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The Garden |
In "Film as Personal Art" session, filmmakers use the medium to turn the camera and found footage into a megaphone for larger points about life. The Garden by Ann Steuernagel is a brilliant montage that describes the perils of climate change using found footage and juxtaposition to make her points. The first and most effective part follows news coverage of a glacier falling into the sea set against children running to observe from a hill and a hammer breaking a block of ice. It's not subtle, but it's effective.
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Contra el Cine |
The rest of the session cannot be recommended. When My Eyes are Closed by Jon Perez does a good job of evoking a mood, but with the voiceover and soft lighting, it has a feeling of pretentiousness to it. Winter's Veil by Eva Lee is eight minutes of computer-generated spheres and lines that would have looked state of the art a decade ago. And Don't Look Directly into the Sun by Kathleen Rugh... I didn't get. At all. It's about sunlight abstracted, but the images are so processed and obscured, you only get a fleeting glimpse on any one object. And that goes on for nine minutes.
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