Festival - Engauge Experimental Film Festival 2024 [In-Person Only] On Film (65 min TRT)
Filmmakers in the program find inspiration in the body, an even closer, more readily available and intimate landscape for exploration. This program features four films shown as 16mm prints.
Films In This Program:
Clear Ice Fern (Mark Street | 12:00 | USA | color | sound muted | Super 8 mm to digital | 2023)
Images shot through architectural glass on Super 8 film in the dead of night in NYC. The title refers to one of the glass samples I used to frame up images of Times Square and other nightspots in NYC. The city peeks its head in as an off-screen character, but the glass bends and twists it in its own warped and wonderful way.
That I Have Broken Into Two (Ellery Bryan | 2:38 | USA | b + w | silent | 16mm to digital | 2022)
Made following the death of my former partner, this film uses double exposure and half-processed 16mm film to explore the feeling of removal, division, and loss. Splitting the screen across a threshold, my performance attempts to interface with another side.
Unity Island (Carl J. Lee | 13:30 | USA | color | sound muted | 16mm to digital | 2023)
"Unity Island" looks at 1/4 square mile stretch of land situated between Niagara River and Black Rock Canal at the border of Buffalo, NY and Fort Erie, Ontario. A railroad traverses the island from Canada to the U.S. passing by a park visited by picnickers, bicyclists, and fishermen. Ive been going there for walks with our dog for years. Freight trains cross a swing bridge over the canal which rotates open for boats and the occasional freight ship. A hill sits on the former site of an incineration plant and garbage dump. From there you can get a 360 view of the island, the city, the river, and the highway. Shot on 16mm film, "Unity Island" is a personal exploration of the site over time: its beauty, its moments, and its contradictions.
Shedding (Vicky Smith | 4:19 | United Kingdom | b + w | silent | 16mm | 2024)
Multiple passes of hand processed 16mm film, with some flash frames. A performance for the Bolex camera in which dimensions of stasis and movement are physically enacted by filming at varying frame rates. A still figure, saturated with light, appears to be highly overexposed. As layers of the image dislodge it becomes apparent that the exposure is correct, and that the brightness is caused through multiple superimpositions.
Everything Comes Full Circle (Lilan Yang | 13:44 | USA | color | silent | 16mm | 2022)
Following Wim Wenders Paris, Texas (1984) filming locations from Houston, Texas to Los Angeles, California, I use a 16mm Bolex camera to capture the vastness of the American West. The footage draws me to reminisce about snippets of my everyday life. I contemplate how we perceive the world through analog optical apparatuses and how memories are multidimensional yet fragile. Our recollections of people and places can be distorted, unrecognizable, and fictitious. These memories would eventually diminish with the passing of time. Everything Comes Full Circle is a personal attempt to remember things that will soon be forgotten. The original footage was shot in Kodak 16mm film stocks during the summer of 2021 and edited digitally with voiceover. Later the digital moving images were inkjet printed on clear film spliced together with perforations cut out with a laser cutter. Each run of the projection makes the printer ink slowly melt, and the film will eventually fall into decay over the course of time.
Bosco (Lucie Leszez + Stefano Canara | 8:00 | France | b + w | silent | 16mm | 2023)
Three filmmakers bring back images of the forest, they are are reworked and destructured with the means of the photochemical laboratory. Bosco is a visual breakthrough punctuated by a contrasted hypnotic black and white palatte.
Location
Northwest Film Forum (View)
1515 12th Ave.
Seattle, WA 98122
United States
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