Yahoo India Web Search

Search results

    • December 1966

      • Wavelength is a 1967 experimental film by Canadian artist Michael Snow. Considered a landmark of avant-garde cinema, it was filmed over one week in December 1966 and edited in 1967, and is an example of what film theorist P. Adams Sitney describes as "structural film", calling Snow "the dean of structural filmmakers."
      www.wikiwand.com/en/Wavelength_(1967_film)
  1. People also ask

  2. Wavelength is a 1967 experimental film by Canadian artist Michael Snow. Considered a landmark of avant-garde cinema, [1] it was filmed over one week in December 1966 and edited in 1967, [2] and is an example of what film theorist P. Adams Sitney describes as "structural film", [3] calling Snow "the dean of structural filmmakers." [4]

  3. Wavelength is a 1983 science fiction film written and directed by Mike Gray and starring Robert Carradine, Cherie Currie, and Keenan Wynn. [2] Plot. Bobby Sinclaire (Robert Carradine), a failing Californian musician, meets telepathic Iris Longacre (Cherie Currie) in a bar and they begin a relationship.

  4. Filmed over one week in December 1966, edited and first screened early the following year, Wavelength was not Michael Snow’s first film but the groundbreaking work that catapulted him out of the painter’s studio, where it was shot, into the international avant-garde.

  5. Released January 1968. Filmed during one week of December 1966 in a loft in New York City. Producer: Michael Snow; screenplay and photography: Michael Snow; editor and sound recordist: Michael Snow; music: Tom Wolff.

  6. Sep 8, 2006 · Michael Snow's Wavelength (1967), Canada's most famous and widely seen experimental film, is a minimalist masterpiece and an important, influential work in the history of cinema. Forty-five minutes in length, it was shot from a fixed position at one end of an 80-foot loft facing a row of high windows (which provided the light) and, beyond them ...

  7. Nov 11, 2002 · Thirty-five years after its inception, Wavelength (Ontario, 1967, 45 min.) remains one of the most vital and (still) groundbreaking films in the history of experimental cinema. It is, quite simply, the “ Citizen Kane ” of experimental cinema.

  8. Wavelength: Directed by Michael Snow. With Hollis Frampton, Lyne Grossman, Naoto Nakazawa, Roswell Rudd. Claimed by some to be one of the most unconventional and experimental films ever made, Wavelength is a structural film of a 45-minute long zoom in on a window over a period of a week. Very unconventional and experimental, indeed.