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Stille Nacht I: Dramolet

Dramolet

United Kingdom

1988

1 Min
Black and White
English
  • Currently 3.8/5 Stars.
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DIR Stephen Quay, Timothy Quay

PROD Keith Griffiths

SCR Stephen Quay, Timothy Quay

DP Stephen Quay, Timothy Quay

ED Keith Griffiths

ANIM Stephen Quay, Timothy Quay

Melbourne (Animation), Melbourne (Cabinet of Dreams: The Brothers Quay)

Synopsis

The Quay Brothers made their first foray into the world of the pop promo in 1986, when they were amongst a number of animators who worked on Peter Gabriel’s ‘Sledgehammer’ video (d. Stephen R. Johnson). Although they had mixed feelings about their contribution, ‘Sledgehammer’ was one of the most influential videos of its era, and opened up new commissioning possibilities. In 1988, the US-based MTV cable television music network asked several animators to create a number of very short pieces that could be played as an ‘Art Break’ between the music videos that formed the bulk of the station’s output.

The typically cryptic subtitle reads ‘Dramolet für R.W. in Herisau’, which is the first reference in the Quays’ output to Swiss writer Robert Walser (1878-1956), who ranks alongside Franz Kafka and Bruno Schulz in their literary pantheon (and whose work also inspired The Comb, 1990, and the Quays’ first feature Institute Benjamenta, 1995). Walser specialised in highly condensed, allusive pieces, including prose, poems and miniature dramas, or ‘dramolets’. He spent over two-and-a-half decades in various institutions, culminating in the Herisau sanatorium in eastern Switzerland. On Christmas Day, 1956, he was found frozen to death in a nearby field.

None of this is explicitly dramatised in the film, but there’s a pervasive impression of chilly, institutionalised loneliness. The Quays’ familiar puppet animation (here looking even more cracked and peeling than usual) is here enhanced by the use of animated iron filings, which suggest the rapid formation of frost over every surface, the swaying of the individual particles suggesting a hefty buffeting by a keen, piercing wind. The puppet watches this ‘frost’ out of the window, then turns to a bowl that’s filled with the same substance. His spoon begins to vibrate and, as if in sympathy, more spoons emerge from the wall behind him. As the picture fades to black (via a silent-movie-style iris-out), the ‘frost’ is starting to form on the surface of the table. To chime with the shopworn imagery, the music is deliberately distorted, as if sourced from a badly-tuned crystal radio.

The Quays received several more commissions from MTV over the following few years, the one-minute Ex Voto (1989) and what would become the three subsequent instalments in the Stille Nacht cycle: Are We Still Married?, Tales From Vienna Woods (both 1992) and Can’t Go Wrong Without You (1993). They also designed an animated MTV station ident. —Michael Brooke, BFI Screenonline

Director

Original

Stephen Quay

The Quay brothers are identical twin brothers born outside Philadelphia, in Norristown, Pennsylvania. They studied Film and Illustration at the Philadelphia College of Art {1965-1969} followed by a Masters Degree in London at the Royal College of Art {1969-1972} where they continued their studies in Illustration and Film, particularly the latter, where they made three short animation films. Returning to America they attempted to make a living from free-lance book illustration out of New York, though economically times were difficult. In terms of their work, there was an increasing frustration with the two-dimensional graphic realm of drawing and little by little they gravitated towards wanting to create in miniature (in the manner of Joseph Cornell’s boxes) powerful three-dimensional realms, using puppets and objects through the medium of film animation. In 1978 they received a National Endowment Grant for the Arts. They travelled throughout England, Belgium and Holland researching… read more

Original

Timothy Quay

Stephen and Timothy Quay (born June 17, 1947 in Norristown, Pennsylvania) are American identical twin brothers better known as the Brothers Quay or Quay Brothers. They are influential stop-motion animators. They are the recipients of the 1998 Drama Desk Award for Outstanding Set Design for their work on the play The Chairs.

They reside and work in England, having moved there in 1969 to study at the Royal College of Art, London after studying illustration at the Philadelphia College of Art, now the University of the Arts in Philadelphia. In England they made their first short films, which no longer exist after the only print was irreparably damaged.[citation needed] They spent some time in the Netherlands in the 1970s and then returned to England where they teamed up with another Royal College student, Keith Griffiths, who produced all of their films. The trio formed Koninck Studios in 1980, which is currently based in Southwark, south London.

The Quays’ works (1979-present… read more

Wall

Displaying 2 wall posts.
Picture of M. Hulot

M. Hulot

15Jul11

http://www.dailymotion.com/video/xdm01h_stille-nacht-quartet_creation

Picture of Patricia Vidal

Patricia Vidal

18Jul10

Robert Walser.

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