AFW + NFSA #68: ANIMEIGHTIES
8pm Tuesday 29 October
The Brunswick Green, 313/315 Sydney Road, Brunswick.
16mm projection. $10 on the door.
“Making an animated film has always been a precarious business, but a lot looked possible during the 1980s.” - Robert Stephenson
We’re excited to step back to the 1980s this month with an evening of Australian-made short-length animations from the vaults of the National Film & Sound Archive. Enjoy humorous and dazzling 16mm films from some of the icons of the Melbourne alternative-animation scene - exploring claymation, abstraction, direct animation, time lapse and traditional animation techniques.
FILMS:
Pleasure Domes, 1988, Maggie Fooke. 8 mins
“A reflection upon man-made impositions upon the landscape from Nice to St. Kilda Esplanade.” - National Film & Sound Archive
Shadowland, 1988, Anthony Lucas. 6 mins
“Large winged insects prey on humans in a pre-industrial landscape. A human transforms into a winged creature after being attacked.” - Victorian College of the Arts
Still Flying, 1989, Robert Stephenson. 8 mins
“An aging man recounts his experiences as a pilot during the war.” Victorian College of the Arts
Dance of Death, 1983, Dennis Tupicoff. 9 mins
“An animated satire on television violence, set in a world where the skeletal Don Death runs a popular variety show called “Dance of Death”.” National Film & Sound Archive
Suburban Windows, 1981, Robert Wyatt. 20 mins
“Impressions of the domestic prison and the suburban landscape through object animation, exploration of sound-image relationships and a variety of other techniques used to non-naturalistic, often humorous, effect.” National Film & Sound Archive
Rainbow Diary, 1984, Ivor Cantrill. 17 mins
“Hand-drawn directly onto 16mm film, this animation is a 'diary' of daily drawing-on-film practice by Ivor Cantrill over a period of 18 months. Drawing style ranges from bold geometric patterns, to a delicate calligraphy.” National Film & Sound Archive