Monday, February 27, 2012

1 QUICK FIX #ONE: POWERS OF TEN


Hey all--
Just to mix things up a bit, I thought it'd be fun to start a recurring series of posts highlighting short form films.  Not really looking to analyze or review them...just intending for it to be a low-key curatorial sweep through some of my favorites from the past.  And I'll probably end up finding some new favorites along the way, too.

As for style, format, etc., I'm not really planning on imposing any rules.  Look for the avant-garde to rub shoulders with the strongly narrative or non-fiction to sit side-by-side with popular animation of the past.

Before we begin with the first installment, I wanted to give a quick shout-out to the visual arts blog Fuzzimo, whose free, hi-res 16mm film frame images post is the source material for the 1 Quick Fix image above.  Yup, that's the name of the series: 1 Quick Fix.  Hope you enjoy it.



I wanted to ease into things with a film that many of you have probably encountered before.  Charles and Ray Eames' Powers of Ten.  I first saw the film in an elementary school science class (via a 16mm film-strip version).  The film's pondering of infinite space blew my mind then and it still wows me to this day.  Over time, it's become famous enough to have been paid homage to in an intro segment for The Simpsons, practically the modern equivalent of canonization.

'Nuff said about it.  Why don't we just take a look at the film?  Here it is, from 1977, Charles & Ray Eames' Powers of Ten:




Related links:
1 QUICK FIX #TWO: UNE NUIT SUR LE MONT CHAUVE (A NIGHT ON BALD MOUNTAIN)
1 QUICK FIX #THREE: ORGANISM
1 QUICK FIX #FOUR: THE GREAT ECSTASY OF WOODCARVER STEINER


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