Monday, January 14, 2013
Friday, January 11, 2013
Thursday, January 10, 2013
Telling a Story in Color
Tokyo Drifter (1966)
As visually chaotic as Tokyo Drifter appears to be, on a purely abstract level, the color design in this film can operate entirely as its own (separate from the scripted narrative) and tell the same story without effort. What is unsaid or uncertain by scripted means is made clear and reinforced through the use of color.
Monday, January 7, 2013
Saturday, January 5, 2013
Friday, January 4, 2013
Thursday, January 3, 2013
Wednesday, January 2, 2013
Ruppert et Mulot
Amazing work by the french duo Florent Ruppert and Jérôme Mulot. Their comics emphasize sequential movements between panels which lends itself nicely when transitioning into animation. Reminds me a little of Winsor McCay.
For more: http://www.succursale.org
For more: http://www.succursale.org
Tuesday, January 1, 2013
Monday, December 31, 2012
Why are you making me think with your editing ways?
I'm quite partial to jarring cuts in between sequences of film
(regardless of how obsessive they seem or how much they challenge
continuity) because they are bizarrely contradictory: the successions of
cuts are quick and yet they seem to slow down the moments they
interrupt as if the brain is taking extra time to sort out the
condensely packed images (I suppose this is actually the case).
Here are some examples of interesting "quick cuts" I've come across recently.
Mean Streets (1973)
The entire title sequence is incredible---from the cut to a projector that comes out of nowhere, to the home movie, to the music---but the cutting that takes place in between the shots of Charlie's head hitting the pillow is what I want to talk about. As the character falls back in slow-motion, the camera cuts closer and closer to his face. Yes, the editing matches the beat of the music, but abrupt cutting of a single action paired with the slow-motion is fascinating. It is at once both jarring and dream-like, informing us that we are about the enter Charlie's psyche, one of heavy conflict, contradictions, and sensual rawness.
Stolen Kisses (1968)
(Note: Obviously, we'd get a better sense of the rhythm editing with a video, but I couldn't find a clip of this scene anywhere.)
Working as a detective, Antoine Doinel loses sight of the magician he's suppose to be tailing when he decides make a phone call to his girlfriend. Realizing this, he exits the phone booth in a hurry. In what could have been filmed within one shot, what we get instead is an odd series of shots from two different perspectives of him leaving: One from an interior shot in the booth and one exterior. The sort of "rack" cutting of between the two shots happen rapidly, lasting less than a second. It's almost like a subliminal message or even a glitch, as if someone accidentally included a couple frames from the next shot when cutting the scene together. This disruption in the follow of Antoine's exit heightens the anxiety of the situation (though rather quickly) with the flash of the interior shot attempting the keep Antoine within the booth when he clearly needs to leave.
Let me stress the fact that the cuts are telling us this information, not necessarily what is happening within the shot.
The Color Wheel (2011)
This example is a little different of the first two. It's more about condensing time and space than adding extra information to the scene.
At first glance, the cutting of this transition moment between locations seems somewhat strange. As the brother and sister duo, Colin and JR, make their way from a motel to the diner, we first see a shot of a car driving on the road, then a cut to the car pulling up to the diner, and a final cut of the car already parked with Colin and JR walking into the restaurant. We have witnessed a jump-cut people! What make this interesting is that the attempt to condense time is somewhat negated by the car moving in the first two shots and then is stationary in the last one.
It's weird.
Here are some examples of interesting "quick cuts" I've come across recently.
Mean Streets (1973)
The entire title sequence is incredible---from the cut to a projector that comes out of nowhere, to the home movie, to the music---but the cutting that takes place in between the shots of Charlie's head hitting the pillow is what I want to talk about. As the character falls back in slow-motion, the camera cuts closer and closer to his face. Yes, the editing matches the beat of the music, but abrupt cutting of a single action paired with the slow-motion is fascinating. It is at once both jarring and dream-like, informing us that we are about the enter Charlie's psyche, one of heavy conflict, contradictions, and sensual rawness.
Stolen Kisses (1968)
(Note: Obviously, we'd get a better sense of the rhythm editing with a video, but I couldn't find a clip of this scene anywhere.)
Working as a detective, Antoine Doinel loses sight of the magician he's suppose to be tailing when he decides make a phone call to his girlfriend. Realizing this, he exits the phone booth in a hurry. In what could have been filmed within one shot, what we get instead is an odd series of shots from two different perspectives of him leaving: One from an interior shot in the booth and one exterior. The sort of "rack" cutting of between the two shots happen rapidly, lasting less than a second. It's almost like a subliminal message or even a glitch, as if someone accidentally included a couple frames from the next shot when cutting the scene together. This disruption in the follow of Antoine's exit heightens the anxiety of the situation (though rather quickly) with the flash of the interior shot attempting the keep Antoine within the booth when he clearly needs to leave.
Let me stress the fact that the cuts are telling us this information, not necessarily what is happening within the shot.
The Color Wheel (2011)
This example is a little different of the first two. It's more about condensing time and space than adding extra information to the scene.
At first glance, the cutting of this transition moment between locations seems somewhat strange. As the brother and sister duo, Colin and JR, make their way from a motel to the diner, we first see a shot of a car driving on the road, then a cut to the car pulling up to the diner, and a final cut of the car already parked with Colin and JR walking into the restaurant. We have witnessed a jump-cut people! What make this interesting is that the attempt to condense time is somewhat negated by the car moving in the first two shots and then is stationary in the last one.
It's weird.
Sunday, December 30, 2012
Sunday, December 16, 2012
Saturday, December 15, 2012
Now That Everything Has Settled Down . . .
Friday, December 7, 2012
Monday, December 3, 2012
Tuesday, November 27, 2012
Tuesday, November 20, 2012
Alright Guys, it’s Dérive Time
According to Guy Dubord, the spectacle is the most glaring superficial manifestation of mass media. Idealized lives, carefully constructed narratives of film, television, and literature, the presentation and function of our commodities, these are all subject to the influence of the spectacle. It’s a critique of contemporary consumer culture. We are so mesmerized by the spectacle of our society that ordinary objects, locations, images have become emotionally charged. They have become our link to the people around us. We live for objects and images because we do not know of any other way to live.
How can small stories and the mirco-narratives of ordinary life compete with the spectacle? Is it not inherently influenced by mass culture? The discovering the spaces in between reality and fiction are the only ways we can find grace from the influence of the spectacle. The fleeting moments, the trivial events, inspired instances of play are occurrences that can foster new ways of seeing only if one takes the time to examine them. I like to think of them as spectacles of the ordinary. Capturing and interpreting this idea through visual media, how can the nature of the ordinary change our idea of visual representation? Can the ordinary exist as spectacle or does is very qualities negate its transformation?
What the hell is going on in my brain? (Thanks a lot TV)
There he goes. Eating a hamburger. He doesn't even finish it.
And why should we care about this?
Is this a joke? Were we tricked? Did we wasted our time watching this?
In Warhol’s Eating a Hamburger (1982), we are presented with a incredibly mundane situation. It just Andy. He's just eating a hamburger. Yet the very medium of video makes it an event. There is action, drama, and mystery (why didn't he finish that hamburger???)
It is at once mesmerizing and distancing. A screen that demands our gaze and yet offers us something that can be found in the everyday.
We can read into whatever we like about this piece. I like to think of it as a spectacle.
Tuesday, November 13, 2012
Monday, November 12, 2012
Sunday, November 4, 2012
The Reason Why I am Talking About Orwell's Novella "Animal Farm" When I Should be Writing my Artist Statement
The whole story.
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)














