Dear Frameworkers, 

Sorry I missed the “This Week in Avant-Garde Films” cut off, but we hosting 
this potent screening this week.  Films online for three days; discussion live 
on Sunday night, 8 pm Pacific, and then it will be available for streaming as 
well.

 

Available online worldwide!

 

Los Angeles Filmforum presents

minutes, hours, days

Saturday, August 21–Monday, August 23, 2021

Online, hosted by Los Angeles Filmforum

 

Conversation: August 22, 2021 at 8pm PDT

In person via Zoom: Filmmaker Rania Stephan in conversation with Guest 
Programmer Zaina Bseiso, viewable on Eventive or Zoom.

 

INFO: https://www.lafilmforum.org/schedule/summer-2021/minutes-hours-days/

323-377-7238

 

​​This month marks one year since the Beirut port explosion. On August 4th, 
2021, people took to the streets to mourn, remember and grieve collectively; 
only to be met with tear gas and unsolicited violence. Events repeat themselves 
and the cycle of corruption and neglect continues without a trace of 
accountability. Past, present and future are in constant collision—in Lebanon 
as in the films—as a result of consistently unresolved needs. This program 
lingers on the repetition of events and celebrates Lebanese filmmakers who 
poetically engage with the weighty task of remembrance. Their work counters 
violence with images of power, desire and unfolded memories. A Film Noir-like 
investigation, recollections of a city increasingly estranged to its own people 
and children’s drawings that complicate the relationship between reality and 
fiction ultimately point at Rania Stephan’s question: “What remains of war, 
death and love with the passing of time?” —Zaina Bseiso

 

Tickets: Sliding Scale, as you can pay, recommended $12 general, $8 students, 
seniors, $0 for Filmforum members at 
https://watch.eventive.org/minuteshoursdays/play/6114b102e4667500b600190c

For more information: www.lafilmforum.org or 323-377-7238.

 

Screening:

 

Red Chewing Gum

by Akram Zaatari (Lebanon, 2000, video, color, sound, 11’)

Courtesy Video Data Bank at the School of the Art Institute of Chicago

 

A video letter that tells a story of separation between two men, set within the 
context of the changing Hamra, a formerly booming commercial center. The video 
looks at image making in relation to consumption and the possession of desired 
subjects. It examines issues of desire and power, and the attempt to capture 
fleeting time.

 

 

Memories for a Private Eye

By Rania Stephan (Lebanon, 2015, video, color, sound, 31’)

 

The first chapter in a trilogy which investigates the filmmaker’s personal 
archive. Evoking the language of film noir, it foregrounds the fictional 
detective Marc McPhearson from the film Laura (1943) by Otto Preminger, to help 
unfold deep and traumatic memories. The film spirals around a lost image: the 
only moving image of the filmmaker’s dead mother. How is absence lived? What 
remains of war, death and love with the passing  of time? These are the 
questions that are delicately displayed for contemplation. While dwelling onto 
the past, the film weaves together images from different sources – private 
archives, cinema, television, YouTube – unfolding into a labyrinthic maze, to 
create a blueprint of remembrance itself. 

 

Children of War  (Les Enfants de la Guerre)

By Jocelyn Saab (Lebanon, 1976, 16mm transferred to digital, color & b/w, 
sound, 12’)

 

Days after the Karantina massacre in a predominantly Muslim shanty town in 
Beirut, Jocelyne Saab met children who’d escaped, and who were deeply 
traumatised by the horrific fighting they’d seen with their own eyes. She gave 
them crayons and encouraged them to draw while her camera filmed. She made a 
bitter discovery: the only games the children engaged in were war games, and 
the war would quickly become a way of life for them as well.

 

Total Runtime: 55 minutes

 

Organized by Zaina Bseiso

 

Biographies:

 

Jocelyne Saab is a filmmaker and a photographer. She was born in 1948 and grew 
up in Beirut. In 1973, she became a war reporter in the Middle-East. In 1975 
she directed her first documentary, Lebanon in Turmoil. She then covered the 
Lebanese war for fifteen years, during which she directed almost thirty films, 
including Beirut, never again, Letter from Beirut and Beirut, my city. She was 
awarded the Order of Chevaliers des Arts et des Lettres for Once Upon a Time, 
Beirut. Throughout her life, she organized a number of important events 
including rebuilding the Lebanese Cinematheque.

 

Born in Beirut, Rania Stephan is an artist and filmmaker working with still and 
moving images. She has directed art videos and creative documentaries. Her 
documentaries give a personal and poetic perspective to political events. 
Archival material has been an underlying enquiry in her artistic work. Her most 
recent work investigates forgotten images and sounds that haunt the present. By 
juxtaposing them with new ones, she explores a diversity of meanings, 
triggering renewed narratives and emotions.  Approaching images like an editor 
– part detective, part cinephile, she traces absence and remembrance originary 
to those images.

 

Akram Zaatari is a filmmaker, photographer, archival artist and curator. He 
co-founded the Arab Image Foundation with photographers Fouad Elkoury, and 
Samer Mohdad. Akram has been exploring issues pertinent to post-war Lebanon. He 
investigates the way television mediates territorial conflicts and wars, and is 
particularly interested in logic of religious and national resistance 
movements, and the circulation and production of images in the context of 
today’s geographic division in the Middle East. His work has been widely 
exhibited worldwide in biennales and venues such as the Centre Pompidou and is 
in the permanent collection of museums such as Tate Modern. and the Thyssen 
Bornemisza Contemporary. Akram was selected to represent Lebanon at the 2013 
Venice Biennale by Sam Bardaouil and Till Fellrath, curators for the Lebanese 
Pavilion.

 

Zaina Bseiso is a film director, producer, and curator working primarily in 
documentary and experimental cinema. Her work explores the relationship between 
the materialities of place and issues of memory, surveillance, corporeality, 
and nationalism. She received her Master’s degree in Film and video from the 
California Institute of the Arts. Bseiso is based in Los Angeles and was raised 
in Egypt by Palestinian parents. Her practice mainly traverses among Egypt, 
Palestine, Cuba, Mexico, and the US. She is co-founder of Bahía Colectiva, a 
community of filmmakers that collaborate in practice and curation. 

----------------------

Los Angeles Filmforum screenings are supported by the Los Angeles County Board 
of Supervisors through the Los Angeles County Department of Arts & Culture, the 
Department of Cultural Affairs, City of Los Angeles, the National Endowment for 
the Arts, the Mike Kelley Foundation for the Arts, the California Community 
Foundation, the California State Relief Fund, and the Academy of Motion Picture 
Arts & Sciences. We also depend on our members, ticket buyers, and individual 
donors.

 

Los Angeles Filmforum is the city’s longest-running organization dedicated to 
weekly screenings of experimental film, documentaries, video art, and 
experimental animation. 2021 is our 46th year.

 

Memberships available, $40 Student $75 Individual, $125 Dual, or $225 Silver 
Nitrate

Contact us at [email protected]

Find us online at http://lafilmforum.org

Become a fan on Facebook and follow us on Twitter @LosAngFilmforum!

 

 

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