Daily Archives: October 5, 2023

Lost Material and Found Footage: Peter Tscherkassky’s Dark Room – and Ours

Commissioned  by Found Footage for its 4th issue (February 2018). — J.R.

Tscherkassky, Outer Space 5

We’re living through a confusing transitional period whose transitions are chiefly matters of financial speculation lying beyond our control. Theorizing our helpless condition — which often means attempting to rationalize it, or to adapt to it by other means — we’re obliged to use an out-of-date language. This antiquated language needs to be upgraded with a new vocabulary if we want to make useful sense of what’s happening — something that we haven’t yet figured out how to do. Just as “politically correct” language can sometimes be described as the language of defeat – struggling to make an adequate representation of a reality over which one has lost control – theoretical cinema suggests at times a farewell gesture towards a medium that has fled.

The fumblings to be found below are an attempt to clarify not so much five experimental films in 35-millimeter and CinemaScope by Peter Tscherkassky — L’Arrivée (1997-1999, 2:09 min.), Outer Space (1999, 9:58 min.), Get Ready (1999, 1:06 min.), Dream Work (2001,11 min.), and Instructions for a Light and Sound Machine (2005, 17 min.), all of which I find powerful, provocative, haunting, and ultimately confounding — as the confusing language used to describe them. Read more

The Best Video Essays of 2020 (for SIGHT AND SOUND)

Best Video Essays (alphabetical order):     

    

  1. L’Année Dernière à Dachau (Mark Rappaport, France)
  2. Her Socialist Smile (John Gianvito, U.S.A.)
  3. A House is Not a Home: Wright or Wrong (Mehrnaz Saeed-Vafa, U.S.A.)*
  4. The Social Dilemma (Jeff Orlowski, U.S.A.)
  5. Sportin’ Life (Abel Ferrara, Italy)
  6. Women According to Men (Saeed Nouri, Iran)

                                                      

*I worked on this film in various capacities–as interview subject, consultant, and camera assistant. Read more