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  • Passion Crucified

    “Passion Crucified” is an episodic rite of passage rendered in tableau style. Part creation myth, part medieval science fiction, it enacts a typology of the body – offering us glimpses of Adam, Eve, Christ and Joan of Arc. Together they are figured as subterranean ideals, which continue to haunt us, even as they provide the means by which we might come to understand our own bodies. Begun as a dance performance, Torossian recasts her naked charge into a series of phantasmagoric settings – trees whose fruit show the faces of Medici children, drunken underground rooms filled with a rotting, natural detritus, medieval triptychs and coffins. Every where the body staggers beneath the weight of its own representations, surrounded by images which threaten to engulf or convert it, turning it into one more instance of a Christian paradigm the filmmaker insists is inevitable. “Passion Crucified” opens with Adam alone, crawling against a blank ground, attempting to forestall the flood of representation, which will dissolve his flesh into the infinite reproductions of the image. In the film’s second section, Eve appears, her every gesture doubled via electronic processing, each frame bisected with a mirrored crease, which offers identical vantages left and right. Eve’s split inaugurates a cascade of pictures with which each of the film’s protagonists will have to contend, and then finally become. Eve gives way to a section entitled “The Genealogy of Christ,” its serial announcements of succession (Adam begat Jacob begat…) appear as text superimposed over a sleeping Christ figure. This dream of naming conjures the body as historical issue, its flesh a blank receptor for Christian litanies. Rising from his slumber, Christ opens the gilded doors of his retreat and begins a strange, terrible dance. His stomach massively distended, as if he’d swallowed the line of his succession, he turns in a slow motion wind of torment before entering a world of picture galleries. Paintings of a suffering Christ frame his own gestures, and then are projected overtop of him, as he takes his place in the image world. The next two sections concern Joan of Arc, the matriarch who dressed as a man in order to do battle. In an allegorical reprise, Torossian pictures her burning in mirrored and symmetrical flames, made to endure the punishment reserved for those who cannot make their peace with Christian ideals. Our bodies remain bent to the rule of the Word, its apertures of opening and closing have admitted a history of looking which few remain cognizant of, no matter how diligently they apply its principles. In her steadfast deconstruction of old world ideals, and her stunning reassemblage of the very images that made them possible, Torossian’s imaginary historyscapes posit a place where the body might escape its disciplines of understanding, and appear again to its beholders.

    Passion Crucified

  • passing through / torn formations

    Music by Tucker Zimmerman. passing through/torn formations looks at a family blown apart by the migration from Czechoslovakia to Canada, the collision between old world and new. “‘passing through/torn formations’ extends from Eastern Europe and back again – an unraveling tapestry of family relations that speak of migration and translation.” – Marian McMahon “Philip Hoffman’s ‘passing through/torn formations’ is a wide open ramble through the labyrinth of memory, considered primarily as a family affair. The film deals with the life and history of Hoffman’s Czech-born mother and her family, as presented as a kind of polyphonic recitation of words, of images and of sounds.” – Robert Everett-Green, Globe & Mail “‘passing through/torn formations’ accomplishes a multi-faceted experience for the viewer. It is a poetic document of family, for instance – but Philip Hoffman’s editing throughout is true thought process, tracks visual theme as the mind tracks shape, makes melody of noise and words as the mind recalls sound. “ – Stan Brakhage “The film does not record the journey in a linear way. The elements of the journey are strained through out the mind, using the mechanics of memory and the imagination as a basis for the form. And this was the strategy I followed to construct characters as well throughout the film. Family members from Canada and relatives from Czechoslovakia are not easy to identify because their identities continually shift and slide. These characters are transferable throughout the film, for instance, you see an image or images of a certain person and there is a voice-over with this person. Later on in the film different voices are attached to the image of the person earlier seen. It’s a way of avoiding the conventional approach to character construction whereby the character’s identity gets pinned down and there’s less work for the audience. I tried to make a form that allows the viewer to participate in the construction of the characters. As well, this method takes the emphasis off individuals, the family exists more as a whole, albeit a tumultuous whole.” – Philip Hoffman, Cantrill’s Filmnotes “The film’s theme of reconciliation begins with death’s mediation – and moves its broken signifiers together in the film’s central image, ‘the corner mirror,’ two mirrored rectangles stacked at right angles. This looking glass offers a ‘true reflection’- not the reversed image of the usual mirror, but the objectified stare of the other… Each figure in the film has a European double, as if the entry into the New World carried with it not only the inevitable burdens of translation (from the Latin ‘translation’ – to bear across) but also the burden of all that could not be said or carried, to all that needed to be left behind.” – Mike Hoolboom, Cinema Canada

    passing through / torn formations

  • passages

    The entire film takes place in one space – a room of which we see only one wall, upon which is the moving shadow of a tree being blown by the wind. In the window we see images, which act both as mirrors reflecting back what is happening inside the room, and as glass, allowing us to see what is happening outside the room. The film is divided into four sections plus an introduction with each section separated by a slow zoom in towards the window, drawing us through the successive levels of life and existence of the space of the room, the “passages” which give the film its name.

    passages

  • Pas de Trois

    “The question of whether certain kinds of film formalism tend to be sexually reactionary is encapsulated in this little triptych. Each of the three sections includes three kinds of information. In the first section, we see single frames of strippers dancing, single frame clusters of red and then yellow, and single frame clusters of what looks to be a light source. The imagery and clear colours mix retinally, and with the flickering light source, makes this section reminiscent of looking into a movie projector. In the second section we see live action footage of a little girl presumably competing in a twirling contest. This footage regularly dissolves into and out of a blue light, which itself is punctuated by a single frame of what looks to be a movie screen. Finally, in the third section, red-toned footage of three strippers, recorded in slightly fast motion, alternates with eight-frame passages of lime green leader and, in four instances, with shots of several fish in a tank reminiscent of the final section of ‘Surface Tension.’ Together the three sections suggest something of film’s history, as well as the figure as the focus of the viewer’s gaze. ‘Pas de Trois’ is reminiscent of Paul Sharits’ single-frame films, of Robert Huot’s ‘Strip,’ and of some of Hollis’ earliest film work.” – Scott MacDonald

    Pas de Trois

  • Away

    “The story of a man’s search for a long-lost brother set against the backdrop of a famously deranged movie production, ‘Away’ draws from everything from Conrad and Chris Marker to Coppola and daytime TV for its inspiration. Yet, given the diversity of these influences, it remains a sharply focussed and emotionally intimate work: Steve’s search for his brother is after all a search for something like home or self, a truth that rings with perfect clarity through the din of craziness swirling around it.” – Geoff Pevere “An addictive mixture of fact, fiction and found footage, all whipped – through the twin magics of editing and dramatization – into a heady and hilarious brew that’s half spoof, half epic… It’s a masterful effort, and one well worth seeking out – at a mere 60 minutes, one of the most original and amusing Canadian films I’ve seen all year.” – 4-star rating, Gemma Files, Eye Weekly, Nov. 21, 1996 Awards: 2nd Prize, Best Feature Film, Main Street Film Festival, Los Angeles, 1996; Silver Award, Experimental Film, Philafilm Fest, Philadelphia, 1996

    Away

  • Parcelle

    The French term “parcelle” refers to a fragment, particle or bit. Filmed frame-by-frame in the camera, the film rests upon the alternate appearance and duration of tiny coloured squares and circles placed on a black background. Inserted in series between plain white or coloured frames, the particular arrangement of the items on separate frames forms, when projected on the screen, certain visual relationships producing a specific perceptual experience.

    Parcelle

  • Paranoia Corridor

    This film is an elaborately hand-painted step-printed work composed primarily of luminescent greens and blues in constantly shifting symmetrical shapes which suggest, rather than delineate, passage through a corridor. An increasingly menacing evolution of patterns is finally interrupted by a series of static shapes which almost appear to be symbols of resolution, ending on an almost-thigh-bone image.

    Paranoia Corridor

  • Paper Age and Ancient Flight, The

    It was in Egypt 4000 years ago when mankind first developed the aircraft. Using the pyramids as launch pads, ancient civilizations had mastered the air before the invention of the wheel. For over a thousand years cultures around the world used papyrus, or paper, to construct simple yet effective means to travel through air. Is it possible that this age of paper thrived for so long, but has remained virtually unnoticed? In in-depth interviews, William Deiches describes how he rediscovered this ancient technology. While researching pyramid contruction, he stumbled unexpectedly onto secret plans for hot air balloons, gliders and hang gliders. With over 300 scale models built from paper, he has been recognized by the Guiness Book of World Records, Who’s Who in the World, and the Rolex Awards for Enterprise.

    Paper Age and Ancient Flight, The

  • Panama, The

    “The Panama” chronicles the Chan family of Victoria, B.C. as it evolved from its first days in Canada when the patriarch Chan Dun, at the age of twelve, landed in Victoria in 1890. From this auspicious occasion, a family of eight sons and four daughters would eventually center around the Panama café, a western-style eatery specializing in liver and onions and apple pie to the working class of the city. Located on Government Street by 1930, The Panama café is a story of one of the oldest Chinese Canadian families. It describes its experience during the depression, the war years and finally the 1960s when it closed its doors for good because of the fast food competition emerging in the city. In “The Panama,” we meet 85-year-old Steven Chan, the eldest son whose marriage to Rosy Wing from Vancouver in 1932 was celebrated in a community known more for bachelors and gambling than marriage and family. Steven’s brothers and their wives are also introduced as well as his oldest daughter, Benita. Four of the brothers fought for Canada in Borneo and India during World War II. Daughter Benita talks about growing up in the restaurant among her grandparents and many aunts and uncles during the 1930s and 1940s.

    Panama, The

  • Painting with Light (Leach)

    The craft and art of stained glass is presented in an entertaining cinematic style. From the early stages of design through the choice and cutting of glass to the glazing and cleaning of the finished panel, all are detailed through the expression of artist Robert Jekyll.

    Painting with Light (Leach)