Week 7
HEY GRACE, BETH, AND MICHAEL this is the peer feedback thing <3

This was so interestingly shot, as was the very mysterious subject. There was something arresting in the way he spoke about helping people and the style it was shot – very cold, steel, blue palettes. It felt almost sinister because of his facelessness and the corporate setting. I loved the multi screen shot SO MUCH. Really well composed, good balance of movement and distance. The sound beds of bustling atmospheres and pen on paper also helped in warming the presence of your subject because he could have been in great danger of coming across as stiff and aloof. Also really liked the city scape photos and the rapid back and forth towards the end as Nic searched for the right words- interesting, even somewhat humorous touch.
HANNAH POPPINS: Practically Perfect
Born Hannah Cripps, this gal is determined not to let an ordinary name lead to an ordinary life – and thus, Hannah Poppins was born! Inspired by the practically perfect nanny, Hannah navigates life with a sassy independence, trusty red lipstick, and an ever present spoonful of sugar.

FILM ART: Three Fascinating Forms
DOCUMENTARY FORMS:
Categorical Form:
Often begins by identifying its subject. These might develop in simple ways which could bore the viewer because of the risk to seem like a list predictably building from one example to another.
Les Blanc’s Gap Toothed Women, however, are a complex and fascinating take on the categorical form. His film makes this form feel like a kitschy scrapbook of images and vignette monologues. A “talking heads” style situation as the book refers to.
I loved the balance between the interview subjects, found images, and especially the slyly suggestive, gap-evocative imagery like the harp.
Experimental:
A “wilfully nonconformist” approach to filmmaking also known as avant-garde. These can be made for a variety of reasons: desire to express a personal experience, convey mood or physical quality, explore possibilities of medium itself…There may not be a story but more poetic language or “pulsating visual collages” like Ballet mechanique. They can also have a story but it will usually be a challenging one.
Abstract Form:
Can be a film organised around colours, shapes, sizes, and movements in the images. Can be organised according to theme and variations – terms taken from the musical world playing on motifs, keys, and rhythms. Similarly, abstract films can also be arranged as such – introducing viewer to initial ideas and materials that could be expected. An establishment of tone, if you will. Then other segments will begin, typically going on from previously established tones and materials. Perhaps augmented in energy or colour but still a similar idea.
Often filmmakers will juxtapose photographs of real, recognisable objects alongside creations of shape/colour etc.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2QV9-l-rXOE
Ballet mecanique uses film techniques to stress the geometric qualities of ordinary things. Close framing, masks, unusual camera angles, and neutral background isolate objects and emphasize their shapes and structures.
The film has been divided in 9 parts:
Credit sequence, intro of rhythmic elements, objects through prisms, rhythmic movements, people and machines, intertitles and photographs, more rhythmic movements mostly of circular objects, objects dancing, return to opening elements.
Associational Form:
Drawing on a poetic series of transitions. They suggest ideas and expressive qualities by grouping images that may not have logical connections but the viewer will look for and probably find a pattern or way of association.
Godfrey Reggio’s Koyaanisqatsi is a full length associational form film in which the associations are not purely image-based but also suggest a whole range of context, meaning, and emotion.
The power of an associational formal system: its ability to guide our emotions and to arouse our thinking by juxtaposing different images and sounds.
WAR! Hol! What is he good for – absolutely nothing! (Except sassy wall decor.)
The cleverest scam of an artist whose legacy refuses to fade in my life time. I appreciate his bridging of high and popular culture, I adore his use of vibrant colours, and you bet I would KILL to get into his Silver Factory #squad if I could go back in time. But I think his greatest artistic lesson is that ANYONE can extend their 15 minutes of fame if they hung out with Mick Jagger and used aluminium foil as wall paper.



































