Date: Saturday, January 21st, 2012 at 8:00pm
Venue: Oddball Films, 275 Capp Street, San Francisco
Admission: $10.00 Limited Seating RSVP to programming@oddballfilm.com or 415-558.8117
Featuring:
The Human Senses:
Learning to See (Color,
1970s)
How do optical illusions
work? In order for us to understand, this educational film teaches us how the
eye works, beginning with how we see movement, perspective, and colors. Through
beautiful images such as point-of-view rollercoaster rides and hundreds of eyes
edited together in rapid succession, the magic of vision begins to make a
little more sense.
The Magic Shop (Color,
1972)
This
short film, adapted from H.G. Wells’s short story of the same name, chronicles
a father and son’s trip to a neighborhood magic shop. The magician inside
demonstrates a wide array of tricks and illusions, which amaze the son, but
initially fail to impress the skeptical father. As the magician’s feats grow
more outlandish, however, it becomes increasingly difficult for the father to
hold on to his disbelief.
Camera Magic (B&W, 1955)
The photographer Weegee,
known for his stark photography of urban crime and tragedies, turned his
attention towards moving images in the 1950s and ‘60s. Much like his
photography, this short film adopts a sensationalism as he demonstrates optical
illusions that he achieves through film editing, prisms, and different lenses.
Weegee is shot with camera in hand, then disappears out of the blue… a poodle
appears to have two heads, then a woman appears with three legs… “They say the camera never lies… but it
can stretch the truth in the hands of Weegee!”
People Soup (Color,
1970s)
While Learning to See made the magic of sight scientifically
comprehensible, People Soup
tells the story of a science experiment that results in an absurd magical feat!
Two boys spend most of the film performing a chemistry experiment that grows
more and more disgusting. The endless number of ingredients forms a magic
elixir that transforms them from children into something entirely different.
Harry Houdini is perhaps
the best-known magician and escape artist in American popular memory. In
addition to his death-defying feats, he was also committed to debunking
spiritualism and otherworldly claims. His magic was grounded in the physicality
of his acts; they were simply fantastic escapes and illusions, rather than
something supernatural. Both sides of Houdini are on display in this
fascinating half-hour long documentary, which contains rarely-seen archival
footage of Houdini, narrated by Burgess Meredith.
Curator’s
Biography
Hannah
Airriess is a graduate of the University of Chicago in Film and East Asian
Studies. She has previously programmed at Doc Films Theater in Chicago, and
various art spaces in the Midwest. She has been programming with Oddball Films since
2011.