Gustav Deutsch is a maestro of found footage filmmaking. In this enterprise, he travels to film archives worldwide, researches, and excavates clips from obscure films, and reassembles them into montage sequences that create compelling visual narratives organized around larger thematic concerns. Two of his films have previously shown at the Tribeca Film Festival: FILM IST. 7-12 (2003), which addresses questions of magic, the circus, and the fantasy aspect of cinema traced back to Georges Méliès, and World Mirror Cinema (2005), which focuses on movie theaters and the entertainment culture.
In FILM IST. a girl & a gun, the director weaves together a stunning array of color-tinted images from a variety of genres, including scientific, erotic, fiction, and actuality films. Deutsch also obtained privileged access to the film archives of the Kinsey Institute for Research in Sex, Gender and Reproduction, enabling him to incorporate sequences from especially rare erotic and sex films into his latest oeuvre. Deutsch adroitly assembles a precisely constructed, mesmerizing ebb and flow of images into extraordinary montage sequences divided into five acts: Genesis, Paradeisos, Eros, Thanatos, and Symposion.
Within this narrative construction, the director creates a stunning vision of the natural and mythological order of the universe, love between the sexes, and weapons of mass destruction. These unique images are complemented by a dramatic music track, alternating between both haunting and romantic melodies. Opening the film with an arresting side view of Annie Oakley shooting her gun at the target, and ending with the iconic, startling shot of the cowboy in The Great Train Robbery aiming his gun at the audience, Deutsch implicates the spectator in the eternal cycle of life and death, so brilliantly and uniquely articulated during 90 minutes of cinematic construction. —Tribeca Film Festival
Gustav Deutsch, born in Vienna in 1952, is a leading figure of international found-footage cinema. In his extravagant “remixes” of film history, every genre imaginable has its place: fiction and document, magic fables and newsreels, amateur and scientific films. Although his works are highly playful and often humorous, he is not concerned with ironic effects when choosing and editing his found materials. Essentially, Deutsch’s filmmaking looks for a “sensual comprehension” of the medium, and for an understanding of the ways in which cinema, history and individual lives are intertwined. The title of one of his major works sums up this perspective: Welt Spiegel Kino (World Mirror Cinema).
In Deutsch’s case, however, the multiply fragmented “mirror” that stands between “world” and “cinema” becomes a veritable hall of mirrors. The Retrospective devoted to his oeuvre is meant to lead audiences to precisely this place. It opens with the première of Gustav Deutsch’s… read more
Even as critics cobble together their year-end and decade-end lists, 2010 is already beginning to take shape. The Sundance Film Festival
elegante y bella manera de resignificar el cine del pasado. deutsch tiene una gran capacidad para manejar ese acervo y crear una obra en la que por encima de cualquier cosa, brillan sus cualidades… read review
In response to JRH:
“the viewer is in need of a relief from oversaturated color palates.”
I wasn’t. I didn’t notice them much, which, realizing this now, is a bad thing, because they probably… read review
The latest installment of Ist is inundated with color filters and the viewer is in need of a relief from oversaturated color palates. Moments of the film are gorgeous (such as the very beginning scene… read review