Neil Brand: Composer and Musical Improviser for Silent Films
posted November 23, 2011
During 25 years of accompanying and composing for silent film and other audio-visual media, Neil Brand has become one of the finest exponents of a century-old art. A MIAN interview.
The Art of the Film Improviser
posted November 23, 2011
During 25 years of accompanying and composing for silent film and other audio-visual media, Neil Brand has become one of the finest exponents of a century-old art.
Call for Submissions
posted November 16, 2011
Cine Tectonica: Film On The Faultline Alan Wright of the University of Canterbury, New Zealand, has made a call for articles for a book to be titled Cine Tectonica: Film on the Faultline (Intellect Press). Abstracts of 250 words, along with a short biography, are due to him – alan.wright@canterbury.ac.nz – by February 6, 2012.
How to Make “The Hobbit”
posted November 6, 2011
A joy for fans and filmmaking aficionados alike is the video blog that director Peter Jackson is keeping about his filming of The Hobbit, whose first installment is due for release at the end of 2012. He has mounted his “The Hobbit, Production Video” series on his blog and his Facebook page, and it makes
Clip of the Day: Andy Rooney
posted November 5, 2011
Andy Rooney discusses television news, in 1994 Source: C-Span Video Library Duration: 26’ Andy Rooney died on Friday, November 4 2011 in New York City, aged 92, a month after the last of his many regular appearances on the CBS News network’s “60 Minutes” program. His weekly segment on the show, “A Few Minutes With
Bill Morrison’s Found-Footage Portrait of The Great Floods
posted November 3, 2011
Bill Morrison’s films using decayed found footage are legendary in experimental film circles, and this fall and winter you may have an opportunity to see his latest, The Great Flood, accompanied live by the stellar guitarist Bill Frisell and his quartet. (Morrison and Frisell’s project was the subject of a feature article in these pages,
Archival Film of Today: Mode de Paris
posted November 2, 2011
Mode de Paris (Paris Fashion, 1926) Source: Europa Film Treasures Duration: 4′ 49″ The models weren’t as skinny, and fashion runway style has changed in other ways, too, judging by this stencil-colored film by an unknown director, made in The Netherlands in 1926 by the Unie Filmrevue film company. Still, by the standards of the
Archival Film of the Day: Sorley Maclean’s Island
posted October 29, 2011
Sorley Maclean’s Island (1974) Source: Scottish Screen Archive Duration: 4’19” (excerpt) In an excerpt from a 22-minute film, the poet Sorley Maclean (1911-1966), the “father of the Scottish Gaelic renaissance,” recites two poems (in Gaelic) at a ceilidh, followed by scenes of his native island of Raasay, where Scottish Gaelic was the first language, during
Archival Film of the Day
posted October 28, 2011
Prices Unlimited (1944) Director: Erle C. Kenton Source: The Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences Film Archive Collection: War Film Collection Duration: 10’30” In a narrative short produced by Universal Pictures for the U.S. Office of Price Administration and the U.S. Government Office of War Information, it’s evening of another WWII day. As Gracie
Imagine the Archives!
posted October 28, 2011
Forget The Truman Show – on madman Ilya Khrzhanovsky’s filmset-panopticon, everyone is transformed into a Soviet citizen of 1952 (Olya, Stalin-era cafeteria worker, left) as civilians act out his fantasy of lust amid mundane totalitarianism, where everyone snitches and the cameras never stop rolling… Imagine the archive!