Oddball Films presents Nomads in the Ozone:
Gypsies, Hobos and Wandering Souls,
a screening examining nomadic life around the world. From gypsies in Eastern
Europe to traveling traders of Tibet to the legendary hobos and comedic
vagabonds of North America, this genre-bending program explores global and pop
collective concepts of nomadic life. Showcasing ethnographic films such as Tibetan
Traders (1958) portraying the
life of a semi-nomadic Himalayan tribe traveling through Tibet and India;
documentaries like Circus Nomads (1975) capturing the
colorful and hardship-laced culture of the traveling circus life; and the
silent comedy of The Tramp
(1915) featuring Charlie Chaplin’s fastidious hobo falling in love with a girl
he rescued from robbers, this collection of esoteric films reflects on
ephemerality and transience through time and space. Other highlights include:
the novelty short Rip Van Winkle Returns (1953),
showing the legendary vagabond as he attempts to adapt to modern 1950s life,
the cartoon antics of policeman Porky Pig and a homeless Daffy Ducky in
Riff Raffy Daffy (1948), the
comedic duo of Abbott and Costello as train hopping, gambling hobos in Hollywood
And Bust (1955), Nomads of the North (1950), Alaskan Inuit protect reindeer from killer
wolves, and Desert Regions: Nomads and Traders (1980) showcasing the diverse yet similar nomadic
lifestyles of the Bedouins of Jordan and the Navajo of the US. Plus! Gypsies 3 ways! Hollywood goes gypsy in Under
A Gypsy Moon (1938),
with the Five Balabanows and other acrobatic acts performing around a “Gypsy
Campfire,” Gypsies
(1972), a rare, non-narrative look inside traveling Gypsies of Poland, and Hunting
Wild Doves in the Mali
Highlands and a trailer for the film “King of the Gypsies”!
Venue: Oddball Films, 275 Capp Street, San Francisco
Date: Saturday, January 7, 2012 - 8pm
Admission: $10.00 - Limited Seating RSVP to programming@oddballfilm.com or 415.558.8117
Highlights Include:
Gypsies
(1972, B+W)
Directed
by Wytwórnia Filmów Dokumentalnych, this
enthralling non-narrative documentary provides unique insights into the nomadic
life of Polish gypsies in the late 1960s.
Tibetan
Traders (1958, Color)
A rare look at
the lives of Tibetan traders in the Himalayas, their rituals, daily activities,
schools, crafts and agriculture. Traders portrays the lives of a semi-nomadic Himalayan
tribe traveling India and Tibet in search of trade by barter for their goods,
carried on the backs of goats. Shows life in the lower village, including
recreation, bartering, processing of wool, and the collection of taxes.
Tibetan Traders was directed by J. Michael Hagopian who made over 70 films on the subject of international cultures, for the educational market, spanning the world’s geographies and cultures, and winners of numerous educational film awards.
Tibetan Traders was directed by J. Michael Hagopian who made over 70 films on the subject of international cultures, for the educational market, spanning the world’s geographies and cultures, and winners of numerous educational film awards.
Circus Nomads (1975, Color)
As we all know
the circus travels and with it everything under the big top and more. This film
profiles the colorful mood, the magic and associated hardship of the circus
world and its performers.
The Tramp (1915, B+W)
In this classic silent film Charlie Chaplin portrays a fastidious hobo
who falls in love with a girl whom he has rescued from robbers. She takes him
home to work on the farm owned by her father. Pathos and comedy are interwoven
as Charlie falls in love with her and plans to propose marriage but returns to
the road when her fiancé arrives.
Rip Van Winkle Returns (1953, B+W)
The ghost of Rip Van Winkle appears in the 1950’s. Alone and invisible, this once legendary figure is reduced to a vagabond struggling to adapt to modern life.
This novelty short utilizes physical comedy and cultural commentary as we witness a “man out of time’ as he wanders through consumer culture and mores of America in the 1950s.
Nomads
of the North (1950s, Color)
"Home
is where the herd is", is the theme of this stunning Kodachome film.
The naïve
narration-”The story of how a brave and sturdy people formed a strange and
permanent partnership between man and beast” belies the fascinating life on the frozen terrain
profiling Nomadic Eskimos herders of Alaska protecting 3000 reindeer from
killer wolves as well as the harness and joys of their tribal life.
Regions: Nomads and Traders (1980, Color)
This unique film profiles two distinct tribal groups- the American
Navajo Indians of Monument Valley and the Bedouins of Jordan and their lives
amidst the advances of modern technology. The film shows how each group has
adapted to its desert region and developed its own culture as well.
Additionally the film examines how the impact of 20th Century technology and
lifestyles are beginning to affect the traditional ways of both tribes.
Porky
Pig: Riff Raffy Daffy (1948, B+W)
Here’s
a metaphoric toast to the 99 percent. This film brings us a homeless Daffy Duck
as he tries to foil policeman Porky so that he can sleep in the City Park. But
Porky Pig won’t let Daffy off so easily, ensuing a feud between the two
rabble-rousers-- leading them to a department store where they wreak havoc!
Abbott
and Costello: Hollywood And Bust (1955, B+W)
The
classic comedy team Abbott and Costello hit the road as hobos. With their train
hopping, gambling, ride hitching, antics this hilarious duo give us a taste of
hobo life, Hollywood style.
Under
A Gypsy Moon (1938, B+W)
A
RKO musical comedy features a Hollywood take on “gypsy“ acrobatics, dancing,
and singing with Hollywood actors J. Harold Murray, Erna Rubenstein, Five
Balabanows, Nita Carol and the Song Stylists entertaining us around a hokey
Hollywood set.
Hunting Wild Doves (1967, Color) One of Hermann Schlenker’s series of amazing ethnographic shorts this
film features Dogon tribesmen in the Mali Highlands as they scale sheer cliffs,
using braided ropes, to hunt doves.
King of the Gypsies (1967, Trailer, Color)
King
of the Gypsies
deals with the criminal and violent lives of a group of modern day gypsies
based in New York City. The film stars Sterling Hayden, Judd Hirsch and Eric
Roberts, and based on a book by Peter Maas. Technical
advisors, bit players and extras were played b real life extras and music was
composed by David Grisman which prominently features the legendary jazz
violinist Stephane Grappelli.