Английская Википедия:17 Reasons Why
Шаблон:Infobox film 17 Reasons Why is a 1987 American avant-garde short film directed by Nathaniel Dorsky. Working with a collection of secondhand portable cameras, Dorsky used the unslit 8 mm footage to create a split screen with four quadrants. Normally screened on 16 mm film at 16 frames per second, it is one of his only works to have been shown as a digital transfer.
Description
17 Reasons divides the screen into four quadrants. The top and bottom images are offset by a single frame.[1] The left and right sides usually use different shots but sometimes show the same image out of sync.[2]
The content of the images varies between landscapes, interior scenes, faces, extreme close-ups of objects, and color fields. These are sometimes combined through multiple exposures.[1][2]
Production
The split screen in 17 Reasons Why was produced through Double 8, a technique that had become common within experimental cinema during the 1970s.[3] Double 8 mm film uses a single film strip that is 16 mm wide. Only half of the width is exposed at any given time, and the camera operator flips the roll once one side is complete. When the roll is developed, the strip is slit along the center to separate it into two 8 mm strips. To created the quadrisected image, Dorsky created a 16 mm strip from printing the unslit 8 mm strips, such that each 16 mm frame contains four smaller 8 mm frames.[4][5]
Dorsky made the film using old 8 mm cameras he purchased secondhand.[6] To prevent the two sides of the strip from facing different directions, he held the camera upside down when shooting the second side of each roll.[3] His use of multiple cameras and film stocks produced different colors, textures, and gate shapes in the resulting footage.[1][7] He edited the footage together, using much shorter shot durations than is common in his work.[8]
The title 17 Reasons Why comes from a rooftop sign at 17th and Mission Street which appears in the film.[7]
Release
The film premiered on October 6, 1987, at the Berkeley Art Museum and Pacific Film Archive, in a program with Pneuma and Alaya.[6] It screened on October 20 at the Collective for Living Cinema in New York.[2] Dorsky requests the film be projected at 16 frames per second, slightly slower than the 18 fps frame rate of his other films or the 24 fps frame rate of typical sound films, to emphasize the articulation of individual frames.[3]
17 Reasons Why is one of few films by Dorsky to have been presented digitally. A 2019 exhibition at the Museum of Modern Art, Private Lives Public Spaces, featured 100 works of "artist's cinema, amateur movies, and family filmmaking". 17 Reasons Why was presented on a digital screen in front of a dark background at the exhibition's entrance, in addition to two 16 mm screenings. MoMA had wanted to show the film as a 16 mm loop, but the wear and tear would have destroyed the print. Dorsky was concerned that rendering the film at 16 frames per second would require the insertion of duplicate frames which would interfere with its single-frame effects. Upon seeing the installation of the digital version, Dorsky remarked that it "has less feeling of body and light, delicacy of color, and tenderness of fragile beauty" than the film version but that he was "very pleasantly surprised with how good the MoMA technicians made the film look in its own newly acquired digital terms."[9][10]
Reception
Critic Amy Taubin described the film as "lively, glittering, and mysterious", writing that it "has the surprise and resonance of accomplished ensemble jazz improvisation."[2]
References
External links
- 17 Reasons Why at Nathaniel Dorsky's official site
- 17 Reasons Why at Canyon Cinema
- Английская Википедия
- Страницы с неработающими файловыми ссылками
- 1980s American films
- 1980s avant-garde and experimental films
- 1987 short films
- American silent short films
- Films directed by Nathaniel Dorsky
- Non-narrative films
- Silent films in color
- Страницы, где используется шаблон "Навигационная таблица/Телепорт"
- Страницы с телепортом
- Википедия
- Статья из Википедии
- Статья из Английской Википедии