Friday, February 10, 2012

Shorts Circuit

Some of the Best Shorts from Pratt's 16mm Film Archives


Saturday, February 18, 2012 @ 2 P.M.
Enoch Pratt Central Library
400 Cathedral St.
(410) 396-4616

Starting this weekend, the Charles Theatre will be screening "Oscar Shorts" - a two-part program featuring the 2012 Oscar-nominees for best live action, documentary and animated shorts - continuing the annual Academy Award-nominated shorts roadshow started by ShortsHD (a cable TV network specializing in short films) seven years ago. Among this year’s nominees are Pixar’s longest theatrical short, a live action film by Hotel Rwanda director Terry George, and a documentary about Japan's tragic tsunami disaster of 2011. I highly recommend taking advantage of this rare opportunity to see some of the best short films in their ideal environment - a movie theater (as opposed to viewing them on TV or YouTube) - in this, the appropriately "shortest" of months, February.

For those who long to see even more shorts - or who simply don't want to pay to see the ones at The Charles - I recommend checking out the free "Shorts Circuit" film program next Saturday at the Enoch Pratt Central Library. This 82-minute program features nine of the best live-action and animated shorts from Pratt's extensive 16mm film archives and includes four Oscar-nominated shorts and two Oscar-winners in Norman McLaren's Neighbors (Best Documentary, Short Subjects, 1952) and Chuck Workman's Precious Images (Best Live Action Short Film, 1987). All of the films featured at this free screening are available for loan from Pratt’s Sights & Sounds Department; call (410)396-4616 or check Pratt’s Web site at www.prattlibrary.org for more information.

Many of Pratt's 16mm film shorts are commercially unavailable (or extremely hard to find) elsewhere, including Muppets-creator Jim Henson's early live-action student film Time Piece (1965), Stan VanDerBeek's influential but rarely seen collage-montage Breath Death (1964), and Workman's Precious Images (1986). Part of the explanation why has to do as much with the nature of the format as with the market for such films; unlike Hollywood feature films (which are typically produced by a single studio), short films come from various sources and are rarely compiled into anthologies, though Pixar has released a few over the years.

"SHORTS CIRCUIT" Program Guide

SNOOKLES
(Juliet Stroud, 1980, 2 minutes, color animation, 16mm)


We open our program with macabre humor in the vein of Godzilla Meets Bambi in this unlikely encounter between a baby dragon and a baby bird.

TIME PIECE
(Jim Henson, 1965, 8 minutes, color, 16mm)

UNAVAILABLE ANYWHERE ELSE. This early live-action film produced by and starring Jim Hensen (of Muppets fame) documents a day in the live of one man in the urban rat race. While he is in a hospital bed, the typical day of a young executive flashes before his eyes. Realistic scenes cut to wild dream sequences that comment on the reality they interpret. Anticipates the free-form editing style Bob Rafelson would later employ in his Monkees cult film Head (1968). Nominated for an Oscar (Best Short Subject – Live Action) in 1966. Produced by Jim Henson, photographed by Ted Nemeth with music by Don Sebesky.

BREATH DEATH
(Stan VanDerBeek, 1964, 15 minutes, b&w, 16mm)


UNAVAILABLE ANYWHERE ELSE. Stan VanDerBeek, an early experimenter with collage-animation, creates a surrealistic fantasy based on 15th century woodcuts of “the dance of the dead” by cutting up photos and newsreel footage to produce images that are "a mixture of unexplainable fact ... with inexplicable act”; he dedicated the results “to Charlie Chaplin and Buster Keaton." Artist/director Terry Gilliam has cited this film as an early influence on his collage-style animation with Monty Python. In 1975, VanDerBeek became an instructor at the University of Maryland, Baltimore County (UMBC), where he founded the digital media center. He died in 1984.

NEIGHBORS
(Norman McLaren, 1952, 8 minutes, color, from 16mm)

In 1952, Norman McLaren was credited with introducing the technique of pixilation with this ground-breaking film that won a 1953 Oscar for “Best Documentary, Short Subjects.” Described as “the most eloquent plea for peace ever filmed,” it’s an anti-war parable that shows how a dispute over which neighbor owns a flower escalates into territorialism, war, and genocide. The film’s climax, in which the men’s wives and children are killed, was originally cut from prints (including the one shown at the 1953 Academy Awards ceremony) because the sequence was considered too shocking to the sensibilities of the time. Animator Grant Munro also acts in the film (he’s the neighbor on the right side of the picket fence.)

PRECIOUS IMAGES
(Chuck Workman, 1986, 8 minutes, b&w/color, from 16mm)

UNAVAILABLE ANYWHERE ELSE. No one captures "the moment" - iconographic images that define a film, an emotion or an era - better than montage master Chuck Workman (pictured at left), the Eisenstein of celluloid flashcards. In this Academy Award-winning film (Best Short Film, Live Action, 1987), Workman presents the greatest scenes from 50 years of film - from Citizen Kane to Star Wars – in eight breakneck minutes of skillful editing. Over 500 images appear in rapid-fire cuts of roughly a second each, presenting the “defining moments” of great films of half a century. Precious Images went on to become the most widely-viewed short appearing in schools, museums, film festivals and movie theaters worldwide. Precious Images is one of five Workman films in the collection of The Museum of Modern Art in New York.


Rosebud is just one of Workman's "Precious Images"

Workman’s montages of Hollywood films are visual highlights of each year's Academy Awards telecast and his 100 Years at the Movies (1994) is frequently shown on cable TV’s Turner Classic Movies channel. Though editing dozens of images a minute became his trademark, Workman ironically also made a feature-length documentary on Andy Warhol (1987’s Andy Warhol: Portrait of An Artist), a man whose own specialty was using only a few images and keeping them there for up to eight hours. He also directed a feature-length documentary on the Beat Generation, 1999’s The Source, and has created movie trailers for Star Wars, Close Encounters of the Third Kind, and Paris, Texas.

THE TELL-TALE HEART
(Ted Parmelee, 1953, 8 minutes, color animation, 16mm)

Director Ted Parmelee’s animated adaptation of Edgar Allan Poe's classic horror tale of a man who is driven by an old man's "vulture eye" to kill him (only to be forced to confess his crime by the loud, insistent beating of the dead man's heart) comes from UPA, the studio most associated with Mr. Magoo, Gerald McBoing-Boing and Woody Woodpecker. It’s considered a classic in the development of the animated film because of its unusual subject matter, its use of dramatic visual techniques (created by Paul Julian and clearly indebted to the German Expressionist style featured in The Cabinet of Dr. Caligari), and the effectiveness of its soundtrack, which includes narration by the great James Mason – reason enough to see this film. Incredibly, it was the first cartoon to be X-rated (adults only) in Great Britain under the British Board of Film Censors classification system! Oscar-nominated in 1954 (Best Short Subject, Cartoons) and added to National Film Registry in 2001. For some reason, this short was included on the 2-disc edition Hellboy DVD.

LOVE LETTER TO EDIE
(Robert Maier, 1975, 14 minutes, color, from 16mm)

"I like being a star," says Edith Massey, in this tongue-in-cheek film "biography" which traces her life from a foster home, to a career as a B girl on the Block, a barmaid at Pete's Hotel in Fells Point, owner of the "Miss Edith's Shopping Bag" thrift shop at 726 S. Broadway and to the career which has made her famous across the U.S. - as the "glamorous" star of John Waters' underground films. Written, produced and directed by Robert Maier (line producer of Waters’ Desperate Living, Polyester and Hairspray), it won an award at the 1975 Baltimore Film Festival. Great period footage of 1970s Baltimore shops, bars, and people (including John Waters, Pat Moran, Mink Stole, Mary Vivian Pearce, Vincent Peranio, and LA showgirl Delores Delux).

We end our program with two psychedelic experimental films from the ‘60s...

OFFON
(Scott Bartlett, 1967, 9 minutes, color, from 16mm)


From Treasures IV: American Avant-Garde: “OffOn is a landmark avant-garde film, the first to fully merge video with film. Scott Bartlett’s goal was to ‘marry the technologies’ so that neither would ’show up separately from the whole.’” Made by feeding film loops into a color television channel and filming the results off a TV monitor (at 30 frames a second to eliminate flicker), Bartlett then optically printed much of the footage frame by frame, adding additional complimentary images solely on film. Then, to intensify the weaker colors of video, he dyed the film strips with food coloring.

Bartlett later commented, “There’s a pattern in my film work that could be the pattern of a hundred thousand movies. It is simply to repeat and purify, repeat and synthesize, abstract, abstract, abstract.” Significantly, OffOn opens with a close-up of an eye as if to suggest a new way of seeing. Interesting both for its technique and the implication "of the reality behind the reality we normally perceive",” this film is part of the National Film Registry.

7362 (1967)
(Patrick O’Neill, 1967, 10 minutes, color, from 16mm)


“I was interested in making something that was neither a negative nor a positive but an amalgam of both,” says filmmaker Patrick O’Neill of 7362, which takes its name from the stock number of the high-contrast black-and-white Kodak film commonly used for titles and mattes; this stock became the building block for the film’s special effects, which start with machine-like imagery and gradually merge into abstracted forms of the human anatomy. From Treasures IV: American Avant-Garde: “As they swing to the electronic throb of the sound track, the shapes grow more complex, refracting the oil pump and a dancer into mirrored patterns as they divide and mutate with strobe-light urgency...eventually the line between human and machine becomes impossible to determine. Black/white, negative/positive, man/machine, yin/yang – neither can exist without the other. In 7362, the unity of opposites enters the psychedelic age.” The soundtrack features music by Joseph Byrd and Michael Moore (no, not that Michael Moore!).

Labels: , , , ,

Tuesday, January 17, 2012

The Short Films of Amy Linthicum


An early Fluxus-influenced installation by visual artist Amy Linthicum

Local filmmaker/criminal records clerk [it's a new combined major - check your local college catalogs!] Amy Linthicum is a master of cinematic haiku, creating brief but thought-provoking short videos using only her smartphone and small, everyday objects - such as wind-up toys and solar-powered plastic flowers. Though she claims to have no obvious aesthetic influence beyond her own collection of household tchotchkes, this reviewer sees a direct connection to the post-modern principles of the 1960s Fluxus Movement, specifically the films of the (pre-professional widow) visual artist, Yoko Ono.

As she prepares to submit a much longer work (perhaps, rumor has it, even a full-blown 60-second video installation) for consideration in the prestigious 2012 Janet & Walter Sondheim Prize competition, Ms. Linthicum has graciously uploaded the following videos to her YouTube channel amylization.

Six Seconds of Cheer
(Written, directed & produced by Amy Linthicum; 2012; 06 seconds)


Brilliant! And yes, couldn't we all use a few seconds of cheer in these turbulent, dangerous and economically devasting times? The artist cuts to the quick with disarming simplicity.

Happy Squirrel Toy
(Written, directed & produced by Amy Linthicum; 2012; 11 seconds)


"Happy Squirrel Toy" evokes the spirit of German poet Friedrich Schiller's famous "Ode an die Freude" ("Ode to Joy") in enthusiastically celebrating the brotherhood and unity of all mankind, as here expressed by a tiny, plastic, mechanical representation of a carefree mammalia sciuridae playing with a tiny, plastic nut. This creature's joy is measured not in arbitrary mathematical units, but in kinetic leaps and bounds!

Heads up, Maryland Arts Council, attention Baltimore Office of Promotion & The Arts. There's a new visual arts playa in town, and she's wound-up and ready for her six seconds of fame - maybe even 15 seconds by the time the Sondheim Award Finals roll around this July!

Labels: , , , ,

Saturday, February 16, 2008

Weekend Toon Up

AN ANIMATED WEEKEND AT THE MOVIES

Inspired by MICA's Suzan Pitt retrospective Thursday night, I spent all day Saturday watching animated films at area theatres.

DAY WATCH



First up was the the "The 2007 Academy Award Nominated Animated Short Films" program at the Landmark Theatre, where I saw all five short films nominated for Best Animated Short at the 2007 Academy Awards (a separate program addressed the live action short film nominees). One of those films was the amazing Madame Tutli-Putli, which I had seen previously and was sure would be the pick of the litter and a shoo-in for this year's Oscar. But after seeing the full line-up, I wasn't so sure. In other words, this is a great program of immensely talented animators, one in which everyone's a contender! In fact, I was so impressed by the impressionist watercolor technique employed in the Russian short My Love (Moya Lyubov) , I have to give it the Oscar nod (though I Am the Walrus was easily the most enjoyable short).

The 90-minute program was perfectly paced and included (in order of appearance):

MEME LES PIGEONS VONT AU PARADIS (EVEN PIGEONS GO TO HEAVEN)
(directed by Samuel Tourneux and Simon Vanesse, France, 9 minutes, French w/ English subtitles, CGI)

A priest tries to sell an old man a machine that he promises will transport him to Paradise. This funny short was a great opener, managing to entertain while also showing the hypocrisy of Catholic theological excess in a way only Europeans raised under Church ideology can.

MEME LES PIGEONS VONT AY PARADIS Trailer

MEMES LES PIGEONS at Internet Movie Database

MY LOVE (MOYA LYUBOV)
(directed by Alexander Petrov, Russia, 27 minutes, Russian w/English subtitles)

Alexander Petrov has been nominated for four Oscars for Best Animated Short Film, winning previously for THE OLD MAN AND THE SEA (1999). Inspired by Ivan Turgenev's novella First Love, this long short set in 19th-century Russia tells the story of a teenage boy in search of love who is drawn to two very different women from two very different social classes. Da, da...typical Russian epic novel fare with a typically tragic Turgenev twist (readers of my Lazy Eye post take note - it involves strabismus!). But it's handled with great imagination and amazing technical skill - Petrov employs the time-consuming technique of painting pastel oils on glass, giving his film the look of one of Monet's impressionist paintings come to life. The effect is visual poetry at its finest.

MY LOVE - PART 1 (extract from You Tube)

MADAME TUTLI-PUTLI
(directed by Chris Lavin and Maciek Szczerbowski, Canada, 17 minutes, Claymation/CGI)
Official Madame Tutli-Putli Website


Jeepers, creepers, where'd you get those peepers?

A timid woman boards a mysterious night train and has a series of frightening experiences. That's the non-narrative plot of this stop-motion puppet animation film, but its real story lies in Madame Tutli-Putli's expressive eyes. Those emotive orbs were the creation of Jason Walker, who crafted a production process in which he seamlessly added live action human eyes to stop-motion animation. The process is explained in detail on Jason Walker's official web site (http://madametutliputli.com):
Jason developed a system of separating and analyzing the previously shot stop-motion puppet moves, choreographing, rehearsing and shooting a human actor's corresponding "eye performance" to match each puppet move, at the same time recreating as closely as possible all light and shadow passes original to the stop-motion. Once the human eyes were shot, each eye was individually positioned, scaled, re-timed and digitally composited onto the puppet scenes. As different actors were cast for almost all the characters, the requirement was not only to integrate the human eyes onto each puppet, but on a frame by frame basis, match the subtle movement of the puppets, the camera, and the train – all the while retaining the flow of the acting. "This required every trick in the book and more!" exclaims Mr. Walker. The creation of the film and this extraordinarily painstaking process took 4 years from concept to completion.

Beyond its technical aspects, the film is also a thought-provoking psychological exercise, for Mademe Tutli-Putli certainly carries more than just Samsonite luggage aboard the train. Like the characters in Suzan Pitt's Asparagus and Joy Street, the protagonist is clearly taking a trip to the center of her mind.

MADAME TUTLI-PUTLI Trailer

I MET THE WALRUS
(directed by Josh Raskin, Canada, 5 minutes, English, 2D Animation)
Official Web Site: www.imetthewalrus.com

Animators looking for ideas, take heart: this is a prime example of how to make something out of nothing. In 1969, 14-year-old Jerry Levitan (pictured left) snuck into John Lennon's hotel room in Toronto with his tape recorder and persuaded him to do an interview. This was during John and Yoko's "Bed-In" to promote world peace phase. Levitan got 5 minutes worth of conversation about various topics, including war and peace, music and, unfortunately, his dislike of George Harrison (what's his problem? George was my fave of the Fab Four!). It all wouldn't have amounted to much, except for Josh Raskin's imagination and skill as an animator and director 38 years later. He uses a stream-of-consciousness technique to illustrate basically every word that comes out of Lennon's mouth. More specifically, he employs James Braithwaite's pen sketches and Alex Kurina's digital illustrations to create what the film's official web site quite rightly calls "a spell-binding vessel for Lennon’s boundless wit, and timeless message." That message is illustrated below:



The look of the animation reminded me of both Terry Gilliam's Monty Python work (which of course harkens back to the cut-up collage techniques of Stan Vanderbeek) and Frank and Caroline Mouris' FRANK FILM (1973), especially in regards to the latter's pacing and thematic synching of images with narration.

Check out the trailer below:
"I Met the Walrus" trailer

PETER & THE WOLF
(directed by Suzie Templeton, UK & Poland, 27 minutes, stop-motion Claymation)
Official Web Site

The kids in the crowd loved this one the best, and why not? It's a familiar story to them, but this version of Prokofiev's classical music drama of a young boy and his animal friends who face a hungry wolf is told with a different slant. The director nixes all that "cry wolf" foreplay and gets right to the matter at hand, the action and Prokofiev's music propelling the narration-free story forward until it reaches a new, "re-imagined" non-violent ending. There are also ample bits of humor, thanks to Templeton's amusing animal models.

Suzie Templeton is best known for her award-winning film DOG (2002), which told the story of a boy coming to terms with the death of his mother. This film has won many prizes, including a British Animation Award and a BAFTA.

Watch Official Trailer

The short was also featured on PBS' GREAT PERFORMANCES. Check out the clip below to see director Suzie Templeton talking about the maing of her film:
The Making of PETER & THE WOLF

NIGHT WATCH

Then it was up to the Charles Theatre to finally catch Marjane Satrapi's Persepolis (2007, France/USA, 95 min), which I had been hearing about since my animator friend saw it at the Annecy Animation Festival in France. First-time director Marjane Satrapi did a marvelous job adapting her graphic novel of the same name to the big screen (after all, who else knows the material as well as its author?), and I like the way she used black-and-white to depict her life under an oppressive regime in Iran and color for her life in the West.

Satrapi's story of her coming-of-age, from a 9-year-old during Iran's Islamic Revolution, a teenager during the long war of attrition with Iraq and as a young woman eventually escaping to the West is both a history lesson and the story of one woman's independent spirit and quest for artistic and creative freedom. Particularly amusing is the appeal of "decadent" Western culture in the form of punk, ABBA, Iron Maiden and Michael Jackson for Satrapi while in her homeland, as contrasted with her contempt for its excesses in the West. For example, when she is Vienna hanging out a middle-class group of friends made up of mohawked nihilists and punk rock-listening anarchists, she can't figure out exactly what they're rebelling against, other than boredom. They seem to have it all too easy while in her country listening to something even as innocuous as the Bee Gees was enough to get one imprisoned.



As has been pointed out by other reviewers, the emotional highlight of Satrapi's film is the unironic use of Survivor's "Eye of the Tiger" to represent her resolve to change her plight and strike out for personal and artistic freedom. Westerners may snicker at the cheesiness of the song's sentiments, but irony is a luxury for oppressed people whose main concern is survival.

It would be easy after watching Persepolis to smugly assume that the West has religious freedom and that that Iran's religious regime is an all-too-obvious form of fascism. But religious fanaticism of all every stripe came off pretty poorly in the films I saw today, from the mean-spirited imans and nuns in Persepolis to the conniving priest in the animated short Meme les Pigeons vont au Paridis (Even Pigeons Go To Heaven).

Labels: , , , ,

Friday, February 15, 2008

Pitt Stop

ANIMATOR SUZAN PITT VISITS MICA


Fanboy with Suzan Pitt

Last night I got to meet one of my idols, American animator Suzan Pitt (pictured above right), who was in town for a free film screening of her works Asparagus (1979), Joy Street (1995), and El Doctor (2006) at the Maryland Institute, College of Art. Suzan Pitt is an artist and independent animator whose acclaimed works are characterized by their bright color schemes and concern with the spiritual and psychological journeys of their protagonists. Interested in the aesthetic of moving painted images, her goal has always been to make animated films that are gorgeous to look at but which also have something important to say. But that only tells part of the story of this talented artist's work; her life is a work of art in itself, one that has enabled her to meet and work with artists of every stripe, including "rock stars" like Debbie Harry (who sings a song with the Jazz Passengers on the soundtrack of Joy Street) and Peter Gabriel (Suzan helped animate his Big Time music video). But more on that later.

The screening was organized by Laurence Aracadias and Richard Lipscher of MICA's Experimental Animation Department (as pictured below with Suzan), in collaboration with the Maryland Film Festival.


Laurence Arcadias, Suzan Pitt and Rich Lipscher

Entering MICA's Brown Building lobby at half past 7 p.m., I immediately spotted Laurence Arcadias talking to someone I assumed was one of her students, a slender study in black jeans and knee-length black coat. But on closer inspection the "student" turned out to be none other than guest of honor Suzan Pitt, who calmly explained that she had lost a lot of weight the last month from a bout of flu.

"You wear it well," I complimented her. "I mistook you for MICA coed."

Despite still being a little under the weather, it immediately became apparent that Suzan had a very relaxed, easy-going manner, one entirely in keeping with her self-characterization as "an old hippie." She is definitely "Old School" as far as animation goes, a hand-drawing/painting cel animator (the end credits in her latest work, 2006's El Doctor, said it all: "Hecho a mano," made by hand), who takes great joy in what she called "the process" - the whole soup-to-nuts process from conception to completion that goes into creating a work of art.

As we stood conversing outside Falvey Auditorium, other Suzan Pitt fans gathered around her, including my cineaste co-worker Marc Sober (pictured right), his friend (and erstwhile Baltimore Film Festival impressario) Harold Levine, retired film teacher Mike Iampieri, and BCPL Nex Gen librarian Cody Brownson. In full otaku fanboy mode, Marc and I loomed over Suzan asking for autographs and pictures. She gracefully indulged our attentions and obliged all parties concerned with ample photo ops.

By way of introduction...a slight digression

So why all the fuss and fawning, you ask? Well, if you don't know about Suzan Pitt's work, you really should. I would be doing an injustice to her if I summed her career up in one word, but it's the first word that pops into everyone's head when they've seen her work, past or present. That word is: Asparagus.


Asparagus is hard to digest on just one viewing

I work in the audio-visual department of the Enoch Pratt Free Library and anytime someone interested in animation asks me for recommendations, the first question I ask is, "Have you seen Asparagus?" It is at once mind-blowing, bizarre, and surreal - as well as beautiful, detailed and thought-provoking. Or, as Turner Classic Movies describes certain must-see films, it's one of "The Essentials."

Five years in the making (1974-1978), this award-winning (First Prize - Oberhausen International Film Festival, Baltimore Film Festival, Atlanta Film Festival, Ann Arbor Film Festival) 20-minute candy-colored dreamscape wowed audiences upon its 1979 release and propelled Suzan Pitt to the front ranks of indie animation. As critic Michael Spor recalled, "Asparagus was the biggest thing in the Independent animation world back in the early ’80s. Hardly a screening of animated films existed without including this short."

Baltimore filmmaker/curator Skizz Cyzyk can certainly vouch for that last statement. Long before it finally became available on DVD, Asparagus was only available locally as a 16mm print at the Enoch Pratt Central Library and Skizz used to check it out regularly to show at his Mansion Theatre and MicroCineFest "underground film" screenings. And I myself have shown it so many times at Enoch Pratt film programs that I've lost count.


Dollhouse still from "Asparagus"

In addition to film festivals, Asparagus also ran theatrically on the Midnight Movie circuit, where it achieved cult status when paired with David Lynch's Eraserhead (it was a truly match made "In Heaven" - when you see it, you'll know why.) From its opening scene of a woman defecating an asparagus spear into her toilet bowl to the concluding set piece in which the artist opens her Medusa's box to release rare wonders before a claymation audience, beautifully detailed cel animation leads its blank-faced protagonist into a world of Freudian symbolism and Jungian archetypes.


Asparagus' climatic theatre scene

The link with David Lynch (who, like Pitt, came to filmmaking from a painting background) is more than natural. As is a link with the books of Haruki Murakami (who is sometikes referred to as a "literary David Lynch"). For they all share a fondness for mood and tone over mere narrative and exposition, and for surreal dream-like images. As one spot-on reviewer characterized Pitt's work: "Her background as a painter informs everything she does. She is far more interested in the value of the image than in narrative or character."

Meanwhile, back in the lobby...

As Suzan Pitt made her way into Falvey Auditorium to start the screening, I mentioned that I had seen clips of Asparagus show up in the documentary Midnight Movies, which was inspired by the book of the same title by J. Hoberman and Jonathan Rosenbaum. The footage appeared during the documentary's segment on David Lynch's Eraserhead.

"I heard that too," Suzan replied, "but it wasn't credited." That would be par for the course, as Suzan complained that people are now also downloading her movies for free on the Internet. Time was, you could only see Asparagus by going to a midnight movie screening, but now everything is readily available in the information age and the increased exposure doesn't necessarily guarantee artistic compensation.

"It's not just people uploading clips for viewing on YouTube," Suzan explained. "People are now downloading the entire film through Bit Torrents."

This is a particularly sore point, because Suzan gets not one penny from these downloads. This is a woman who has invested YEARS of her life for each project she undertakes, with scant funding from grants and institutions. So if you like her work, show it by supporting the woman. You can buy her collected works DVD (distributed by First Run Pictures), El Doctor, Joy Street & Aparagus: The Wonderfully Strange and Surreal Animation of Suzan Pitt, directly from her for $25. (Sound pricey to you? It's not. That's about 5 fancy Starbucks lattes, and this isn't exactly Dragonball Z animation that you can find at your local Blockbuster, this is a true American Master, who painstakingly creates lush, detailed animation that bears rewarding repeat viewing.)

To buy the DVD (and/or reproductions of her cel animation art) directly from Suzan Pitt, just send an e-mail to suzanpitt@earthlink.net.

And check out her website and blog while you're at it!

And now, on with the show!

At 7:30 p.m., it was time for the show to begin. Inside Falvey Auditorium, MICA experimental animation instructor Laurence Arcadias gave a brief introduction to her guest of honor and then Suzan Pitt stepped forward to address the audience.

Introducing herself, Suzan pointed out that she is that rarity in animation, a female animator in a field that seems to be dominated by men. Not that there aren't oustanding female artists working in the field (Carolyn Leaf, Sally Cruikshank, Kathy Rose, Martha Colburn, and Faith and Emily Hubble spring instantly to mind - not to mention MICA's own talented Laurence Arcadias, whose recent short "Dust off and Cowboy Up!" has been making the film festival rounds).

"I don't really understand it, but it's a fact," Suzan said.

Grrrl Power

It's ironic, given that the first feature-length animated film was made by a woman, Lotte Reininger (1926’s The Adventures of Prince Achmed) that so little has been written about the history and achievements of women working in animation. Although women have always worked in the male-dominated animation industry in auxiliary roles (tracers, painters, colorists, designers), the number of females working as independent animation filmmakers has only recently increased, a surge that animation scholar Jayne Pilling attributes both to the rise of independent filmmaking in the United States and a redress of gender imbalance in funding policies in the arts, as more colleges and universities offer animation courses (increasing employment opportunities for female artists and providing access to new and and costly equipment.) Of those rising female ranks, many work as independent animators like Suzan Pitt. The reason, according to Linda Simensky (Cartoon Network’s Vice President of original animation): "Women pursuing careers in the field seem more interested than men in animation as an art form. Thus, it is not surprising that the area of independent filmmaking seems to have more women than men; after all, it is an area of animation which has more room for self-expression and no real traditional hierarchy in which to fit."

Suzan then mentioned that she gave a talk earlier in the day to MICA animation students and screened Suzan Pitt: Persistance of Vision, Blue and Laura Kraning's documentary about her that appears on her collected works DVD. (Blue Kraning also wrote the script for Suzan's latest film, El Doctor.) Suzan went on to compliment MICA's animation students, many of whom were in the audience, lamenting that so much animation work goes overseas these days when there are so many outstanding animators coming out of American film and art schools.

Hands-On Animation

Many of those students have the latest high-tech computers and software to assist them in the creation of their animation. But Suzan admitted that she was very much from the Old School, one whose films were made entirely by hand.

"My films take a long time," she explained to the audience during her introduction. "Joy Street took four years, Asparagus five years and El Doctor another five years."

Not that she didn't keep busy with other projects while working on those films. A multi-tasker, Suzan supported herself as a full-time painter who also worked on operas (she created animated images for German productions of The Damnation of Faust and The Magic Flute), theatrical productions, music videos, and other creative collaborations with fellow creative types. Of the latter, she knew many; don't forget, she lived in New York City between 1977 and 1987, an exciting time of artistic endeavor in music (Punk, Disco, New Wave, No Wave), art (Basquiat and the whole downtown/SoHo art scene) and literature.

She also found time to have exhibitions at the Whitney Museum of Art, the Holly Solomon Gallery in New York, and the Stedlijk Museum in Amsterdam, two large multi-media shows at the Venice Biennale and Harvard University.

She was in no rush, she admitted, clearly enjoying the time-consuming process of creation, like medieval icon painters who measure their work's progress by the passing seasons.

"You're in your studio, listening to music, using natural light, with the camera on the animation stand. I enjoyed it, being in my own little world."

When she was starting to make films, Suzan said she had a 16mm Bolex camera that she loved.

"Of course, I was younger then and I could bend down and shoot my stills right off the floor, but now that would just about kill me, so I have to use an animation stand now."

But eventually Suzan switched to shooting in 35mm because, as she described it, "It's really the closest you can get to seeing the orginal art as imagined by the creator - mistakes and all" before it's cleaned up or tweaked when converted onto video, DVD, or a 16mm print.

Suzan mentioned that her next film will be shot entirely on 16mm, the medium she started out on. She explained that the change was due to wanting to work at home at her own pace, so that she could tamp down the labor-intensive grind of having churn out work on site at LA's Cal Arts, where she teaches. As she explained in her new blog (http://suzanpitt.blogspot.com/):
Most of my films were shot on a professional Oxberry animation stand using 35mm color negative film. This provides a beautiful high resolution image from which 35mm prints can be made, or the film can be transferred to a digital video format and the work finished in video. However, the countless days and weeks required to shoot the animation meant I had to work at Cal Arts or a professional facility in Los Angeles. I've always wanted to be able to work in my own converted garage studio!

After investing 14 years to create the three films screened at this retrospective, I think she's more than entitled to take it easy and work from home!

That said, Suzan told the audience that they were in for a treat tonight because she was screening only 35mm prints of her films, which not only presented the most beautiful rendition of her art but, to discerning eyes, would allow us to her "mistakes." This discerning eye didn't see any.

Roll Film...

And on that note, the lights dimmed and the screening opened with Joy Street.

JOY STREET (1995, 24 minutes, 35mm)



This is a story of despair and spiritual rebirth that was previously shown at the Sundance Film Festival, New York Film Festival, Naples International Film Festival (winning Best Short Film), and the San Francisco International Film Festival (where it won the Golden Gate Award). Besides being on her collected works DVD, Joy Street is also available on the Cartoon Noir VHS collection.

Analyzing Joy Street in Animation World Magazine, Jackie Leger wrote "one might say it is the culmination of Pitt's life as an artist and a woman." It certainly reflects a time in Pitt's life when, during the '90s, she became involved with rain forest activism, traveling to Guatemala to observe and paint examples of flora and fauna there. Visually, the film seems split into two parts, the first a dark German Expressionist mood mirroring the protagonist's despair and the second half an explosion of color and movement as the woman starts to look on the sunny side of life thanks to a ceramic ashtray mouse that comes to life. Linking the two parts is Pitt's jungle fantasy sequence.

As one IMDB user commented, "Pitt gets despair right on: the closed in feeling of alienation, inner pain and hopelessness that can swallow up one's reality, especially when enhanced with alcohol and tobacco, is vividly recreated here, quite a feat for animation."

This observant user adds, "Here Suzan Pitt does her riff on the classic genre of still objects coming to life at night and partying, and what a riff it is. How many times have you been way past blue, took a big, fat toke, then suddenly noticed a small detail of your existence that makes everything seem suddenly worthwhile? That's what you get here. Pitt even includes a rain forest of inspiration for the viewer to play with, crafted from her travels in Central America, and it's a blast. Don't linger over the ape smelling the flower, though, as those of you who have experienced Pitt's other classic pieces of animation will no doubt read sexual connotations in the image. Now that will bend your head."

The "still objects coming to life" riff seemed to be an homage to a bygone era of anthropomorphic animation, reminding me of old 1930s cartoons produced by the Fleischer Brothers and Van Beuren Studios in which cars and trains had eyes and limbs and everything seemed to be in constant motion, as if dancing. These cartoons starring Betty Boop, Koko the Clown, Molly the Moo-Cow and Van Beuren's Tom & Jerry (not the cat and mouse duo) existed to make people laugh and be happy, which is exactly what the depressed protagonist of Joy Street needs. That's why the swinging uptempo music, scored by The Jazz Passengers, is also so important.

Now Hear This!

"Wasn't the music in Joy Street wonderful?" Suzan asked the audience after the screening. "The Jazz Passengers really added to the film. Music is so important when you're making animated films. For Asparagus there was maybe $400 for the music, but we actually were able to get a little money to compensate the Jazz Passengers."

The Jazz Passengers were founded in 1987 by saxophonist Roy Nathanson and trombonist Curtis Fowlkes, formerly of John Lurie's NYC band The Lounge Lizards, and their ranks later included Blondie's Debbie Harry. Harry appeared on In Love (High Street Records, 1994) and later became a regular member of the band, appearing on a number of follow-up albums, including Individually Twisted, (which includes two duets with Elvis Costello, including "Doncha Go 'Way Mad").

In Joy Street, Debbie Harry sings "When the Fog Lifts" over the end credits backed by the Jazz Passengers. The song can be found on the UK-released CD Blondie Personal Collection.


Picture This: Debbie & the Jazz Passengers put the joy in JOY STREET

"Debbie Harry is a wonderful jazz singer," Suzan Pitt told the audience. "People don't realize that, but she is. And just a wonderful person, too, just so fun to be around and helpful. Besides the song during the credits, that was her providing some of the ooo's and ah's, along with me, during the jungle fantasy sequence."

And speaking of rock stars, I had to ask her about Peter Gabriel. Knowing that Suzan had provided animation for Gabriel's 1986 music video Big Time, I asked her if he was an animation fan.

"Oh yes," she replied. "And just a wonderful, charming man. I remember him as this quiet, polite, doting man who would serve you tea and sit there talking with you about all sorts of things and then they'd summon him off to start filming the music video and he'd suddenly turn it on and become this dancing, animated 'Rock Star'!"

Fade To Black

ASPARAGUS (1979, 20 minutes, 35mm)

Next up was Asparagus, which started, stopped, started and then stopped again, experiencing some sort of technical difficulty in the projection booth. The film only screened for roughly a third of its run time before the lights went up and Suzan had to explain that a technical glitch made it impossible to continue.



A big sigh of disappointment swept the auditorium. That said, the lights dimmed as the next film came on.

EL DOCTOR (2006, 23 minutes, 35mm)



El Doctor was the last film presented. This was her most recent film, one that played on PBS in October 2006 (as well as the 2007 Maryland Film Festival). Suzan's website describes it as "a dark animated poem set in a crumbling Mexican hospital about 1920. Inhabited by surreal characters including the man shot with one hundred holes, the girl who sprouted morning-glories, and the woman who thinks she is a horse, the Doctor prefers to drink. The Saint of Holes and a mysterious gargoyle rearrange the Doctor's fated demise and send him on a dark and twisted journey. The film celebrates the nature of perception and the miraculous." With a script by her documentary biographer Blue Kraning, El Doctor took over five years of production, utilizing the hand-painted skills of Suzan and a group of Los Angeles- and Mexico-based artists.

It was also project that reenforced to Suzan that she is, and always has been, a very independent spirit. As anyone who follows PBS' Art 21 knows, a great deal of modern art involves collaborations with sometimes a crew of collaborators - gallery assistants, technical crew, and so on. Suzan works with others, but admits she likes to approach it in a more communal spirit, working at her own pace with people she feels close to. As an example, she mentioned that although El Doctor was partially funded by a public television grant - which relieves the anxiety independent filmmakers experience looking for funding - it was not without its costs.

"I was stressed somewhat by that experience," she explained. "I felt this pressure of having to deal with deadlines and people who were overly organized. It was kind of like working with both the FBI and the CIA."

In other words, instead of fellow artists, she found herself having to work with the business/bureacracy side of Art - the funding side full of adminstrators and executives.

Small wonder then that she plans to return to her home studio for her next production, where she'll return to her roots with her handy old Bolex standing on the animation stand she built herself.

The Few, the Proud

On the way out, Marc Sober lamented the sparse turnout for the free screening (a phenomenon I'm all too familiar with at some of my screenings). I mentioned I didn't even known about the event until a few days earlier when I got a Friends of the Festival e-mail from the Maryland Film Festival, which advertised it as $10 - unless you were a friend of the festival. Maybe that had something to do with it. Who knows. Regardless, it was the no-shows' loss, for they missed watching three beautiful 35mm prints of Suzan's films and, even better, getting to hear the creator talk at length about herself and her work.

Note: Michael Spor's blog has a great review of Suzan Pitt, that sums up her work - and specifically the import of Asparagus - better than I ever could in a million years.

Partial Suzan Pitt Filmography:

Here's a filmography put together by Jackie Leger for Animation World Magazine. Note that some of these works are in the permanent collection of the Walker Art Center, The Museum of Modern Art, and the Filmmuseum in Amsterdam.

Bowl, Theatre, Garden, Marble Game (1970), 7 min., 16mm.

*Crocus (1971) 7 min., 16mm.

A City Trip (1972), 3 min., 16mm.

Cels (1972), 6 min., 16mm.

Whitney Commercial (Whitney Museum of Art, 1973), 3 min., 16mm.

*Jefferson Circus Songs (1973), 20 min., 16mm.

Watch JCS Part 1
Watch JCS Part 2


*Asparagus (1979), 20 min., 35mm.

Night Fire Dance (Columbia Masterworks Records, 1986) (Co-Director), 1 min., 35mm., black & white. Music video, with music by Andreas Vollenweider.

Big Time (Warner Records, 1986) (Storyboard & Animation), Music video; music by Peter Gabriel.

Watch "Big Time"



Surf or Die (Profile Records), 3 min., 35mm. Music video; music by The Surf M.C.'s.

Watch "Surf or Die"



The Damnation of Faust (Hamburg State Opera, 1988), one hour, 35mm.

Bam Video (Brooklyn Academy of Music, 1990), 3 min., 35mm.

Colors/Colores (Public Broadcasting System, 1995, 1 min. 15 sec., video.

Joy Street (Channel Four & PBS, 1995), 24 min., 35mm.

Troubles the Cat (The Ink Tank, 1996) (Director), 12 six-minute sequences for the Cartoon Network.

El Doctor (PBS, 2006), 23 min., 35mm and digital

*Distributed by the Museum of Modern Art, New York and the British Film Institute, London.

Related Links:
Suzan Pitt's Website
Suzan Pitt's Blog
Suzan Pitt's DVD from First Run Pictures
El Doctor review (Animation World)
Suzan Pitt DVD review (Frames Per Second magazine)
DVD Verdict review of Suzan Pitt's DVD
Michael Spor's Blog about Suzan Pitt
Animation World's Review of Suzan Pitt (Jackie Leger)

Labels: , , , ,