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Fire of Waters

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Fire of Waters
Directed byStan Brakhage
Release date
1965
Running time
10 min
CountryUnited States
LanguageEnglish

Fire of Waters is an experimental short film by Stan Brakhage, produced in 1965.

Production

Fire of Waters was inspired by a letter Brakhage received from poet Robert Kelly, in which was written: "The truth of the matter is this that: man lives in a fire of waters and will eternally in the first taste."[1] Brakhage intended the film as "a play of light and sounds" on that theme.[1] The film contains footage shot in a lightning storm with a jerky handheld camera, occasionally showing the panes of the window through which the footage was filmed.[2] Unlike much of the director's work, Fire of Waters contains a soundtrack,[3] which has been described as "mushy, noisy and largely ambiguous - maybe rain, maybe paper rustling, maybe just dirt and water spots on the optical soundtrack."[2] The soundtrack actually consists of slowed down bird calls, wind, and speeded up audio of Jane Brakhage giving birth to daughter Myrenna[4] (an event originally documented, albeit silently, in Brakhage's film Window Water Baby Moving).

Reception

David E. James described Fire of Waters as one of Brakhage's most interesting films, in large part due to its use of sound.[3] Phil Solomon's experimental film Night Lights was inspired by Fire of Waters.[5] Daniel Barnett, in his book Movement as meaning: in experimental film, wrote of his first encounter with Fire of Waters, "I can't ever remember art making me so angry," citing the film's apparent incomprehensibility on initial viewing.[2]

See also

References

  1. ^ a b Brakhage Scrapbook: Stan Brakhage Collected Writings 1964-1980, edited by Robert A. Haller (1982) New York: Documentext, p245
  2. ^ a b c Daniel Barnett (2008) Movement as meaning: in experimental film, Rodopi, page iii-iv
  3. ^ a b James, David E. (2005) Stan Brakhage: Filmmaker, Temple University Press, p43
  4. ^ The Sound Cinema of Stan Brakhage, Los Angeles Film Forum, June 2010. Accessed March 10, 2011.
  5. ^ MacDonald, Scott (2005) A critical cinema: interviews with independent filmmakers, University of California Press, p205