experimentalcinema, dennishopper:

Something to be seen to be believed: Film still from David Lynch’s short experimental film made with the original Cinématographie camera invented by the Lumière brothers. Lynch was one of 41 international film directors who used the camera to make their own 52 second short, edited in-camera. Each director followed three rules: cannot be longer than 52 seconds, no synchronized sound (that is, the visuals cannot match the sound), and no more than three takes can be used.
Watch the films made by Lynch, Wim Wenders, and Peter Greenaway
via Ubuweb

experimentalcinema, dennishopper:

Something to be seen to be believed: Film still from David Lynch’s short experimental film made with the original Cinématographie camera invented by the Lumière brothers. Lynch was one of 41 international film directors who used the camera to make their own 52 second short, edited in-camera. Each director followed three rules: cannot be longer than 52 seconds, no synchronized sound (that is, the visuals cannot match the sound), and no more than three takes can be used.

Watch the films made by Lynch, Wim Wenders, and Peter Greenaway

via Ubuweb

experimentalcinema, dennishopper:

Something to be seen to be believed: Film still from David Lynch’s short experimental film made with the original Cinématographie camera invented by the Lumière brothers. Lynch was one of 41 international film directors who used the camera to make their own 52 second short, edited in-camera. Each director followed three rules: cannot be longer than 52 seconds, no synchronized sound (that is, the visuals cannot match the sound), and no more than three takes can be used.
Watch the films made by Lynch, Wim Wenders, and Peter Greenaway
via Ubuweb

experimentalcinema, dennishopper:

Something to be seen to be believed: Film still from David Lynch’s short experimental film made with the original Cinématographie camera invented by the Lumière brothers. Lynch was one of 41 international film directors who used the camera to make their own 52 second short, edited in-camera. Each director followed three rules: cannot be longer than 52 seconds, no synchronized sound (that is, the visuals cannot match the sound), and no more than three takes can be used.

Watch the films made by Lynch, Wim Wenders, and Peter Greenaway

via Ubuweb

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About:

foxesinbreeches' depository for cinematic masturbation.

Pervasive themes include nuns, noir, trash, art-wank, viscera, boobs, surrealism, and varying combinations thereof.

Here, we dream longingly of resurrecting the respectively pickled cadavers of Divine and Oliver Reed for a neo-noir Sapphic nun film based loosely on The Story of the Eye, made highbrow through an aspiring Bernard Herrmann soundtrack written by Goblin, and recycling the dolphin fountain pool last used for Showgirls as a chief prop.

Submissions welcome. Ask away too, but it should be noted that we're currently unable to explain why remaking The Wicker Man, I Spit On Your Grave or Sisters was ever considered, nor why Bitter Moon exists.

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