Showing posts with label 16mm film series. Show all posts
Showing posts with label 16mm film series. Show all posts

Wednesday, August 17, 2011

Baltimore Hostel's Free Fall Film Series



Select Thursdays @ 7:30 p.m.

HI-Baltimore Hostel

17 W. Mulberry Street

Baltimore, MD 21201

Contact: ehgage@gmail.com



Since arriving in Baltimore early this spring, cineaste extraordinaire Eliot Gage has presented a number of interesting free film screenings at the HI-Baltimore Hostel, located across from the Enoch Pratt Central Library on the corner of Mulberry and Cathedral streets.



With everybody getting in on the free-outdoor-screenings-of-popular-Hollywood-movies-summer-time-fun-act ("Films on the Pier" in Fells Point, "Films on the Hill" in Federal Hill, Little Italy's outdoor series on High Street, etc.) - a trend supported by the major Hollywood studios as they try to offset the increasing threat of NetFlix and on-demand video streaming by selling affordable umbrella licenses and one-time screening rates for their films through vendors like Movie Licensing USA - I find myself growing weary of the glut of mass pop movie entertainment and yearn for good old obscure arthouse, cult and experimental cinema programming (aka "the few, the proud!"). (Speaking of which, let us thank our lucky stars that John Standiford has returned from Roma to schedule another season of Classic Repertory Cinema at the Charles Theatre!)



Like Miguel Sabagol's bygone "Free Wednesday Night 16mm Film Series" screenings at Station North's Hexagon - which relied almost exclusively on the Enoch Pratt Central Library's 16mm film archives (see my reviews at "In Search of Buried 16mm Treasures," "The Great Ecstacy of the 16mm Film Series," and "The Shepherds of Berneray") - Gage's programming ideas are teeming with endlessly fun and creative permutations. And they're indoors, for the true, diehard, hard-top arthouse cineastas (as opposed to the trendy, picnic-under-the-stars populists). Though his audiences so far have been small, I always say it's the quality not the quantity that matters in life. As the rock and roll myth goes, only 30-40 people may have seen the Sex Pistols play Manchester's Lesser Free Trade Hall in 1976 (though now everybody claims "I Swear I Was There"!), but almost everyone in the audience went on to form a band (The Smiths, Joy Division, Simply Red, etc.) or become influential players in the nascent punk rock scene. Less can be more. (Case in point: Artie Bootle, one of the regulars at the screenings, has his own outstanding movie review blog "Moom Pitchers Not To Miss" that examines some of the lesser known films from world cinema.)



Gage recently sent me his tentative autumn 2011 schedule for what he calls "the Free Film Excerpt Series," which is moving from Wednesday nights to select Thursday evenings this fall.



To give you an idea of the type of programming involved, check out my review of Gage's first screening, "Laughter in the Dark" (May 25, 2011).





"Laughter in the Dark" flyer



Following are Gage's program notes for this screening (click on the image to enlarge):





"Laughter in the Dark" program notes, page 1





"Laughter in the Dark" notes, pages 2-3





"Laughter in the Dark" notes, page 4



And here's Gage's own description of his most recent Hostel screening, "Signifying Fade-Ins" (from June 22, 2011).

The beginnings (each roughly 15 minutes) of the four stunning films below advance the graphic art of cinema through mise-en-scène, camera movement, signs, montage, sound and music.



*Love Me Tonight* 1932 Rouben Mamoulian USA

*L’Atalante* 1934 Jean Vigo France

*Le Plaisir* 1952 Max Ophüls France

*Andrei Rublev* 1966 (released 1971) Andrei Tarkovsky USSR



Many great works of cinema art begin with a striking dialogue, monologue or narration to which graphic arts are clearly subservient. For this reason works such as *Apocalypse Now, Contempt, The Cruise, Double Indemnity, Divorce Italian Style, One Two Three, Lolita, My Life to Live, La Ronde, Scarlet Street, The Seventh Seal, *or *Twentieth Century* are not included in this program. The renown beginning of *Citizen Kane* is not included here; nor is *M,* nor *8 1/2*, because each is so well known.


Below are Gage's "Signifying Fade-ins" program notes (click on the image to enlarge):





Signifying Fade-ins flyer, front





Signifying Fade-ins flyer, back



2011 Free Fall Excerpt Series





"Mysteriosos: Eight Film Excerpts with Mysterious Characters

Thursday, September 1 @ 7:30 p.m.



Mysterious characters to include:

Bill Murray

Cary Grant

Hal Holbrook

Katherine Hepburn

Marcel Herrand

Maria Casaros

Rene Navarro

Orson Welles


Here are Gage's program notes for this program (click on an image to enlarge):



Mysteriosos notes, cover





Mysteriosos notes, page 1





Mysteriosos notes, page 2





Mysteriosos notes, page 3





Mysteriosos notes, back page



"Almost Animation"

Thursday, October 6th @ 7:30 p.m.



Possible films include:

George Melies - The Man with the Rubber HeadErnie Gehr - Serene Velocity

Ken Jacobs - Tom, Tom, the Piper's Son

Oscar Fischinger - Composition in Blue

Norman McLaren - Hen Hop

Stan Brakage - Mothlight

Ray Harryhausen - Mother Goose: Little Miss Muffet

Jan Švankmajer - Alice

Lotte Reininger - The Adventures of Prince Achmed

Harry Smith - Heaven and Earth Magic Feature

Max Fleischer - Betty Boop's Rise To Fame

Chuck Jones - Duck Amuck


Oct 15 through Nov 15 - one month for new sprinkler installation at hostel



"Featured Painters"

Thursday, December 1st @ 7:30 p.m.



Painters painting in feature (not documentary) films, including:

Van Gogh, directed by Pialat

Rembrandt, directed by Korda with Charles Laughton and Gertrude Lawrence


"Fast Talkers"

Thursday, December 29 @ 7:30 p.m.



Possible films include:

*One Two Three*, directed by Wilder with James Cagney

*Meet John Doe*, directed by Capra with Barbara Stanwick

*Double Indemnity*, directed by Wilder with Edward G. Robinson

*Twentieth Century*, directed by Hawks, writers included Charles McArthur, Ben Hecht and Preston Sturges with John Barrymore and Carole Lombard

*Rain Man* or *Magnolia* with Tom Cruise




Monday, May 18, 2009

The Great Ecstacy of the 16mm Film Series

The Great Ecstacy of the Sculptor Steiner
Gravity Is My Enemy
Wednesday, May 20, 7 p.m.
The Hexagon, 1825 N. Charles St., hexiconspace.com

Once again I applaud the film enthusiasts at The Hexagon for unearthing gems from the Enoch Pratt Central Library's 16mm film collection. This week's "FREE Wednesday 16mm Film Series" program looks at two unusual artists - one an athletic sculptor who as a skier defied gravity, the other a quadriplegic painter bound by it. Both push the limits of human spirit and expression.

The Great Ecstacy of the Sculptor Steiner
(Werner Herzog, 1975, 45 minutes, in German with English subtitles.)


"Great Ecstacy" opening clip

This is German director (and ski enthusiast) Werner Herzog's documentary about Walter Steiner, a Swiss woodcarver who is considered the world's greatest ski jumper (here called "ski flyers"), who effortlessly broke all the sport's records. It was the first film Herzog tackled after the rigors of directing Klaus Kinksi in Aguirre: The Wrath of God. Following the skier's preparation for an event in Yugoslavia, Herzog uses ultra-slow-motion photography to capture the "ski flyer's ecstasy" as he is compelled to take his creative impulse to the absolute limit. The poetic images of beauty and danger are complimented by a dreamy guitar score by Krautrock band Popol Vuh.

Gravity Is My Enemy
(John C. Joseph, 1977, 26 minutes)
1978 Academy Award winner - Best Documentary Short Subject


"Gravity Is My Enemy" clip

This Academy Award-winning short profiles the life of Mark Hicks, who was paralyzed from the neck down at the age of 12 yet painted and drew by holding a brush, pencil, or ink pen between his teeth. It paints a palette similar to that of local artist Dan Keplinger, a Parkville High and Towson University grad with cerebal palsy who was the subject of Susan Hannah Hadary and William Whiteford's 1999 Oscar-winning documentary King Gimp.

I haven't gone to any Hexagon screenings yet but I sure plan to. I've only met one of their programmers, a young lady by the name of Lisa; the other programmer is local filmmaker Miguel Sabogal, who recently screened his Cube shorts trilogy (Dream's Structure, Escape, and Behind the Red Door) at the 2009 Maryland Film Festival.

They've brought renewed interest to 16mm film and I thank them for it.