Watch unlimited films online for $6.99.
Try MUBI for FREE.
 

Rameau's Nephew' by Diderot (Thanx to Dennis Young) by Wilma Schoen

Canada

1974

270 Min
Color
English
  • Currently 4.8/5 Stars.
  • 1
  • 2
  • 3
  • 4
  • 5

   |   

DIR Michael Snow

EXEC Michael Snow

PROD Michael Snow

SCR Michael Snow

DP Michael Snow, Babette Mangolte

CAST Jonas Mekas, Jessica Harper, Jackie Burroughs, Bob Cowan, Nam June Paik, Joyce Wieland

ED Michael Snow

SOUND Michael Snow

Synopsis

Described (rather cheekily) by director Michael Snow as a musical comedy, this deft probing of sound/image relationships is one of his wittiest, most entertaining and philosophically stimulating films. In his words, the film “derives its form and the nature of its possible effects from its being built from the inside, as it were, with the actual units of such a film, i.e. the frame and the recorded syllable. Thus its ‘dramatic’ element derives not only from a representation of what may involve us generally in life but from considerations of the nature of recorded speech in relation to moving light-images of people.’”

Snow’s first “talking picture,” the film is divided into approximately twenty sections tied together by thematic rather than narrative concerns. Aside from its most prominent theme – the relationship of the film’s sounds to its images – its concern with memory and the different uses of the word/sound “for/four/fore” is explored. Indeed, the meanings of words and their sounds are played with at length; the film is awash with various puns, quotes and wordplay, which is hinted at in the title (Wilma Schoen is an anagram of Michael Snow) as well as in the cast credits (many of the several dozen names listed – such as Nice Slow Ham, Seminal Chow, Show Me A Ling and Lemon Coca Wish – are anagrams for Michael Snow). —CFE

Director

Original

Michael Snow

Michael Snow is best known for his influential 1967 film Wavelength, which remains one of the landmarks of structuralist cinema. Already an accomplished musician, sculptor, painter, and photographer in his native Canada when he became interested in film after moving to New York in the early ‘60s, he saw filmmaking as a natural extension of his other artmaking activities. His first film, New York Eye and Ear Control, incorporated the “Walking Woman” figure he had already employed in a series of widely-exhibited paintings and sculptures.
His subsequent films investigate the medium’s formal possibilities and are often structured on the mechanical properties of the camera itself. Wavelength is organized around a 42-minute zoom across a New York City loft. His next film, Back and Forth, is built around continuous horizontal and vertical pans across a classroom. These experiments reached their logical extreme with La Région Centrale, for which he built a computer-controlled apparatus… read more

Wall

Displaying 2 wall posts.
Picture of The Stunner

The Stunner

25Jan12

sounds awful, but i'd watch it.

Picture of apursansar

apursansar

31Oct11

An intriguing experimental film, some kind of “Finnegans Wake” of cinema that distorts and reinvents language while at the same time demanding a constant distrust in the convergence of image and sound. Well worth checking out, but: Abandon all viewing habits, all ye who enter here!

Sean John and Max painter like this

Related Films