Neelon Crawford

Filmes

Kate and Anna McGarrigle
Sound Recordist
A short documentary about singers Kate and Anna McGarrigle made by animator Caroline Leaf.
For the Spider Woman
Producer
In this film, dancer and choreographer Jane Comfort performs a short dance titled “For the Spider Woman.” She intentionally threw herself off balance and then recovered. We filmed the same dance once a month during the term of her pregnancy. As her body grew and her balance changed, successive months were denoted by the change of colors of her leotards.
For the Spider Woman
Director
In this film, dancer and choreographer Jane Comfort performs a short dance titled “For the Spider Woman.” She intentionally threw herself off balance and then recovered. We filmed the same dance once a month during the term of her pregnancy. As her body grew and her balance changed, successive months were denoted by the change of colors of her leotards.
The Vincent
Director
There is nothing like a summer ride on a legendary Vincent Black Shadow motorcycle to “blow the stink off.” Driven to a top speed of over 100 miles an hour by computer graphics artist David DiFrancesco on the backroads near Westbury, Long Island, NY.
Lago Agrio Gas Burn
Director
A portrait of power as natural gas was vented and burned from an oil field in the jungle of eastern Ecuador.
Untitled Bulb
Director
Another energized detail of a filament in a red electric bulb.
Screen Gems
Director
I found the pixel structures in extreme close-ups of my Sony Trinitron television’s screen surface to be an endless source of colorful kinetics, often more interesting than the presented program.
KMK Cane
Director
Making short, silent, single-subject films allows the specific forms and movements to be savored without the burden of a distracting drama or explanation. Filmed in Hawaii.
Banana Leaves
Director
“The series of South American films...shot in Ecuador in 1976, such as Banana Leaves and Lago Agrio Gas Burn, speak to what one critic had earlier described as “an almost pantheistic reverence for [the] phenomenal world.”
Laredo Sugar Mill
Director
Shot in Peru in 1974, this is an examination of a vintage mechanical mill crushing sugar cane.
Passing
Director
With films such as Passing, Paths of Fire II, and Light Pleasures, the viewer’s retinal after-image is enhanced by the dark frames after bright frames. This reveals the complicated relationship between the eye, the retina, and perception.
Paths of Fire II
Director
From two color camera rolls filmmaker Michael Mideke and I shot on July 4, 1969, we began editing many versions, independently and together. I worked running a 16mm Bell & Howell “J” contact printer in San Francisco, which allowed me to make many generations of printing elements not normally available to customers.
Fire Flames
Director
Optically printed frames of a flickering candle flame.
La Selva
Director
The films shot during 1973–74 in Ecuador, Peru, and Bolivia span a range of interests. Some, like Ship Side Steel Plate Lights and Laredo Sugar Mill, are examinations of visual details. Others, like La Selva, which I completed using a number of complicated yellow and green filters, are portraits of places and their energies.
Ship Side Steel Plate Lights
Director
Bright sun reflecting off the water’s surface onto the black hull of a cargo ship made a fluid painting with light and steel.
Sun Dream
Director
[…The] first of a series of one-minute films to replace television commercials.
Mobius
Director
The material…was shot primarily on the West Coast, some in New York, during 1969–71. Divided into eight sections, Mobius defines a motion from downtown San Francisco through a forest in Los Padres National Forest, a student (Michael Anton) practicing Tai Chi Chuan, to the southern Big Sur coast. It pertains to sensing the intensity of the energy that surrounds one.
Window Dance
Director
A chance meeting with contemporary dancer Ishi Kamamoto during a visit to London led to the filmmaker shooting the performer’s improvised dance in natural light alongside a canal which Crawford later edited when he returned to San Francisco. “With Window Dance I explored how any image contains aspects of a “surface” to look at and a “window” to look through.”
Needle at Sea Bottom
Director
Influenced by the early theories of Sergei Eisenstein (1898–1948), in Needle at Sea Bottom I sought to create and implied time and space not found in either of the component images…the power of still awareness is literally depicted…. The film’s title is taken from the name of a specific named movement in the Tai Chi Chuan.
Saturday Club Meeting
Director
On the first and third Saturday of each month, Master Choy Kam-man has a club meeting with all of his students who have completed at least one course in Tai Chi Chuan. Together, the students practice their form and Master Choy helps them to correct their movements….
Light Pleasures
Director
Visually oriented films presented as moving light paintings enabled me to leave the structures and expectations of dramatic and documentary motion pictures aside.
Prison 1
Director
During the winter of 1968–69, I saw that much of the footage I was shooting was filled with a tension reflecting my own anxieties. Rather than terminate my filmmaking, I chose to shoot a film about self-generating depression. Prison I is about the frustration and fear reaching out to others and risking the revelation of one’s self.
Skyjacker
Director
Mostly animated from 35mm slides, Skyjacker slips to a dream world of Ohio woods, British Columbia winter, and New York. A critical aspect to film work that interested me was the second phase effort found in the editing choices. While placing two still photographs next to each other creates a combined effect that neither image transmits alone, the editorial options in cinema are considerably more complicated.
Rays
Director
[…A] tribute to the Sun. It is a celebration of light and water shot in Ohio and while crossing the country to the Northwest during the spring and summer of 1969.
Freakquently
Director
I shot my first film on 16 millimeter inside the eight-foot mirrored cube “optical sculpture” I had built in 1966, and on exterior locations, as a blissful celebration of the visual tools and techniques I found at my disposal. Bruce Baillie’s Castro Street (1966) confirmed my intuition that making visually defined films was the direction I wanted to pursue.