Daisies (1966)

Still from Daisies

Still from Daisies

Daisies (1966) is a film by Věra Chytilová, part of the Czech New Wave. It is commonly labeled a “feminist farce” and was banned at the time for promoting and glamourising anarchy. And it’s true – the film made anarchy look crazy fun so consider me converted!! I saw this film the other week and my god it has changed me creatively. I was on Twitter at the right place at the right time when I saw Nowness post about it. I thought it was a photography project because they featured only stills but when I found it was an ENTIRE FILM of aesthetically pleasing feminist insanity?!! I. was. thrilled.

The concept of the film is simple enough: two teenage girls named Marie unrepentantly wreak havoc and leave a symphony of disaster in their wake. The imaginative editing, the girls’ flippant delivery of their characters, the colourful cinematography – I loved every bizarre moment and used some of it as inspiration for my own self portrait assessment. I dare say I would love to play around with this style more and create a more substantial work at some point.

It is definitely considered an avant-garde creation with its unconventional…everything. The structure is quite vignette-like with no obvious arc until the last 15 minutes of the film where its political aspects are explored a little more candidly (but no less fun!). We don’t really see the girls travel to any of their destinations nor talk about their future plans which makes each scene appear quite unrelated to each other. There’s a spontaneity in Chytilová’s chosen settings which add to the great dynamic of the film – in their bedroom one moment then a remote flower field the next with not a city in sight. The cuts in between are brisk and unpretentious, sometimes with a a frantic slew of textures flashing one after the other creating a sort of hallucinogenic daze. The editing in general features a lot of single colour tinting and many close ups – enough to disorient the audience. It really mirrors the girls’ volatility and single mindedness.

Another highlight is the use of sound, especially in scenes where the two girls are waddling whilst dissonant chords are stabbing in staccato with each step. I love their relatively naturalistic dialogue delivered in such a stylised fashion – there’s something very Brechtian about how the film reminds the audience that these are actors playing a scene.

On David Gauntlett

 

I must admit Gauntlett frustrated me when we were examining his vlog and writing and it must stem from the fact that everything he kept remarking on as the change in the media landscape is not a change for our generation at all. Our formative years were spent using and creating media for school projects and watching Youtube creators churn out successful, popular content. I always just assumed media would have a great emphasis on the creator. What even was Media 1.0 before the blurred lines between creator and audience?

I still liked his breakdown of the knowledge we need now though, however glaringly obvious it is to people with any semblance of the competitive creative industries.

Some of his main points in the video:

  • more engagement rather than studying media from the outside:
  • ease of making and sharing media
  • interaction rather than drawing audiences
  • not passive, it is the world we live in.
  • not a textbook definition any more, constantly evolving and we have to change and adapt to it
  • quite pragmatic in his approach, acknowledging the necessary importance of both practical knowledge and creative expression

ACMI Virtual Reality Experience: Stuck In The Middle With You

acmi vr

This 15 minute VR experience puts you in the centre of a contemporary dance performance by the Sydney Dance Company through occulus rift goggles and headphones. Three participants at a time, you stand on a stage in front of the “audience” (the waiting line) with a dance barre to hold on to for grounding. While waiting, we saw a few people go through the experience. Some brave and wonderful people just let loose and danced away with no care in the world! It was such a delight to see people’s visceral reactions to the energy of the dancers and theatre atmosphere. Furthermore, it was amazing to see how truly transported you could be during a VR experience. When your sense of sight and hearing are so explicitly affected, what’s to say what’s real or not? Media is totally shifting the way we tell and experience stories and it’s so exciting to see what media makers throw at us next.

Beyond the novelty of the experience, the short film (can I call it that??) also explores the displacement of identity, control, and expression which elevates it from gimmick to truly meaningful medium.