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Came across this one by chance, went to see the Scottish National Gallery of Modern Art, and as part of the festival it was playing on continuous loop, at 41 minutes, it's just a feature by BFI, AFI, and AMPAS definition, but most people I'm sure would term it a short.
It's a selection of scenes of people listening to music, with their reactions being filmed, shot in black and white on Super 8. To be an art film we can't hear them listen to anything obvious, so a lot of the soundtrack is old fairly obscure rock and French tunes. I didn't know many but I had listened to Blitzkrieg Bop by the Ramones before "hey ho, let's go!". The filmmaker somehow makes the locations they're shot in quite interesting, psychologically, not sure quite how she did that, they're not stereotypical at all.
I just think it was nice to show how people have music as an escape, it's a joy that most everyone young and old, good or bad, rich or poor, can access and participate in. As a teenager my brother knew people who knew about music and I used to headbang away to stuff, but I've since mostly been able to handle only minimalist or sturm und drang type classical music, so it was quite a melancholy watch for me, the kind of freeness and joie de vivre I had seemingly quite vestigial.
We get different characters here, a beautiful young woman with lustrous hair and tasselled arms headbanging, an emotionally beset attrited man sat outside a café in an ugly street full of parked cars, a woman fondling her cat in bed, a man playfully blinking at the camera, a gelled-hair guy taking a leak and a smoke and a drink outside a bar - which is nice because music is often accompanied by visceral sensations.
The film starts of with Shanti doing a duet herself which is a nice personal touch.
Anyway it's French, it's good, it won a Special Jury Award at CIMMfest in Chicago, if you ever get the chance to see it, why not give it a go?
It's a selection of scenes of people listening to music, with their reactions being filmed, shot in black and white on Super 8. To be an art film we can't hear them listen to anything obvious, so a lot of the soundtrack is old fairly obscure rock and French tunes. I didn't know many but I had listened to Blitzkrieg Bop by the Ramones before "hey ho, let's go!". The filmmaker somehow makes the locations they're shot in quite interesting, psychologically, not sure quite how she did that, they're not stereotypical at all.
I just think it was nice to show how people have music as an escape, it's a joy that most everyone young and old, good or bad, rich or poor, can access and participate in. As a teenager my brother knew people who knew about music and I used to headbang away to stuff, but I've since mostly been able to handle only minimalist or sturm und drang type classical music, so it was quite a melancholy watch for me, the kind of freeness and joie de vivre I had seemingly quite vestigial.
We get different characters here, a beautiful young woman with lustrous hair and tasselled arms headbanging, an emotionally beset attrited man sat outside a café in an ugly street full of parked cars, a woman fondling her cat in bed, a man playfully blinking at the camera, a gelled-hair guy taking a leak and a smoke and a drink outside a bar - which is nice because music is often accompanied by visceral sensations.
The film starts of with Shanti doing a duet herself which is a nice personal touch.
Anyway it's French, it's good, it won a Special Jury Award at CIMMfest in Chicago, if you ever get the chance to see it, why not give it a go?
- oOgiandujaOo_and_Eddy_Merckx
- 26. Juni 2010
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