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Los Angeles Plays Itself

Los Angeles Plays Itself

Thom Andersen, Los Angeles Plays Itself, 2003, 170 min

Per Thom Andersen, Los Angeles és probablement la ciutat més fotografiada del món, però és la menys fotogènica. En aquest documental, el crític i cineasta analitza la manera com s’ha mostrat aquesta gran urbs a la pantalla, tant si ha estat en el focus de la història com si no. Al mateix temps mostra com la ciutat real i la seva gent, així com la seva història, han estat distorsionades i representades de manera errònia a través del prisma del cinema popular. Partint de la hipòtesi que la ficció té un gran potencial documental, Andersen ens intenta convèncer que podem veure el cinema des d’un altre punt de vista. El resultat és una anàlisi provocativa sobre la nostra capacitat de veure pel·lícules.

 
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Los Angeles Plays Itself

Los Angeles Plays Itself

Thom Andersen, Los Angeles Plays Itself, 2003, 170 min

Los Angeles Plays Itself
Per Thom Andersen, Los Angeles és probablement la ciutat més fotografiada del món, però és la menys fotogènica. En aquest documental, el crític i cineasta analitza la manera com s’ha mostrat aquesta gran urbs a la pantalla, tant si ha estat en el focus de la història com si no. Al mateix temps mostra com la ciutat real i la seva gent, així com la seva història, han estat distorsionades i representades de manera errònia a través del prisma del cinema popular. Partint de la hipòtesi que la ficció té un gran potencial documental, Andersen ens intenta convèncer que podem veure el cinema des d’un altre punt de vista. El resultat és una anàlisi provocativa sobre la nostra capacitat de veure pel·lícules.

 
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Table of Contents

Slow Writing: Thom Andersen on Cinema
Edited by Mark Webber
The Visible Press, September 2017

Introduction
Why I Did Not Become a Film Critic, 2017

Essays
Sex in Limbo, 1966 (on exploitation films)
Camp, Andy Warhol, 1966
Two Films by Andrew Meyer, 1966
Eadweard Muybridge, 1966
De Mille’s Ded Zeppelin, 1978 (on Madam Satan)
What is Wrong with this Picture? Almost Everything, 1978 (on The Desert People)
JB, 1978 (on James Benning)
Twelve Films by Five American Filmmakers, 1979 (on Conner, Sharits, Gehr,
   Brakhage & Fisher)
From the Cloud to the Resistance (Dalla Nube alla Resistenza) by Jean-Marie
   Straub & Danièle Huillet, from two texts by Cesare Pavese, 1981
Reagan at the Movies, 1986 (on Ronald Reagan)
“The Time of the Toad”, 1992 (on the Hollywood Blacklist)
The Misogyny Game, 1993 (on The Crying Game)
Looking Over an Underground, 1994 (on the Los Angeles underground)
The Whole Equation, 2005 (on David Thomson’s The Whole Equation)
The Political Documentary in America Today, 2005
The Sixties Without Compromise: Watching Warhol’s Films, 2005
Painting in the Shadows, 2007 (on Pedro Costa)
Passing Through Twilight, 2007 (on Night on Earth)
Los Angeles: A City on Film, 2008
This Property is Condemned, 2008 (on The Exiles)
Pebbles Left on the Beach: The Films of Morgan Fisher, 2009
Against the Grain, 2009 (on Lorna’s Silence)
A Band of Outsiders, 2010 (on In Vanda’s Room)
Happy Daze, 2010 (on Dusty and Sweets McGee)
The Decade in Review: Sketches of History 2000-2009, 2010
Unchained Melodies: The Agony and the Ecstasy of Phil Spector and
   It Felt Like a Kiss, 2010
Get Out of the Car: A Commentary, 2011
Random Notes on a Projection of The Clock by Christian Marclay
   at the Los Angeles County Museum of Art, 4:32 p.m., July 28, 2011
   – 5:02 p.m., July 29, 2011, 2011
Barbarians at the Gate, 2012 (on Los Angeles film culture)
Yasujirō Ozu: The Master of Time, 2012
Too Late to Stop Now, 2013 (on Jean-Marie Straub)
Fire in Every Shot: Wang Bing’s Three Sisters, 2013
The Allure of Failure, 2014 (on Francesco Vezzoli)
500 Words (as told to Travis Diehl), 2016

Images
16 pages of colour and black & white images including film stills and photographs

Thom Andersen Filmography

Thom Andersen Bibliography

Vienna Retrospective

Vienna Retrospective, 19-24 November 2014

The upcoming retrospective at the Vienna Filmmuseum, within the context of Vienna Art Week, will include almost all of the available films by Markopoulos. Outside of Temenos, the Österreichisches Filmmuseum has the largest collection of Markopoulos films, including some unique prints, as a result of the close relationship between the filmmaker and the Filmmuseum’s founders Peter Kubelka and Peter Konlechner. The following introductory text is taken from the Filmmuseum website.

Gregory J. Markopoulos was twenty (and still a student at the University of Southern California) when he completed his first masterpiece, the one-hour Du sang, de la volupté et de la mort (1947-48). Influenced by surrealism and literary modernism, and along with Mara Deren and Kenneth Anger, he was one of the founders of the New American Cinema, the most significant movement in independent cinema after 1945. At the same time, that film marks the beginning of an individual course, as Markopoulos became one of the greatest formal inventors and innovators in the history of film: “A work formed in serious, radical creativity, employing what the Greeks called thrasos – fire, self-confidence, enthusiasm.” (Harry Tomicek)

Born in Toledo, Ohio in 1928, and raised with the Greek language and traditions (he didn’t speak English until he was seven years old), Markopoulos would follow his artistic goals with unprecedented rigor until his death in November 1992. Against any pigeonholing by generic terms such as “narrative”, ”underground”, “avant-garde” or ”art” film, he always vehemently upheld one motto: Film as Film.

Markopoulos was no stranger to cinematic storytelling – he attended lectures by Josef von Sternberg, observed Hitchcock and Lang at work and had contact with Cocteau and Godard during the fifties. But his own practice taught him that the deepest experiences available in cinema were to be found elsewhere: “Who can dare to imagine what a single frame might contain?” More and more, he realized the shape of his films directly during the filming process: composition, sequencing, montage, dissolves, multiple exposures – all of these processes (which the film industry usually delegates to an entire team), he accomplished himself, during the moments of filming.

The result is a cinema of true poetry, containing trance-like narratives such as Swain (1950) and Twice a Man (1963), as well as iridescent portraits of people (Galaxie) and spaces or structures (Ming Green, Gammelion, Sorrows), all made and released in the late 1960s when Markopoulos separated himself from the New York underground scene. His oeuvre of that period is characterized by an almost eerie sense of color and rhythm, and by ecstatic “chords” and clusters made of the shortest visual elements. At the same time, he searched for a utopian unity – a non-alienated relationship between life, filmmaking and film viewing.

Starting in 1967 and together with his partner, Robert Beavers (now the keeper of his estate), Gregory Markopoulos led a nomadic life marked by poverty, traveling between Italy, Belgium, Greece and Switzerland. He continued filming ceaselessly, but released no work after 1971. Instead he concentrated fully on that approximately 80-hour work which would sum up his artistic existence: Eniaios (“unity”, “uniqueness”), created for a special performance in nature, at the “Temenos” near the village of Lyssaraia in Greece.

22 years after Gregory Markopoulos’ death, the opportunities to see his films are still rare; the restoration and preservation of Eniaios is in progress, but far from complete. The Austrian Film Museum, with whom the artist had a long (and complicated) relationship, has collected his works for almost 50 years – and is proud to offer its international audience this retrospective of 26 works, the most comprehensive examination of Markopoulos’ cinema to date.

The retrospective takes place in conjunction with the Vienna Art Week and was organized with the help of Robert Beavers who will attend all screenings. At the opening, curator Mark Webber will present his new book, “Film as Film: The Collected Writings of Gregory J. Markopoulos.” On November 21, Beavers will present four restored reels from ”Eniaios IV” and will speak about the ongoing Temenos project.

Visit the calendar for details of each screening, or view the programme on the Filmmuseum website.

Los Angeles Plays Itself

Los Angeles Plays Itself

Thom Andersen, Los Angeles Plays Itself, 2003, 169 min
Introduced by MarĂ­a Palacios Cruz

As every autumn, Tabakalera hones in on architecture through different programmes. Our contribution from the cinema department begins with a series of questions: What has been cinema’s contribution to the creation of the collective imaginary of cities? Why do we get the sensation of being “in a film” when we see or travel to a landscape similar to that of Los Angeles?

If cinema has indeed shown us how to look at some cities, can that route be travelled in reverse? Can architecture and urbanism show us how to see films? To begin to answer these questions, we are screening a contemporary classic, one of those films that directly addresses this question of correspondence between cinematographic imaginary and urbanism, a film-essay that looks back on how cinema has represented the city of Los Angles throughout history: Los Angeles Plays Itself, by filmmaker and Professor of the School of the California Institute of Arts, Thom Andersen.

MarĂ­a Palacios Cruz of The Visible Press will introduce the screening and discuss the book Slow Writing: Thom Andersen on Cinema.  

18:00 Presentation of the book Slow Writing: Thom Andersen on Cinema, 45 min
19:00 Los Angeles Plays Itself, (Primera parte), Thom Andersen, USA, 2003, 90 min
22:00 Los Angeles Plays Itself, (Segunda parte), Thom Andersen, USA, 2003, 80 min

Presented by Tabakera within the context of The International Biennial MUGAK.

 

 

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