8/18/2023 0 Comments Iograph reviewAnyways, it's time for me to go back to imagining I'm in Pordenone, Italy so as to be transported to China's past in the festival's second-day feature, "Guofeng" (1935). I love these early cinema compilations, such as "The Lumière Brothers' First Films" (1996), "The Lost World of Mitchell & Kenyon" (2005) and others, including my research on the Brinton Collection, the collection of which has been a feature of an annual film festival of early cinema in a tiny Iowa town, as depicted in "Saving Brinton" (2017). The music by Daan van den Hurk aids the pacing, as well. The most striking is surely the Conway Castle one, which offers the added spectacle of a hand-color print, which I don't recall having seen much of in phantom-ride films (dance films, trick films and fictional narratives is another story). I like how they move from chapter to chapter with phantom-ride films, such as those where a camera is attached to a moving train, in between the sections. The program is split into five sections: 1) Daily Life, 2) Riding the Waves, 3) Greetings From., 4) Moving Forward, and 5) Body in Motion, covering actuality films of routine living in Europe (the UK and the Netherlands receive the most coverage, it seems), seaside views of boats and ships, scenes of famous sites, other showcasing innovations of modern times, and, finally, views of people in motion to go along with the motion-picture technology, including vaudeville-type acts and dancing. In their time, too, the films may've been seen individually in the flip-book-like Mutoscope, for which the wide-film process may've originally been intended, or projected on bigger screens than other early-cinema exhibitions allowed (as pointed out by Deac Rossell, "Living Pictures: The Origins of the Movies") due to that 68mm format. There are also square-shaped light marks in the middle of images, which the preservationists have explained are contact points from the roller projection system to produce and project the films back then. Even the scratches that appear in some of them are crisp, with only one film featuring brief but prominent decomposition. Receiving an 8k transfer, from the wide film remarked upon for its clarity and capturing of detail, the films here, indeed, do look great even when streaming them at home. Reportedly, due to the 68mm film not being perforated (Charles Musser, "The Emergence of Cinema," informs that the film instead employed a continuously moving friction-feed device to move the film strips), the footage hadn't been restored or seen since back when it was first made and exhibited-until recently thanks to EYE and digital restoration. He might, or other filmmakers, at least, appear in another film, which features a Captain Deasy promoting Martini cars, in Switzerland, 1903, as well as a second filming crew at the scene. He even appears in at least one of the pictures, seemingly with his family, as they feed pigeons in Venice in 1898. Dickson after he had already worked on the development of motion pictures for Edison and, then, with the Lathams-important figure in the invention of movies that guy. All of the films are 68mm wide film, as devised by William K.L. Again, it's a tour back in time, as seen today, as well as to various lands. This one, "The Brilliant Biograph: Earliest Moving Images of Europe (1897-1902)" features a collection of films of about a minute, more or less, each from the period of early cinema. From the second day of the 39th Pordenone Silent Film Festival, the programmers, this time via the EYE Film Institute in Amsterdam, again decided to open the day with virtual tourism for the "armchair traveler," as they put it, after the first day's "The Urge to Travel" series of travelogues.
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