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Filmforum 50, program 5: Real Life, with the Millennium Film Journal

Filmforum 50, program 5: Real Life, with the Millennium Film Journal

Los Angeles Filmforum presents

Filmforum 50, program 5: Real Life, with the Millennium Film Journal

Sunday January 18, 2025, 7:30 pm

At 2220 Arts + Archives, 2220 Beverly Blvd., Los Angeles CA 90057

Los Angeles premieres!

In person: To Be Announced

Tickets: $15 general, $10 students/seniors, free for Filmforum members

https://link.dice.fm/H2ebb6492f81

Over the last half-century, the Millennium Film Journal has charted seismic transformations in the way we create and look at moving pictures—from 16mm celluloid to magnetic videotape to digital “content creation,” and now the strange new world of AI-generated deepfakes and simulations. All along, we’ve kept an eye on the Hollywood Dream Factory, which has often thrived in the chaos of technological change—though of late its fortunes are fading, with studio workers and artisans suffering most. It is a curious impasse. Compared with the narcotics of Netflix “autoplay” or the debut of virtual actors, like the imaginary Tilly Norwood, the fantasies of the industry’s erstwhile Golden Ages seem vivid, achingly human, recalcitrantly real. As we drift into a surreal future, we want to glance backward, or at least collect the traces of our cinematic pasts. Real Life—the latest edition of MFJ—is a study of this diachronic gray zone, and the Journal joins with Los Angeles Filmforum in showcasing a handful of works discussed in its pages, along with others we admire.

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Memory Theater 2

Memory Theater 2

By Claudia Hart

2022-23/25, digtal, color, sound, 5 minutes.  Los Angeles premiere!

In Memory Theater 2, Claudia Hart combines experimental avatar dance, video, and earlier works culled from her personal archive spanning 35 years of continuous media-art practice. Hart mixes a recorded sound collage featuring samples from Campion’s audio compositions produced and recorded for their collaborative performances with a Bach piece used as rehearsal music by Kristina Isabelle, whose motion-captured "stilt" dancing is embodied by Hart's Bauhaus-inspired avatars. The background video in the scene shows the initial live motion-capture session. In this version of the piece, Hart removed her normal voice-over so that the avatar dance can fully embody her narrative.

“Hart’s uncanny figures and their environments are wholly expressive. They drift, warp, and decay, seemingly under the spell of unknown pressures, whether internal or environmental…”—Claudia Hart: Illuminations, Corinna Kirsch

Did You Know Blue 1

Did You Know Blue Had No Name?

Did You Know Blue Had No Name?

By Elise Rasmussen 

2018, 16mm film transferred to HD Video,  color, sound, 7 min.

Did You Know Blue Had No Name? explores epistemological aspects of “blueness” through various historical narratives, examining the relationship between the color blue and mountaineering, early photographic technologies, art history and how knowledge is ascribed and recorded. As a starting point, I investigate 18th century Swiss scientist and alpine enthusiast Horace-Bénédict de Saussure’s cyanometer, a device he created for measuring the blueness of the sky. Saussure’s quest to test his apparatus and theories on blue led to a contest inspiring the first expedition to the summit of Mont Blanc, the highest mountain in the Alps. The quest for blue has likewise had challenges in early photography as blue skies were difficult to record leading to innovations such as split printing and challenging the “truthfulness” embedded in the medium. Similarly, in ancient texts, no word for blue exists. The word blue only makes an appearance in recorded language after the color could be extracted for pigment. This project weaves together these and other histories of blue, commenting on issues of [in]visibility, innovation, conquest and the contest. This work is the first in a trilogy of works exploring histories related to the Alps preceding The Year Without a Summer and Nostalgia: A Return to the Alps in Five Vignettes.

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A Sinking Feeling

A Sinking Feeling

By Zachary Epcar

2024, 16mm on video, sound, 21 min.   Los Angeles premiere.

Three white collar commuters recall an experience of getting trapped on a train in San Francisco's transbay tunnel, each drifting into fantasies of sex, death, and other intimacies with strangers.

"A beguiling, spacious, and transportive work of suspended tension, that looks for new forms of intimacy in the antiseptic. An urban office park becomes a reflecting pool for the erotic fantasies of a derailed train where we wait, shake and survive together.” - 25 FPS grand jury

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A Real Christmas

A Real Christmas

By Justin Jinsoo Kim

2025, HD, color, sound 12 min.  Los Angeles premiere!

The film conducts an elusive search for the traces of Lee Kyung Soo, a Korean War orphan adopted by a U.S. Navy officer. Lee’s image circulated widely across newspapers, magazines, and photographs—serving specific purposes and cultural narratives. Over time, these representations fractured, faded, and reemerged, leaving silences in the archive and gaps in visibility. The cut-out fragments from the scattered information are pieced together to imagine the child’s unspoken point of view throughout his wandering life.

Collaging text and sound along with the grainy distortions of inkjet-printed imagery, Justin Jinsoo Kim’s (Personality Test, NYFF59) refractory archival dig pieces together the story of Lee Kyung Soo, an orphan of the Korean War adopted by a U.S. Naval officer in Westchester. With its careful manipulation of microhistorical fragments, A Real Christmas summons the neocolonial mythologies of the United States in the 1950s through its news media, uncovering traces of alternate voices and narrative lacunae. -NYFF-

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The Dark, Krystle

The Dark, Krystle

By Michael Robinson (The Dark, Krystle, 10’), 

2013, HD, color, sound, 9:34

The cabin is on fire! Krystle can't stop crying, Alexis won't stop drinking, and the fabric of existence hangs in the balance, again and again and again. – MR

"The Dark, Krystle brilliantly re-purposes the artificiality of stock gesture, allowing viewers to see its hollowness and to feel it recharging with new emotional power. Equal parts archival fashion show and feminist morality play, Robinson's montage rekindles the unfinished business of identity, consumption, and excess in 1980s pop culture."— Carrie Secrist Gallery, Chicago

Lil Tokyo Story 1

Lil Tokyo Story

Lil Tokyo Story

By Matthew Lax 

2016, digital, b&w, sound, 4 min.

A shot-for-shot remake of the climax of Tokyo Story (Yasujiro Ozu, 1953). Screen Left uses the original Japanese text delivered orally, with subtitles literally translated into English. Stage Right repeats the scene, with the English subtitles authored by the Criterion Collection delivered orally, with subtitles literally translated back to Japanese. Flanked by abstract “pillow shots” of Los Angeles, the roles of Noriko and Kyoko are played by two Japanese male immigrants in drag, the two English/Japanese versions play against one another, falling in and out of sync rhythmically, textually and spatially.

smoke and ash

Smoke and Ash Loops

Smoke and Ash Loops

By Kate Lain

2020, cyanotype, glue, and ash on 16mm film, color

The short film loops digitized and played through once each here are physical records of the Bobcat Fire of September 2020 that burned over 100,000 acres in the San Gabriel Mountains near Los Angeles. I created the film strips in Pasadena between September 8 & 14. The cyanotype loops were made with the smoke that filled the air, ash that fell at my apartment, whatever sunlight made it through the thick smoke, and tap water. The non-photographic loops were made by applying glue to clear film leader and placing them outside in smoky conditions to catch falling ash and other material in the air.