Toronto artist Andy Patton’s account of breaking his back was adapted to performance by Judith Doyle in 1981. Mounted at the now-legendary Funnel Experimental Film Centre in Toronto, “Transcript – On Pain” was presented in the form of recorded voice-over with slides of text. Andy Patton described his trauma with extraordinary clarity and insight. For “the last split second,” Judith Doyle uses her original voice recording from “Transcript” as a base for imagery. Glass shatters into light. A hospital corridor is reframed into the “tunnel vision” of shock. Medical scans, anatomical drawings, and animations of the brain and spine reveal luminous details within the body. Meanwhile, a hospital worker uneasily removes a brace from a patient’s skull with a standard-issue hardware store screwdriver. As the story moves from shock to pain, we return to the collision scene and to personal identity and history.
last split second, the
- Film Maker
- Doyle, Judith
- Year
- 1998
- Country
- Canada
- Language
- Format
- 16mm
- Length
- 7
- Genre
- experimental


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