42 posts tagged “film”
"Native Americans, Aboriginal Australians, Taoists, Zen Buddhists, Tantric
meditators, and mystics everywhere do not think of the Dreaming world
as an 'un'-conscious. For these peoples, the sentient Dreaming world is
the basic reality. Though marginalized and invisible to mainstream cultures
today, Dreamtime has been the essential reality for people from the
beginning of time."
-Arnold Mindell
Directed by Tomas Mankovsky, and you can see the making of it here.
via clementine
“Well, all I’m saying is that I want to look back and say that I did I the best I could while I was stuck in this place. Had as much fun as I could while I was stuck in this place.”
via kabrioletta | kari-shma
Directed by
Clément Soulmagnon, Yann Benedi, Sébastien Eballard & Quentin Chaillet
John Whitney - Catalog (1961)
John Whitney's demo reel of work created with his analog computer/film camera magic machine he built from a WWII anti-aircraft gun sight. Whitney and the techniques he developed with this machine were what inspired Douglas Trumbull (special fx wizard) to use the slit scan technique on 2001: A Space Odyssey
via crystal sculpture 2
John Whitney's demo reel of work created with his analog computer/film camera magic machine he built from a WWII anti-aircraft gun sight. Whitney and the techniques he developed with this machine were what inspired Douglas Trumbull (special fx wizard) to use the slit scan technique on 2001: A Space Odyssey
via crystal sculpture 2
Poem Field is the name of a series of 8 computer-generated animations by Stan VanDerBeek and Ken Knowlton in 1964-1967. The animations were programmed in a language called Beflix (short for "Bell Flicks"), which was developed by Knowlton.
via crystalsculpture
via crystalsculpture
Produced in stop-motion by Apt Studio and Asylum Films over 3 weeks in Autumn 2008.
via 4th Estate | hat tip Clementine
Made by the legendary filmmaker Hans Richter (1928); a warning from
the past.
Trailer for short film 'Curses and Sermons'
based on a poem by Michael McClure.
based on a poem by Michael McClure.
Music by Andy Dragazis.