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Event
Long Live Our Love: New Works by Laida Lertxundi, Michael Robinson, and Ben Russ
Sunday March 27, 2011, 7:30pm Los Angeles Filmforum presents Long Live Our Love: New Works by Laida Lertxundi, Michael Robinson, and Ben Russell Laida Lertxundi & Michael Robinson in person! Multiple Los Angeles premieres!
There is a bright light flickering out from far beyond that half-blue horizon [1], there is sea-breeze and the distant ache of a desert wind blowing [2]. We are here, and together we look hard into the landscape that we've built up around us it is at once a broken television [3], a neon sign [4], an upward pan that leaves us in a cloudless sky [5]. We are here and we are lost: wood-wandering, leaving marks on trees for guides [6]. We've been masked and jungled, guided by spirits that are strong [7] but not stronger than each of us together. Oh! We have song and bell and bird as map, and with you and you lying next to me [8], it is certainly all we need: Long Live Our Love!
[1] Trypps#7 (Badlands) by Ben Russell [2] Cry When it Happens by Laida Lertxundi [3] Light Is Waiting by Michael Robinson [4] Trypps#5 (Dubai) by Ben Russell [5] My Tears Are Dry by Laida Lertxundi [6] If There Be Thorns by Michael Robinson [7] Trypps#6 (Malobi) by Ben Russell [8] Footnotes to a House of Love by Laida Lertxundi
At the Spielberg Theater at the Egyptian 6712 Hollywood Blvd. (at Las Palmas), Los Angeles CA 90028
Tickets: General $10, Students/seniors $6; free for Filmforum members Advance ticket purchase available through Brown Paper Tickets.
Michael Robinson will be doing another, different program at REDCAT on Monday, Mach 28, 8:30 pm: http://www.redcat.org/event/michael-robinson
Trypps #7 (Badlands), by Ben Russell (2010, Super16mm, 10:00) Los Angeles premiere! "Trypps #7 (Badlands) charts, through an intimate long-take, a young woman's LSD trip in the Badlands National Park before descending into a psychedelic, formal abstraction of the expansive desert landscape. Concerned with notions of the romantic sublime, phenomenological experience, and secular spiritualism, the work continues Russell's unique investigation into the possibilities of cinema as a site for transcendence."- Michael Green, MCA Chicago
Cry When It Happens, by Laida Lertxundi (2010, Spain / USA 16mm, solor, sound, 14 minutes) Los Angeles premiere! Los Angeles City Hall is reflected onto the window of the Paradise Motel. It serves as an anchor for this traversal through the natural expanse of California. Here, we discover a restrained psychodrama of play, loss, and the transformation of everyday habitats. Music appears across the interiors and exteriors and speaks of limitlessness and longing. Music: Beethoven, Black Velvet, The Blue Rondos, Laura Steenberge
Light is Waiting, by Michael Robinson (2007, digital video, 11:20) A very special episode of television's Full House devours itself from the inside out, excavating a hypnotic nightmare of a culture lost at sea. Tropes of video art and family entertainment face off in a luminous orgy neither can survive.
Trypps #5 (Dubai), by Ben Russell (2008, 16mm, silent, 3:00) APP APPAP APP APAPPAP APP APP APP APAPPAPAPPAP APPAP APP "A short treatise on the semiotics of capital, happiness, and phenomenology under the flickering neon of global capitalism." - BR
My Tears Are Dry, by Laida Lertxundi (2009, USA/Spain,16mm, color, sound, 4 min) A film in the three parts of a dialectic. Hoagy Land's song is played and interrupted as guitar makes sound, two women, a bed an armchair, and the beautiful outside. After Bruce Baillies All My Life. The lyrics of the song reference the eternal sunshine of California and its promises.
If There Be Thorns, by Michael Robinson (2009, 16mm color film transferred to digital video, 13:20) Los Angeles premiere! A dark wave of incest and magic burns across the tropics, forging a knotted trail into the black hole. Taking its title from the V.C. Andrews novel (a sequel to "Flowers In The Attic"), and weaving together texts from Shirley Jackson, William S. Burroughs, and Stevie Nicks, the film constructs a collaged narrative of three star-crossed siblings searching for one another across the unstable landscapes of their respective exiles.
Trypps #6 (Malobi), by Ben Russell (2009, 16mm, 12:00) Los Angeles premiere! "Part journey, part psychedelic flight of fancy, and all in all a purposeful break in rhythm, Ben Russell's latest "trip," Trypps #6 (Malobi), is a work of ecstatic ethnography. Clearly indebted to Jean Rouch's Les MaƮtres fous, a midcentury document of West African Hauka mystics exorcising the demons of their colonial overlords, Russell allows his camera to fall into a similar hypnosis... In a single, weightless steadicam shot, Russell swings around trees and houses, circling around the main event instead of directly approaching it. While the villagers flurry themselves into an orgiastic danse macabre, which Russell joins only at the very end, his concentration leads elsewhere to the sustained revelation of unflinching vision itself." Genevieve Yue, Reverse Shot
Footnotes to a House of Love, by Laida Lertxundi (2007, 16mm, color, sound, 13 min) A series of shots in a California desert landscape in which there is a play between on frame and off frame, sound and image. There is an effort to create the space of a story, without a story, by the use of real time/diegetic sound. Love is felt as a force that determines the arrangement of the figures in the landscape. Music: Leslie Gore, Ari Up, The Kinks, The Shangri-Las, Henry Flynt, Laura Steenberge and The Crystals.
For the screenings at the Egyptian Theater: Parking is now easiest at the Hollywood & Highland complex. Bring your ticket for validation. Parking is $2 for 4 hours with validation. Enter that complex on Highland or Hollywood. The theater is 1.5 blocks east.
This screening series is supported, in part, by the Los Angeles County Board of Supervisors through the Los Angeles County Arts Commission; the Department of Cultural Affairs, City of Los Angeles; and the Andy Warhol Foundation for the Visual Arts. Additional support generously provided by American Cinematheque.
Los Angeles Filmforum is the city's longest-running organization screening experimental and avant-garde film and video art, documentaries, and experimental animation. 2010 is our 34th year. Memberships available, $60 single or $95 dual Contact us at lafilmforum@yahoo.com. www.lafilmforum.org Become a fan on Facebook and Follow us on Twitter!
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LocationSpielberg Theater at the Egyptian
6712 Hollywood Blvd.
Los Angeles, CA 90028
United States
Categories
Minimum Age: 14 |
Dog Friendly: No |
Non-Smoking: Yes! |
Wheelchair Accessible: Yes! |
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