Low Visibility

Film Maker
Gruben, Patricia
Year
1984
Country
Canada
Language
Format
16mm
Length
84
Genre
experimental, narrative
Category
Work about Women, Work by Women

This is the first feature directed by Patricia Gruben, who created the much-admired “The Central Character” and the award-winning “Sifted Evidence.” Gruben is one of Canada’s foremost filmmakers, part of a new generation which combines avant-garde techniques with narrative elements. “Low Visibility” finds a man wandering alone on a snowy mountain roadside, waving his arms and shouting at the sky. The enigmatic Mr. Bones, an apparent amnesiac, is unableor unwilling to explain what has happened to him. He arouses, as a result, the curiosity not only of the doctors and nurses of the hospital he is taken to, but also the local news media searching for a story and the police who enlist the aid of a clairvoyant in their investigation. In their efforts to find out the true story, these people build an elaborate network of speculation and suspense which ends in paradox. The points of view multiply as Mr. Bones is seen through the eyes of the news camera, the hospital surveillance video recorder, the eyes of those around him and the visions of the psychic. Mr. Bones, meanwhile, blankly watches snow on the ever-present TV screen. “Few fringe filmmakers are as good at directing actors as Gruben, and Larry Lillo develops a convincing portrait of traumatized insanity.” – Kaja, Variety

Stills From Video

  • Still 1

Comments

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

More posts