Simple but intriguing essay on the contrasts and details of the body’s social behavior, made from ephemeral fragments of image. The feet of women, always in high heels, walking or standing still, waiting, uncomfortable. Male torsos, robust, with jackets and vests, hands that gesticulate or are put in pockets. Groups of two or three torsos of men, smoking. Cuts to black, briefer shots, female feet walking faster. The pace in the succession of these images of attractive textures in total silence restlessly reinforces the submission of the bodies to their class and gender. —BAFICI
Su Friedrich’s filmmaking aesthetic arose out of the confluence of feminism and American avant-garde film in the 1970s. Deeply influenced by both traditions, her work nevertheless reflects an ambivalence towards the more rigid ideas of each movement. Early short films like Cool Hands, Warm Heart and Scar Tissue showed the influence of a then-dominant strain of feminist film theory which linked traditional notions of cinematic pleasure with the oppression of women and sought to deny that pleasure through a systematic, polemical critique of it. Friedrich became increasingly uncomfortable with denying pleasure to her audience and broke away decisively with Damned If You Don’t, an unabashedly humorous and erotic tale about a woman seducing a nun.
A brilliant editor, Friedrich weaves elaborate juxtapositions between text (usually scratched directly onto the film), sound, images, and found footage. She first used scratched texts in the dream diary film Gently Down the Stream and also… read more