Peter Bo Rappmund

Birth : 1979-10-08, Casper, Wyoming, USA

History

Peter Bo Rappmund was born in Casper, Wyoming, and lives in Dallas, Texas. He received his BFA from the University of Colorado at Boulder, and a MFA in both music composition and film production from CalArts in Valencia, California. He is the director of several time-lapse films, including: Topophilia, Tectonics, Vulgar Fractions, and Psychohydrography.

Movies

PLAY!
Sound Designer
The imagination of children leads us into a fantasy narrative of play, where adults are nowhere to be found and the harsh reality of nature and imagination takes over. Soon enough, however, we are brought back to earth when playtime comes to an end, in this case with the devastating closure of a unique Icelandic kindergarten.
Tiger Oak + Echo
Music
When Echo, who longs for his older brother's approval, is allowed to join a risky ambush against the Soviet forces, he makes a mistake that costs him everything.
Communion Los Angeles
Animation
'Communion Los Angeles' traces California’s oldest freeway, the 110, as it courses from the San Gabriel Mountains to the Pacific Ocean, defining and dividing the communities it is designed to serve. Viewing the 35 miles of blacktop as both infrastructure and public architecture, this equinoctial journey highlights dichotomies of mobility, technology and urban space.
Communion Los Angeles
Sound Designer
'Communion Los Angeles' traces California’s oldest freeway, the 110, as it courses from the San Gabriel Mountains to the Pacific Ocean, defining and dividing the communities it is designed to serve. Viewing the 35 miles of blacktop as both infrastructure and public architecture, this equinoctial journey highlights dichotomies of mobility, technology and urban space.
Communion Los Angeles
Cinematography
'Communion Los Angeles' traces California’s oldest freeway, the 110, as it courses from the San Gabriel Mountains to the Pacific Ocean, defining and dividing the communities it is designed to serve. Viewing the 35 miles of blacktop as both infrastructure and public architecture, this equinoctial journey highlights dichotomies of mobility, technology and urban space.
Communion Los Angeles
Editor
'Communion Los Angeles' traces California’s oldest freeway, the 110, as it courses from the San Gabriel Mountains to the Pacific Ocean, defining and dividing the communities it is designed to serve. Viewing the 35 miles of blacktop as both infrastructure and public architecture, this equinoctial journey highlights dichotomies of mobility, technology and urban space.
Communion Los Angeles
Director
'Communion Los Angeles' traces California’s oldest freeway, the 110, as it courses from the San Gabriel Mountains to the Pacific Ocean, defining and dividing the communities it is designed to serve. Viewing the 35 miles of blacktop as both infrastructure and public architecture, this equinoctial journey highlights dichotomies of mobility, technology and urban space.
The Sun
Editor
Compiled and animated from still images.
The Sun
Cinematography
Compiled and animated from still images.
The Sun
Director
Compiled and animated from still images.
Opuntia
Sound
A feature length experimental documentary based on the writing of Cabeza de Vaca.
XYZ
Editor
Oil spills around Oak Cliff, Dallas.
XYZ
Cinematography
Oil spills around Oak Cliff, Dallas.
XYZ
Director
Oil spills around Oak Cliff, Dallas.
Topophilia
Editor
An exploration of built and natural environments along the 800-mile length of the Trans-Alaska Pipeline.
Topophilia
Director of Photography
An exploration of built and natural environments along the 800-mile length of the Trans-Alaska Pipeline.
Topophilia
Director
An exploration of built and natural environments along the 800-mile length of the Trans-Alaska Pipeline.
Water Theater
Editor
White Rock Lake Water Theater in Dallas, Texas. Sculpture by Frances Bagley and Tom Orr. Video compiled from 35mm stills.
Water Theater
Cinematography
White Rock Lake Water Theater in Dallas, Texas. Sculpture by Frances Bagley and Tom Orr. Video compiled from 35mm stills.
Water Theater
Director
White Rock Lake Water Theater in Dallas, Texas. Sculpture by Frances Bagley and Tom Orr. Video compiled from 35mm stills.
The Tony Longo Trilogy
Editor
Although he has been limited to bit parts, the actor Tony Longo is an axiom of American action cinema: the giant who is too soft-hearted for the job. Composed of three short movies, Hey, Asshole!, Adam Kesher and You Fucking Dickhead!, The Tony Longo Trilogy brings together all of the actor’s scenes in three of his most memorable films: The Takeover (Troy Cook, 1995), Living in Peril (Jack Ersgard, 1997) and Mulholland Dr. (David Lynch, 2001).
Tectonics
Editor
A survey of the physical qualities and metaphysical quandaries of the United States-Mexico border. Follows the boundary and its immediate surrounding topography incrementally from the Gulf of Mexico to the Pacific Ocean.
Tectonics
Director of Photography
A survey of the physical qualities and metaphysical quandaries of the United States-Mexico border. Follows the boundary and its immediate surrounding topography incrementally from the Gulf of Mexico to the Pacific Ocean.
Tectonics
Director
A survey of the physical qualities and metaphysical quandaries of the United States-Mexico border. Follows the boundary and its immediate surrounding topography incrementally from the Gulf of Mexico to the Pacific Ocean.
Reconversão
Director of Photography
With Reconversão (Reconversion), Thom Andersen opens another fascinating chapter of his ongoing investigation of architectural landscapes, their filmic representation, and their relation to history, by focusing on 17 buildings and projects by the often-controversial Portuguese architect Eduardo Souto de Moura—winner of the 2011 Pritzker Prize. Echoing Dziga Vertov’s concepts and Eadweard Muybridge’s techniques (shooting only one or two frames per second), Andersen masterfully brings forward what makes Souto de Moura an original: the incorporation of the passing of time into architectural designs, positing them within a history fraught with class struggle and societal changes, in a continuum with ruins—from which they may originate, and to which they will return—and with nature—which they frame, and by which they are framed.
Vulgar Fractions
Director
Vulgar Fractions ostensibly begins as a physical exploration of seven unique state intersections along Nebraska...
Psychohydrography
Director
An analysis of the flow of water from mountain to aqueduct, city to sea. Shot at and around the Eastern Sierra Nevada, Owens Valley, Los Angeles Aqueduct, Los Angeles River and Pacific Ocean.
A Staircase
Editor
Single frames vectorized and stitched before processing through an analog EAB.
A Staircase
Cinematography
Single frames vectorized and stitched before processing through an analog EAB.
A Staircase
Director
Single frames vectorized and stitched before processing through an analog EAB.
In the Ocean, on Land
Editor
Panasonic PV-GS83 in a plastic bag thrown in the ocean.
In the Ocean, on Land
Cinematography
Panasonic PV-GS83 in a plastic bag thrown in the ocean.
In the Ocean, on Land
Director
Panasonic PV-GS83 in a plastic bag thrown in the ocean.
Two/2
Editor
Music scores are atomized and recompiled into instructions for visual edits and cues. Ties are uncovered between sight and sound.
Two/2
Cinematography
Music scores are atomized and recompiled into instructions for visual edits and cues. Ties are uncovered between sight and sound.
Two/2
Director
Music scores are atomized and recompiled into instructions for visual edits and cues. Ties are uncovered between sight and sound.
Los Angeles Plays Itself
Editorial Services
From its distinctive neighborhoods to its architectural homes, Los Angeles has been the backdrop to countless movies. In this dazzling work, Andersen takes viewers on a whirlwind tour through the metropolis' real and cinematic history, investigating the myriad stories and legends that have come to define it, and meticulously, judiciously revealing the real city that lives beneath.
Los Angeles Plays Itself
Editor
From its distinctive neighborhoods to its architectural homes, Los Angeles has been the backdrop to countless movies. In this dazzling work, Andersen takes viewers on a whirlwind tour through the metropolis' real and cinematic history, investigating the myriad stories and legends that have come to define it, and meticulously, judiciously revealing the real city that lives beneath.
Red Hollywood
Editorial Services
A documentary that examines the films made by the victims of the Hollywood Blacklist and offers a radically different perspective on a key period in the history of American cinema.