In 1969 Ken Jacobs broke new cinematic ground with TOM, TOM, THE PIPER’S SON, a feature-length work produced by re-photographing a 16mm film print of a 1905 Edison short. In that now classic film, Jacobs zooms into the image, exposing the inner workings, minor movements, background actors and bustling energy contained in the antiquated celluloid frames. Added to the National Film Registry by the Library of Congress in 2007, and included since 1970 in Anthology’s ESSENTIAL CINEMA repertory collection, TOM, TOM is an acknowledged masterpiece of ‘structuralist’ and found-footage cinema and has had a major impact on multiple generations of moving image artists and aficionados.
40 years later, and now camera-free, Jacobs revisits the original Edison footage with entirely new digital tools in hand. ANAGLYPH TOM is a state-of-the-art, delightfully disorienting 3D take on a very old subject. Rather than delving deeply into the image it brings the image off the screen to the viewer, presenting the ancient actors and antics in vibrant close-ups that literally dance in mid-air when watched with 3D glasses. Interweaving up-to-date footage of our current economic downfall into these timeless diversions, Jacobs crafts utterly mesmerizing manipulations throughout, pushing the limits of his software and our notions of the cinema. —Anthology Film Archives
Distinguished Professor Emeritus, Ken Jacobs, was born in Brooklyn, NY, in 1933. He studied painting with one of the prime creators of Abstract Expressionism, Hans Hofmann, in the mid-fifties. It was then that he also began filmmaking (Star Spangled To Death). His personal star rose, to just about knee high, with the sixties advent of Underground Film. In 1967, with the involvement of his wife Florence and many others aspiring to a democratic rather than demagogic cinema, he created The Millennium Film Workshop in New York City. A nonprofit filmmaker’s co-operative open to all, it made available film equipment, workspace, screenings and classes at little or no cost. Later he found himself teaching large classes of painfully docile students at St. John’s University in Jamaica, Queens.
In 1969, after a week’s guest seminar at Harpur College (now, Binghamton University), students petitioned the Administration to hire Ken Jacobs. Despite his lack of a high school diploma, the Administration… read more
While the New York Film Festival runs on through the weekend, a slew of other festivals around the world are suddenly kicking into gear
Above: the longest sequence in the world, the ribald carnival scene in Tom. Credit: Ken Jacobs. Above: not three dimensions but two: flattened
Above: the longest sequence in the world, the ribald carnival scene in Tom. Credit: Ken Jacobs. Above: not three dimensions but two: flattened