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Engauge 2023 Films by Greta Snider [In-Person Only]
Northwest Film Forum
Seattle, WA
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Engauge 2023 Films by Greta Snider [In-Person Only]
Fri Nov 03: 8.30pm PDT

$18 General Admission
$13 NWFF/SIFF/GI/PCNW member

*** Public safety notice ***

NWFF patrons will be required to wear masks that cover both nose and mouth while in the building. Disposable masks are available at the door for those who need them. We are not currently checking vaccination cards. Recent variants of COVID-19 readily infect and spread between individuals regardless of vaccination status.

NWFF is adapting to evolving recommendations to protect the public from COVID-19. Read more about their policies regarding cleaning, masks, and capacity limitations here.

Festival - Engauge Experimental Film Festival 2023 [In-Person Only]
On Film
(75 min TRT)

This wide-ranging survey brings together a selection of Sniders early  now classic  16mm autoethnographies, found footage essays, and materialist inventions, and recent projects focusing on human rights issues, especially as manifested in the schism between document and body. (Brett Kashmere, Canyon Cinema Cooperative)
Featured films: Hard Core Home Movie (1989), Futility (1989), Our Gay Brothers (1993), No-Zone (1993), Portland (1996), Flight (1995), Prayer for the Torture Memos (2015), A Small Place (2019)

Visiting Artist
** Followed by a Q&A with Greta Snider! **

Films in this program:
Hard Core Home Movie
(1989, 5 minutes, b&w, sound, 16mm)

Hard Core Home Movie is a frank and irreverent documentary that asks the question, what is hard-core? Seedy, grainy, and fast-paced, this is a nostalgic look at an ephemeral moment in the history of a subculture: punk rock in San Francisco in the late 80s. Everyone from fucked-up teenagers to elderly Mexican tourists attempts to explain the allure and mystique of the scene. Filmed at SFs historical petting-zoo/theater/punk rock emporium, The Farm.

Futility
(1989, 9 minutes, b&w, sound, 16mm)

My first film was made from editing archival footage I found at the old Film Arts Foundation. Futility is structured around the telling of two tales  the arrangements for an abortion and the dissolving of a relationship, loosely edited around a 1950s ingenue who stays at hotels, blithely visits the Berlin Wall, and makes an appointment at a clinic.

Running water, a list of synonyms of lack, a personal account of an abortion, and a letter to an ex-lover. A body that is too sick to eat, and too uncomfortable to lie down, a lover that hears what he wants, and images that are more powerful when they lie. In Futility (1989), Greta Snider overlaps intimate stories with isolated images, reclaiming the autonomy between the visual and the auditory form. (Almudena Escobar López, NY MoMA)

Our Gay Brothers
(1993, 9 minutes, color, sound, 16mm)

This collage of found film footage, assembles porn movie, childrens instructional film, sports coverage and 50s Hollywood musicals to construct an investigation of gay mens differing attitudes towards the female body. A clever and contentious film. (Melbourne International Film Festival)

No-Zone
(1993, 19 minutes, color, sound, 16mm)

Greta S. incorporates a sprinkling of traditional Bay-Area style  cutting and pasting images from an obscure range of memorabilia footage and pop culture  as she guides us through the tribulations and ecstasies of life in the 90s. No-Zone generates the feeling of reading a book, as a gamut of emotions are brought to life in a series of short fables. The disturbing issues of AIDS, nuclear waste in ones front yard, and the ever-present mid-life crisis, are translated through gun visuals, manipulated text and in-your-face close-ups. Paranoia and discontent with the state of the world are coolly relayed in soap opera time, via two of the films episodes  Sickness and Toxin. Relief from this environment comes in the form of doing 30 kms on a skateboard, downtown and foraging for edible berries in the wilderness Alas, no happy ending here, as a mini-doc focusing on The End of History, stakes its claim as the crowning glory. (Sally Bonython, Melbourne International Film Festival)

Portland
(1996, 13 minutes, b&w, sound, 16mm)

This old story A train, a plan, a camera, the rain: Portland. This film is a low-stakes journey through the Pacific Northwest, alighting on the constructs of memory and story along the way.

Flight
(1995, 5 minutes, b&w, silent, 16mm presented as a digital file)

Flight is my fathers photographic legacy, compiled and transformed into light. I wanted to materialize what spirit ephemera I have remaining from him. His family photographs, his hobbyist pictures of trains and roses, his airplanes and his obsession with birds circling  this material is shot through his eyes. The images are imprinted onto the film, like a fingerprint or trace. Its his movie, really Flight is hand-processed and hand-exposed without a camera (as with Ray-O-Grams) and runs at silent speed 18 frames per second.

Prayer for the Torture Memos
(2015, 9 minutes, color, sound, digital file)

How do words, especially the carefully constructed parlance of legal arguments, contain all of the complexity of a single unique physical body, let alone the infinite possibilities of identity and relationship? Prayer for the Torture Memos explores the delicate, particular significance of the human body, poetics as a means to articulate emotions impossible to speak, and the loss that accompanies moral compromise.

A Small Place
(2019, 6 minutes, color, sound, digital file)

A Small Place is an homage to those surviving solitary confinement and was inspired by the survivor testimonies collected by Jean Casella, James Ridgeway, and Sarah Shourd in the volume, Hell Is A Very Small Place (2016). Particularly moving is the way individuals struggle with communication and connection, within the institutionally violent structure of the US carceral system in general, and solitary confinement in particular. The urge to connect does not diminish, but the persons relationship to time, touch, sound, memory, and story is strained beyond capacity. Hand drawn ink on 35mm film and manipulated 16mm archival film.

Location

Northwest Film Forum (View)
1515 12th Ave.
Seattle, WA 98122
United States

Categories

None

Contact

Owner: Northwest Film Forum
On BPT Since: May 27, 2004
 
Northwest Film Forum Team
www.nwfilmforum.org

Accessibility

Ticketing, concessions, cinemas, restrooms, and our public edit lab are located on Northwest Film Forum's ground floor, which is wheelchair accessible. We have a limited number of assistive listening devices available for programs hosted in our larger theater, Cinema 1. These devices are maintained by the Technical Director, and can be requested at the ticketing and concessions counter. The Forum does NOT have assistive devices for the visually impaired, and is not (yet) a scent-free venue. Our commitment to increasing access for our audiences is ongoing, and we welcome all public input on the subject! If you have additional specific questions about accessibility at our venue, please contact our Patron Services Manager at maria@nwfilmforum.org

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