Rameau’s Nephew by Diderot (Thanx to Dennis Young) by Wilma Schoen

Film Maker
Snow, Michael
Year
1974
Country
Canada
Language
Format
16mm
Length
266
Genre
experimental
Category
art & artists, film studies

“Until ‘Rameau’s Nephew…’ no one has exhibited a film that deals so thoroughly with the range of perceptual problems elicited by the sound cinema.” – M. Keller, Chicago Film Centre “…an achievement of the originality and brilliance of ‘Wavelength.’ Snow embraces the problems on intimacy of language and thought with such variety, clarity and invention and high humour that again he seems to have made a film out of which an entire future movement could be mined.” – P. Adams Sitney, Soho Weekly News I started scripting this film in February 1972 and writing, shooting, mixing, editing and continued till September ‘74. Some ideas used in it date from 1966 when I recognized in myself the ambition to make an authentic Talking Picture i.e. true to its description, it moves for its content from the facts of the simultaneities of recorded speech and image; it is built from the true units of a “talking picture” the syllable and the frame. All the possible image/sound relationships centering around people and speech generate the movie-audience relationships: a wide range of emotional possibilities, the experience of seeing/hearing this film. “Speech,” “Language,” “Culture” – their source, their nature…recorded, imaged, prove (?) that in this case a word is worth 1000 pictures. (Michael Snow) Scripted and directed by Michael Snow. Shot primarily in Toronto and New York by himself, Keith Lock, Babette Mangolte, David York and others.

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