then National Film Library. Yet more cock!!
Vive le Queue! I once asked Kit if he could introduce me to the owner of the Phallic Forest cock, but he never ‘fessed up.

Mike Wilding was a charming man also a good mate of the late Frank Moorhouse. His time at Sydney Uni was marked by ideological warfare between a more or less left and right factions, with the latter winning alas. The latter was championed by the hideous Leonie Kramer whom we all called Leonie Crazy. I should add I never even made it past English 1 - this was one of several units of the eventual BA which I flunked effortlessly. Five years to struggle through a three year pass BA. I loathed Uni for the study side but the politics and sex and drugs made it worthwhile.

Mike did a Sydney Uni seminar on Pasolini which he invited me to host, having heard about my dissertation for Italian year three pass from my professor, Fred May. I had done zero preparation and given my terror of facing audiences I was hiding away getting stoned in a nearby house in Glebe. But friends dragged me out and into the Union conference rooms where the small audience encouraged some degree of expostulation from me, and the whole thing eventually rolled along very nicely. Mike had a knack of getting the best out of “difficult” people, like me, at that time.

Editor's Note: Kit Guyatt and The Phallic Forest are not quite totally forgotten. A box set (cover above) of three of Kit's films including The Phallic Forest, is available for purchase via digital download from https://www.artfilms-digital.com



Friday, 20 August 2021

Streaming - Peter Tammer draws attention to an international online exhibition of the work of Australian experimental film-maker David King

David King

Peter Tammer writes

It's not easy for local filmmakers who create short avant garde or experimental work to have overseas presentation of any single work, let alone a whole programme which shows their entire body of work. 

I got a huge buzz when Bill Mousoulis and Chris Luscri organised a two retro programmes of some of my work a few years ago at AFW.

I can assure you that it was very important for me at the time to see my films being enjoyed by people who may never have seen them otherwise.

David King has been the receipient of a rare honour as his filmwork will soon be presented online at  Salto 1TV, The Netherlands via this link:

All details of the programme on my blog:


Congrats to you David.