From: mat fleming (email suppressed)
Date: Tue Jul 20 2010 - 15:22:20 PDT
I agree with everything Steve said if I had to explain fundamentally why
film is my prefered medium (and why don't know if I'd continue making moving
image stuff if video was the only option).
I'd add for myself that various things unique to the medium inspire ideas in
me. The fact that it sometimes takes a long time to do something means I
come up with lazy solutions or I have time to change my mind or think about
something a different way. Also the fact that it almost always has to
involve other people (even if it's just shopping for supplies) I at least
have a conversation and often you have other people around and their input.
Video can is so boring to do by comparison. I think, in my films, these
'social' properties of film always appear on the screen (albeit in oblique
ways) that enhance the work - the 'negative' attributes appear on the screen
too of course but I don't seem to care so much about them - they make me
feel punk and therefore cooler than everyone else :)
Mat
On Tue, Jul 20, 2010 at 10:25 PM, Steve Polta <email suppressed> wrote:
> Alain comes close to making a point that I was considering making.
> Some (at least myself) work with film because it is personally enjoyable. I
> happen to like tinkering with machines (cameras, projector, editors, etc)
> and I like working with my hands. I like looking at the row of still images
> on a film strip and I like cutting and reassembling pictures (and sounds).
> There's much much more that I "like" about film but this is a large part of
> it. This enjoyment is completely personal and really need be no one else's
> concern but it is a large part of what motivates me. As Hollis Frampton said
> somewhere, "if you don't enjoy your work on an idiot level" (i.e. the
> physical "work" of the process), it's not going to work out for you. This
> attitude doesn't make my films (or Frampton's) any better than anyone else's
> but it explains a large part of why I work with film. It is arguable that
> the history of avant-garde/experimental film is the history of men and women
> (clearly including Frampton) who held similar fascinations.
>
> I mean, what are most of us talking about other than the free use of our
> leisure time? Don't we want to do what we enjoy? Besides contributing to a
> esoteric community what else is there? Working with video, editing on a
> computer, makes me feel like I'm working in a office, and I don't like that
> feeling. If that's filmmaking I think I'd rather do something else with my
> time.
>
> Steve Polta, speaking for himself...
>
> --- On *Tue, 7/20/10, 40 Frames <email suppressed>* wrote:
>
>
> From: 40 Frames <email suppressed>
> Subject: Re: [Frameworks] FUTURE OF FILM (was Letter to other Filmmaker
> Artists)
>
> To: "Experimental Film Discussion List" <email suppressed>
> Date: Tuesday, July 20, 2010, 12:52 PM
>
>
>
> Tim,
>
> You make a good point, though I wonder who cares anymore, esp with so much
> pressure to produce and produce often. Working with film
> can slow this process down.
>
> I see the matter as a quality of work issue...
> sadly, it's also a part of the economy (solid state building and repair, machine shops,
> not to mention processing and printing
> labs) that is dying. The old models of work had us doing more with our hands than typing.
>
>
> Alain
>
>
>
>
> On Tue, Jul 20, 2010 at 12:36 PM, Tim Halloran <email suppressed>
> > wrote:
>
>> Related to several of the ongoing discussions:
>>
>> One thing that has been distressing me lately is the dismissal and
>> denigration of analog film practices as tedious, time-consuming, and, that
>> most dreaded of all, "boring."
>>
>> I really think that analog shooting, editing, and projection are true
>> manifestations of a kind of "slow cinema" movement that should be explored
>> and embraced rather than discarded.
>>
>> I don't think there is anything that gets me more calm and centered than a
>> long, quiet, and yes, *slow *editing session on a flatbed in a dim
>> editing room. Its bliss man. ;]
>>
>> http://slowdownnow.org/
>>
>> Tim
>>
>>
>>
>> ------------------------------
>>
>> ...because this work is really slow and exhausting...
>>
>> Bernd
>>
>> On 20.07.2010, at 22:52, Sam Wells wrote:
>>
>>
>> To go back to the idea of the "future"... who cares what "future" there is
>> for film? Or for anything?
>>
>>
>> Are you joking ?
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>
>
> --
> 40 FRAMES
> Alain LeTourneau
> Pam Minty
>
> 40 FRAMES
> Attention: Pam Minty
> PO Box 15207
> Portland, OR 97293
> USA
>
> +1 503 231 6548
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