Pan 697 (1974)
Género :
Tiempo de ejecución : 1M
Director : Hollis Frampton
Sinopsis
A butchered cow is decapitated in this short film by Hollis Frampton.
A series of ghost-like vehicles drive by in this short film by Hollis Frampton.
The 8 minute short is open to interpretation as it examines the inner thoughts of several people around a table, with the Rita Hayworth version of Put the Blame on Mame playing on the soundtrack.
The camera pans across a field of flowers at extreme speeds in this short film by Hollis Frampton.
A six minute film of the funeral of the murdered Metropolitan Emilianos of Grevena, of which all has been lost, save for 17 seconds. Emilianos was murdered on October 1st, 1911.
A series of papers flutter in the wind in this short film by Hollis Frampton.
"I have not changed the editing structure. I have made the films printable. They are the first known fully collaged films, i.e., films made from found footage, and were done sometime in the ‘40s. Cornell combines Vaudeville jugglers, animal acts, circus performers, children eating and dancing, science demonstrations, mythical excerpts, and crucial freeze-frames of faces into a timeless structure, totally unconcerned with our usual expectations of “montage” or cinematic progression. He collects images and preserves them in some kind of cinematic suspension that is hard – impossible – to describe. But it’s a delight to anyone whose soul has not been squashed by the heavy dictates of Art." —Larry Jordan
Another street scene from the Lumiere company
In GLORIA! Frampton juxtaposes nineteenth-century concerns with contemporary forms through the interfacing of a work of early cinema with a videographic display of textual material. These two formal components (the film and the texts) in turn relate to a nineteenth-century figure, Frampton's maternal grandmother, and to a twentieth-century one, her grandson (filmmaker Frampton himself). In attempting to recapture their relationship, GLORIA! becomes a somewhat comic, often touching meditation on death, on memory and on the power of image, music and text to resurrect the past.
Oscar nominated animated short from 1972. An animated short from British comedian Bob Godfrey.
The men of the The 28th (Māori) Battalion are seen returning to Wellington Harbour from WWII aboard the ship Dominion Monarch after their time spent serving in WW2. Their families wait to greet them with pōwhiri and hākari, whilst those men never to return are also remembered.
A bill poster comes upon a blank wall, and immediately puts up a poster advertising a movie show at one location.
". ..As though you were approaching earth as a god, from cosmic consciousness. You see the same things but with completely different meaning."
Man's rebellion against the world of the digits.
A short film by Hollis Frampton.
Short film which documents Marian Anderson's singing performance at the Lincoln Memorial.
A Berlin street scene.
London to Brighton in 4 minutes BBC interlude. From the days when TV was all live and programming was hectic. Often when one program finished, the next one was not ready yet, and the gap had to be filled. So the BBC developed a number of interludes to fill these gaps, this being the most famous one.
Documentary following an Edinburgh fishing trawler, the "Isabella Grieg".