A leading figure in the California Bay Area independent film movement, Lawrence Jordan has crafted more than 40 experimental, animation and dramatic films. Jordan uses "found" graphics to produce his influential animated collages, noting that his goal is to create "unknown worlds and landscapes of the mind." Inspired by "The Tibetan Book of the Dead," "Our Lady of the Sphere" is one of Jordan’s best-known works. It is a surrealistic dream-like journey blending baroque images with Victorian-era image cut-outs, iconic space age symbols, various musical themes and noise effects, including animal sounds and buzzers.
This film has been selected to the 2010 National Film Registry of the Library of Congress.
BUFS or the Berkeley Underground Film Society is an all ages, analog cinema club for collectors, researchers, and film enthusiasts in the East Bay and San Francisco Area. Our goal is to share and review buried or rarely projected 16mm, Super 8 and 8mm prints in our collection. We're open once a month, Fri. - Sun. from 7pm-10pm at the historic Manasse-Block Tannery, 708 Gilman @ 4th St.
Tuesday, December 28, 2010
OUR LADY OF THE SPHERE (1969) - LARRY JORDAN
Tuesday, December 21, 2010
WINSOR MCCAY - THE CENTAURS (1921)
A female centaur (a creature half-human and half-horse) enters a clearing in the woods, and picks some flowers. She is soon met by a male centaur, and the two then romance each other. They then seek parental consent for their union.
Labels:
Centaurs,
Lost Film,
Winsor McCay
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