Re: [Frameworks] Drama films and the Avant-Garde

From: Jorge Lorenzo Flores Garza (email suppressed)
Date: Tue Jan 25 2011 - 06:39:25 PST


The Diving Bell and the Butterfly by Julian Schnabel is Brakhage's theory applied onto fiction film.

From: email suppressed
Date: Tue, 25 Jan 2011 09:25:12 -0500
To: email suppressed
Subject: Re: [Frameworks] Drama films and the Avant-Garde

Punch Drunk Love has those abstract sequences by Jeremy Blake.

2011/1/25 Dinorah de Jesús Rodriguez <email suppressed>

Peter Greenaway's The Pillow Book, not sure if it is less than 10 years old

there are many others, and i'm sure you'll get lots of responses. this one just flew off the top of my head.

enjoy today...

Dinorah de Jesús Rodríguez

Multimedia Artist

www.solislandmediaworks.com

www.artcinematic.blogspot.com

http://cinesthesia.blip.tv

On Jan 25, 2011, at 5:17 AM, alrees wrote:
Dear Frameworkers,

Can anyone suggest any drama/fiction/narrative films, from the last ten
years or so, that include 'avant-garde' sequences, references, tricks and

tropes? I'm looking for examples from both mainstream and arthouse
contemporary cinema movies that have avant-garde devices of any kind -
flicker, camerawork, blur, rapid cuts, flare-out, anything like that. All

suggestions will be gratefully received!

Al Rees

FrameWorks mailing list
email suppressed
http://mailman-mail5.webfaction.com/listinfo/frameworks

_______________________________________________
FrameWorks mailing list
email suppressed
http://mailman-mail5.webfaction.com/listinfo/frameworks

_______________________________________________

FrameWorks mailing list

email suppressed

http://mailman-mail5.webfaction.com/listinfo/frameworks

_______________________________________________
FrameWorks mailing list
email suppressed
http://mailman-mail5.webfaction.com/listinfo/frameworks


_______________________________________________
FrameWorks mailing list
email suppressed
http://mailman-mail5.webfaction.com/listinfo/frameworks