This mystical short film has a narrator telling us about a “strange philanthropical secret society” that has been in existence for seven years at a certain building. Its members, Philokinetes, devote their energy and money to studying and promoting a fragment of film they call ‘The Film to Come’. The fragment runs for twenty-three seconds and is in a loop. Thus projected, it can last for hours, days, even years. Apparently, after viewing this fragment one can become somewhat enlightened, and in a deep hypnotic state, brought about by over-repetition of the revealing fragment. As the narrator says: “Once you reach this state, you can see, so they say.” The next section of the film is a watershed: for the narrator is now a different voice and telling us that the fragment has been stolen and the Philokinetes were now in a deep identity crisis. There is a large book of apocryphal wisdom shown called ‘Double Book of the Dancing Mysteries’ that the sect read. Knowledge derived from this book of “mumbo-jumbo and untruths” leads the Philokinetes to believe that cinema had a life independent to humans. Cinema, they said, is “the primeval soup of a new life form. Therefrom were to emerge pure screening creatures, or non topical beings. Vast sets of loops, from which everyone would own a short endless return to self.” Later the Philokinetes claim that the lost fragment was found by the narrator’s daughter, an event which sparks off feasts and banquets which lasted for weeks. The narrator’s voice changes again as he dies whilst overlooking two priests undergoing a solemn leafing through the Double Book, after they have taken a vow of illiteracy. The narrator’s soul has now run away to a cinema, but more importantly, it had become a part of the fragment entitled The Film to Come.Shot mainly in black and white, Ruiz’s familiar shooting style and camera angles are evident in his esoteric and interesting nine minute film. —http://chaoticcinema.pwp.blueyonder.co.uk/
Chilean filmmaker Raúl, or Raoul, Ruiz (1941-2011) was one of the most exciting and innovative filmmakers to emerge from 1960s World Cinema, providing more intellectual fun and artistic experimentation, shot for shot, than any filmmaker since Jean-Luc Godard. A guerrilla who uncompromisingly assaulted the preconceptions of film art, this frightfully prolific figure – he made over 100 films in 40 years – did not adhere to any one style of filmmaking. He worked in 35mm, 16mm and video, for theatrical release and for European TV, and on documentary and fiction features and shorts. His career began in avant-garde theatre where, between 1956 and 1962, he wrote over 100 plays. Although he never directed any of these productions, he did dabble in TV and filmmaking in the early 1960s. In 1968, with the release of his first completed feature, the Cassavetes-like Tres tristes tigres (1968… read more
Le film à venir (1997)
Raoul Ruiz wrote and directed this brief 9 minute parody of film cultist with this tale of an observer to the sacred rites of a sect, Philokinètes, who… read review