Examines the rediscovery and analysis by two CIA employees, 33 years later, of the US Air Force aerial photographs taken over the Nazi death camps during World War II. –Inbaseline
Harun Farocki was born in Novi Jicín in 1944 in what is today the Czech Republic. He studied at the German Cinematic and Television Academy (DFFB) in Berlin, from which he was expelled in 1968 for political reasons. In addition to writing theoretical texts, he has scripted numerous films and television productions. His work was shown at Documenta 12 in Kassel and in numerous international retrospectives and has received many awards.
Farocki’s early films are marked by ideas of a cultural revolution as formulated by the increasingly radical Left of the time and are explicitly developed as effective means of political propaganda. In this way, “Inextinguishable Fire” (1968/69) seizes upon the Vietnam War as one of the quintessential themes of the student movement. While his politically-motivated educational films subject the audience to an analytical and consciousness-raising agenda, the subsequent auctorial, essayistic, and documentary films call for a more active reception on… read more
Survivance is to release "Images of the World and the inscription on War" and "Respite" by Harun Farocki on DVD on June 7th. English subtitles are available on both films. "Starting with different dispositifs, Harun Farocki's two films invite us to carry out this traversal of the visible [and] form a ditych revealing the two poles of the tragic voyage to the centres of killing." S. Lindeperg www.survivance.net
It's true that whenever we are faced with a moment triumphant or tragic (historically) we often foolishly neglect the utilitarian precision needed to record and essentially systemize these historical events. Instead these lost memories get tossed away in some abyss, and if they by chance are retrieved, these images, documents appear to us as a blur, lacking any language that we can understand. Resnais+Farocki.
What a haunting and strange experience it was to watch this film. One has to apreciate the narrative pulse of Farocki, and how he manages to blend history, technology and a powerful statement without being propagandistic. A true masterpiece.
this is my kind of film! one great example of what politics + esthetics can achive
An overview of Farocki’s first American exhibition, at the MoMA, and a simultaneous retrospective in New York.