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Freshman

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quote: Originally posted by FutureOfFilm: Is it an excuse to make a short movie with no apparent plot because you want to test the water of filmmaking???
Umm...yeah thats one way to look at it. Key word: "experiment"al. For me, experimenting with film is just practice. Which is what any aspiring filmmaker needs...practice. And lots of it!
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| Posts: 15 | Location: Atlanta | Registered: May 08, 2008 |    |
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Moderator

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I think you are attaching connotations to "Experimental Film" that don't necessarily belong there. Its not that the director ran out of story ideas and is resorting to throwing random nonsensical elements together and slapping a "experimental" label on it. A lot of experimental films are actually very cleverly and meticulously crafted. They just usually rely heavily on intuition and experience, rather than a spoon-fed narrative.
"Important dialog is only in Hollywood films" - Kyle Phillip Johnson
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| Posts: 1275 | Location: Indiana | Registered: May 23, 2004 |    |
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Freshman
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Experimental films are often not made with narrative in mind, rather they are reaching to offer insights about life that is often deeply personal to the artist making the work. Look at the work of Stan Brakhage, Joseph Cornell, Andy Warhol, Micheal Snow (I highly recommend seeing "Wavelength") Nathaniel Dorsky (I also recommend seeing any of his work) Maya Deren, Luis Bunuel/Salvador Dali, Kenneth Anger etc. etc. Got to : http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Experimental_film or look it up in wikipedia to get a brief understanding of these filmmakers and experimental films. Unfortunately, these filmmakers are not given the credit they deserve though we borrow from they experimentation and creativity when we create our own films.
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| Posts: 46 | Location: Colorado/Headed to Chapman in the OC | Registered: May 10, 2008 |    |
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Moderator

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David Lynch's experimental film series Rabbits is better than 98% of all other films (traditional and experimental). Actually, in my opinion anything David Lynch has crafted is better than 98% of all other films :P
"Important dialog is only in Hollywood films" - Kyle Phillip Johnson
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| Posts: 1275 | Location: Indiana | Registered: May 23, 2004 |    |
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Alumnus

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sorry i missed this topic...hooha, if you havnt seen Inland Empire yet there's bits of Rabbits in that, and INland Empire is a much more complete work where Rabbits seems to just be a romp of confusion and pointlessness. But, Rabbits should be available at david lynch's personal website, I am pretty sure thats where he released it (When you pay to join his site, this all may be changed now tho I dono)
there is this great site I cant recall the name of, but theyd have "exploitation genres" like NAzi movies, Italian horror movies, biker, Detective movies, aswell my favorite "best lesbian whip fight scene movies"
in my opinion I would consider Cassavete's films to be very experimental, they would have a script and do rehearsals and constantly be re writing. Finding truer rythmms and patterns to the character's speech and actions.
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| Posts: 3927 | Location: Sacramento, CA | Registered: July 21, 2003 |    |
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Freshman
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quote: Question: Where do you guys go to get your hands on more obscure films like, for example, Rabbits, or whatever else that probably isn't carried in your typical Blockbuster?
Join Netflix.
That's Hatts!
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| Posts: 81 | Location: Hatt City | Registered: July 07, 2007 |    |
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Alumnus

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quote: and they are usually utterly irrelevant to anyone except the "filmmakers" who made them
hmm, thats how I feel about MOST films that come out because of the lack of anything real. for somereason I hated Peter JAckson's King Kong yet it was hugely popular and yet there's absolutely nothing in it that is relevant to the audience or the filmmaker! and what is even weirder is I am LOOKING for films that have a relevance to the filmmaker. I dont want something that is gonna be all perfect and telling me adsactly what is going on, I want the mystery...I want to wonder "who made this? why did they make this?" I want to have to sit through something and constantly be questioning something about it, even if it may only ever be understood by the filmmaker.
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| Posts: 3927 | Location: Sacramento, CA | Registered: July 21, 2003 |    |
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Freshman
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so, according to you, Cinematical, the story is the most important thing in any film? That's like saying the lyrics are the most important thing in a song. To me, anyway. We have plenty of great storytellers budding out there. We need more people like Lynch, I think. Don't get me wrong, just because someone slops together a video doesn't mean it's good. A lot of it is pretentious ****. A lot of good stuff is also pretentious. But I think anyone can make a film and become a great filmmaker. Look at Lynch and Agnes Varda. They weren't cinephiles. I think the artform is open to everyone and I encourage anyone with something honest to say to at least give it a shot.
That's Hatts!
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| Posts: 81 | Location: Hatt City | Registered: July 07, 2007 |    |
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