*Fuses* of course ! And* Plumb Line* (1968-1972) by Carolee Schneemann too.


2014-08-16 9:49 GMT+02:00 <[email protected]>:

> Gummo and Withnail and I have cats in them, albeit briefly.
>
> Nicky
>
>
>
>  -----Original Message-----
> From: Peter Mudie <[email protected]>
> To: Experimental Film Discussion List <[email protected]>
> Sent: Sat, 16 Aug 2014 5:48
> Subject: Re: [Frameworks] cat films
>
>  It's an odd question, really - looking for films with/about cats. If you
> get onto YouTube and type in a search for 'cats', 'wacky cats' and/or
> 'awesome cats' you will find something around 2 billion choices to build
> your exhibition around - none of them worthwhile. Do a search (with the
> same criteria) for 'chipmunks' or 'hamsters' and you'll find less, but
> about as discerning as the 'wacky cats' list. Any exhibition that results
> from a deep curatorial insight about cats will probably leave you in the
> same zone as all the YouTube ones.
>
> If someone asked me what my favourite film was that had a cat within it -
> that is, different from 'a hard-boiled cheap detective getting away from
> the grips of a femme fatale' or 'a Joe-Bob Mr America saves the world from
> certain destruction' scope of subjects (which I guess isn't all that
> dissimilar to 'wacky chipmunk' or 'look what a hamster can fit in his
> mouth' videos) - I would have to say Nightcats (by Brakhage).
>
> Peter
> (Perth)
>
> >> What else could we shown in a Cat Film Fest?
> >
> >As Ekrem mentioned, there's Cat Cradle and Fuses. Dunno if the amount of
> >kitteh-kontent is high enough for a feline fest, but the presence of the
> >pussy... er, scratch that [Meow!] I mean the context of the cat, is the
> >unraveling intertextual ball of string tying the two works together, or
> >maybe being batted away from StanCat by CaroleeCat, or maybe the mirrored
> >meowser is Schneeman's way of saying, 'my little furry pet is purring
> >because she just pounced on some wee bit of pickle, and by the way, did
> >you know that cats are independent creatures who do their own thing
> >instead of licking their masters fantasy boots, and cats have really
> >sharp claws they can dig into your untutored eye if you piss them off by
> >mixing up which human is owned by which cat, and somehow indicate you
> >think you own even one cat much less two, so go pine in the pines with
> >your poor putrefying pooch and leave my kitty alone!"
> >
> >....
> >
> >You could show Marker's 'Case of the Grinning Cat' which also might be a
> >little light on actual kitty-kontent, but again the cat-concept is pretty
> >important, and any excuse to show Marker is always a good excuse.
> >
> >....
> >
> >Or you could go conceptual rather than representational:
> >
> >I read somewhere that felines large and small are "creatures who spend
> >most of the time sleeping between brief bursts of activity."
> >
> >So I'm thinking you could show all 5 hours and 21 minutes of "Sleep", in
> >a room filled with sofa and actual cats, so after puzzling over what do
> >do with themselves for awhile, instead of getting annoyed and heading to
> >the box office in angry mass protest to The Management, the viewers would
> >figure they can emulate the cats and sooner or later pretty much the
> >whole audience would be sleeping along with John Giorno, curled up on a
> >couch like Giorno, but with cuddling kitties, sometimes coming and going
> >but mostly sleeping as cats mostly do. Taking the cat cues, they might
> >conclude that 'Sleep' is not the title of a 'movie' you 'watch' but might
> >be a gentle imperative, like a Yoko Ono instruction, to stage the most
> >simple and mundane action as a form of Art. Or not. Either way, they're
> >in cat-mode, so it's basically nappy time whenever they feel like it no
> >matter what else is going on in the room, and from time to time they'll
> >wake up, yawn, stretch, look around a little bit ‹ maybe watch the screen
> >for awhile, maybe watch the other people sleeping, maybe think about how
> >many hours John Giorno has spent sleeping since 1963, maybe wonder how
> >many hours of sleep they'll have before they join Warhol in eternal
> >slumber, maybe think about what a room of people sleeping because a
> >silent black and white film of a man dozing on a couch can't keep them
> >awake means in light of Warhol's claimed intent of documenting sleep for
> >historical purposes since no one slept anymore due to the miracles of
> >modern chemistry. But, being cat-people for the evening, they wouldn't
> >think about those things too long or too hard before slipping back into a
> >REM state with a dreamy revelation that the proper nouns 'Walter' "White'
> >and 'Warhol' all begin with a 'W'. Then, maybe 90 minutes later, they
> >wake up since the man-cat on the next couch is shattering the silence
> >with loud irregular apneas and hypopneas because he didn't think to bring
> >his C-PAP to a film screening, only, on awakening, they don't dig out
> >their cell phones to check how much longer the film is going to run, they
> >just realize they're hungry, and the smell of chicken and fish is coming
> >from the lobby. So they amble out of the screening room and over to the
> >concessions area set up especially for the screening, where they get
> >served sashimi and/or poulet kabobs, (or Tuna hot dish if it's at The
> >Walker), and at this spot there are benches set up by big picture windows
> >where they can sit awhile and watch birds fly back and forth from the
> >feeders outside, but the benches aren't that comfy so they head back to
> >the couches in the screening room soon enough, tummies full and fall back
> >into the rhythm of "Sleep"s sleep. When they wake up again after a big
> >orange Maine Coon cat licks some hot-dish off their cheek, they sit up,
> >the cat hops onto their lap and starts to purr, they reach down to pet it
> >without thinking about it. Then it dawns on them that since they're doing
> >the stroking and not getting stroked, their personal cat analogy is
> >breaking down, and they start thinking like a human again, but still
> >retaining a kind of felinious disposition. Some thoughts that might
> >follow: Andy Warhol was like some kind of mutant future-cat, since he
> >maintained a feline indifference and inscrutability while never sleeping
> >and working constantly; "Sleep" is celluloid-projection-as-cat since it
> >has 'bursts of activity' mixed in with the sleeping, and combining the
> >two is pretty much the only way to make it from beginning to end (though
> >'sleeping' might be more figurative than literal); why am i able to look
> >at the screen now for awhile without getting annoyed?; "Sleep" is
> >celluloid-projection-as-cat since it's indifference to you is
> >nevertheless amiable enough; hmm, I notice most of the other people are
> >watching now too, I wonder what they're thinking?; and so on. The film
> >ends. The lights come up, and the audience makes its way out through the
> >lobby, passing posters with cat adoption info from the local shelters and
> >half a dozen monitors of different types and sizes playing the Turn Down
> >For What Cat Video on an endless loop.
> >(https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6yfGA6pBFVI) Once the last patron has
> >gone, and the program committee is emptying the litter boxes and rounding
> >up the cats and putting them back in their carriers, someone will say,
> >"Folks, I think we've just set the all-time record for the most people
> >who began a screening of 'Sleep' being present at the end." And someone
> >else might reply, "Yeah, but Andy might ask 'What fun is that?'" Then
> >they get distracted by a tuxedo fighting with a tortie screaming bloody
> >murder while a midnight black long-hair rubs against their legs. And when
> >they return to the question later, they hear the question Warhol might
> >have asked in the deadpan tone with which he would have asked it, which
> >wasn't a tone expecting an answer, or maybe suggesting that any answer
> >would do. "Sleep" doesn't tell you how to watch it, because it doesn't
> >care how you watch it, or how you watch it, or what you think about it,
> >or anything else. It just presents you with an experience you probably
> >can't process within the headspace you brought into the screening room.
> >There must be SOME metaphysical significance to what happens after that,
> >but I'm too tired to think about it, and this activity burst has come
> >t...   zzzzzzzzz.
> >
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-- 
*Benjamin *

*Benjamin Léon*
Ph.D Candidate in Film Studies
[email protected]
(Fr) + 33 (0)6 28 07 18 00
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Skype : benjil75
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