Fresh From the Festivals: December 1999's Film Reviews
Within
the world of animation, most experimentation occurs within short
format productions, whether they be high budgeted commercials, low
budgeted independent shorts, or something in between. The growing
number of short film festivals around the world attest to the vitality
of these works, but there are few other venues for exhibition of
them or even written reviews. As a result, distribution tends to
be difficult and irregular. On a regular basis, Animation World
Magazine will highlight some of the most interesting with short
descriptive overviews. Firehouse
This month:
Firehouse (1998), 5.5 min., directed by Bärbel Neubauer,
Germany. Info: Bärbel Neubauer Productions, Lindwurmstrasse
207, 90337 Munich, Germany. Tel/fax: 49 89 74 70 701. E-mail: baerbelneubauer@csi.com.
The Albatross (1998), 14.5 min., directed by Paul Bush, England.
Info: Ancient Mariner Productions Ltd., 93 Lausanne Road, London,
England. Tel: 44 171 635 7533.
My Father's Story (1998), 10.5 min., directed by Mary Kocol,
USA. Info: Mary Kocol, PO Box 441467, Sommerville MA 02144, USA.
URL: www.ne-arts.net/mkocol.
The End of the Earth (1998), 7 min., directed by Konstantin
Bronzit, France. Info: Folimage Valence Production, 6 rue Jean Bertin,
26000 Valence, France. Tel: 33 04 75 78 48 68. E-mail: folimage@wanadoo.fr.
The Indescribable Nth (1999), 9 min., directed by Oscar Moore,
USA. Info: Character Builders, 1476 Manning Parkway, Powell, OH
43065, USA. Tel: 614-885-2211. E-mail: cbuilders@cbuilders.com.
URL: www.cbuilders.com.
If you have the QuickTime
plug-in, you can view a clip from each film by simply clicking
the image.

In May 1999, Animation World Magazine asked me, "If
you were stranded on a desert
island, which ten films would you take with you?" One of
my choices was Roots (1996), a direct-on-film animation by
sound
and image composer Bärbel Neubauer. It is not much of a
surprise, then, that I also enjoyed one of Neubauer's other works,
Firehouse (Feuerhaus); in fact, I might sneak it onto
that island along with Roots. To my mind, Firehouse
is one of Neubauer's most fully-realized films, in part because
of the lively, intriguing score she has composed for it and the
way in which this soundtrack works with her images.
Like all of Neubauer's
direct-on-film animations, images in Firehouse are primarily
abstract in nature, though recognizable forms appear from time to
time. In this case, she has exposed 35 mm film stock with a flashlight,
using bits of natural matter (such as grasses) to create forms on
the film stock. Neubauer has been consistently productive, creating
eleven short direct-on-film animations since 1993, most of which
have been screened in festivals and some of which have been commissioned
for advertising purposes. Worldwide, she is the most productive
and innovative artist specializing in the direct-on-film technique
(though she also has directed live-action films). Firehouse
has no dialogue, only an electronic score.























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