f i l m fo r u m
los angeles

spring 2005 screenings
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The Egyptian Theater
6712 Hollywood Blvd.

Sunday nights at 7:00pm
8 dollars

 
Ross Lipman's The Interview

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Mar 6

Films by Ross Lipman

Filmforum is delighted to host Ross Lipman, Los Angeles-based filmmaker and film preservationist extraordinaire.

Filmmaker/curator Konrad Steiner writes, “Lipman’s films chronicle the lives of men and women on the periphery of our vision; who slip through the cracks in the system, who walk invisibly by us each day. His medium ranges from photographs to Super-8, 16mm and 35mm film, and each work orchestrates light, language, and silence to create cinematic portraits that fall on a spectrum between document and story.” This special screening features a sampling of Lipman’s work spanning a period of over fifteen years, including his early collage work, film portraits from the ‘90’s, and the Los Angeles premiere of his 35mm psychological drama The Interview, shot by the extraordinary Babette Mangolte (and printed in muted colors and silent film tones.) It also includes a sneak preview of his work in progress Keep Warm, Burn Britain!, a personal memoir of London’s squatting movement in the 1980’s, and a live performance by Michael Whitmore of Listing Ship accompanying Lipman’s award-winning Rhythm 93.

1) 10-17-88 (Chicago, 1989, 11 min., 16mm, sd.)
Optically printed collage of found and archival footage, with audio collage by John Shaw on themes from Debussy and Ellington. An investigation of one’s self within the sociological theater of our cultural history, breaking out to speak to archetypal memory.

2) Rhythm 93 (London/San Francisco, 1994, 9 min., 16mm)
With live musical accompaniment by Michael Whitmore of Listing Ship

A silent portrait of a winter morning in Clerkenwell, London. Set in England’s bleak post-Thatcher years, Rhythm 93 is a narrative stripped of plot. It offers no explanations for the actions depicted—they are intended to depict a pure psychological state. An exploration of the boundaries of visual story-telling, the film breaks with conventional notions of cinematic continuity by varying exposure and focus; inviolate tropes of classical match cutting. But it is no formal exercise—the driving force is natural light, which mirrors the character’s shifting inner states.

3) The Gift—Michael Barrish screen test (San Francisco, 1999, 3 min., Super-8 sd.)

“A project that never was. As a test for my unrealized filmscript The Gift, I asked my friend Michael Barrish--now author of the “Oblivio” weblog--to tell the camera a story about a recent exchange with his father; a subject at the core of The Gift. This film, shot in Super-8 sound, is the story he told, and all that exists from that project...” -- RL

4) Keep Warm, Burn Britain! (London/Los Angeles, 12 min. excerpt of work-in-progress, slide show/performance)

Lipman’s memoir of the squatting movement in England in the mid 1980s. It chronicles the lives of the anarchists, outcasts, and punks who lived in a small enclave of abandoned buildings south of the Thames in East London; an area known in the anarchist community as “Squatter’s Paradise”. After a brief outsider renaissance the buildings were destroyed and their dwellers dispersed; a forgotten moment in the broadscale gentrification of Docklands Development. Featuring an original score by legendary NY street musician and Academy Award winning documentary subject THOTH.

5) The Interview (San Francisco/Los Angeles, 2004, 32 minutes, 35mm)

The tale of a chance encounter between two women struggling to stay afloat, in an era of the downsizing of dreams. A taut psychological narrative printed in muted colors and silent film tones, shot by Babette Mangolte. Starring Julie Queen, Lisa Black, and Elektra Ditto.

Ross Lipman is an independent filmmaker whose work has screened throughout the world at venues ranging from the London International Film Festival to the Chinese Taipei Film Archive, and collected by institutions and museums including the Sammlung Goetz in Munich. He is a former member of Budapest’s celebrated Bela Balazs Studios and Chicago’s infamous Theater Oobleck. His recent film The Interview is currently touring Europe as part of the Best of the Oberhausen International Film Festival travelling program.

Lipman is also one of the world’s leading figures in the restoration of independent cinema, having restored works by John Cassavetes, Charles Burnett, Shirley Clarke, Emile de Antonio, and many others. He has lectured internationally and his writings on film history, aesthetics and technology have been published in numerous books and journals.
--The Cinema of Absence

Lipman’s films and cinematic performances combine a technical mastery of diverse media with a rigorous sparcity of content to create cinematic spaces that are at once ethereal and riveting. Looking back to classical notions of form, these works utilize carefully controlled sensations of absence to point outwards to the fullness of lived experience. Spanning his collages of the 1980’s, through portraiture in the ‘90’s, to his current narratives and pictorial essays, Lipman’s oeuvre both utilizes and challenges conventional notions of the boundaries of cinema art.