Oddball Films presents Strange Sinema, a monthly screening of new finds, old gems and offbeat oddities from the archive. Drawing on his collection of over 50,000 16mm film prints, Oddball Films director Stephen Parr has compiled his 80th program of classic, strange, offbeat and unusual films. This installment, Strange Sinema: Trance Cinema is an exploration into the cinematic documentation of altered states. Drawing on rare
ethnographic and experimental acquisitions from the archives, this program
showcases powerful healing ceremonies, ceremonial dances and ritualized trance
states from around the world. Films include Anastenaria (1970), a rare documentation of surviving Dionastic
worship in Greece featuring ritualized slaughter and a breathtaking fire walking
ritual. Pomo Shaman (1964), in another rarely recorded ritual, Essie Parrish, a Southwestern Pomo Indian doctor
enters a trance and cures a patient with the aid of a spiritual instrument used
to suck out the patient’s illness. In another film, famed anthropologist Jon Marshall documents a all-night medicine dance in
the Kalahari Desert in N/um tchai: The Ceremonial Dance of the !Kung Bushmen
(1950s). Meshes
of the Afternoon (1943) is legendary filmmaker Maya Deren’s ground-breaking
experimental dream-like trance film. Buck
Dancer (1965) is acclaimed ethnomusicologist Alan Lomax’s mesmerizing musical artifact featuring Mississippi fife
player/buck dancer Ed Young. Margaret Mead and Gregory Bateson’s famed estactic
iconographic study Trance and Dance in
Bali (1937-39)
filmed in the village of Pagoetan, records a performance
of the ceremonial Kris (dagger) dance-drama depicts the eternal struggle
between the witch (death) and the dragon (life-protecting force). Himalayan
Shaman of Northern Nepal (1966) is
John and Patricia Hitchcock’s examination of shamanism in the Himalayas
including possession and purification and Dream of the Wild Horses
(1962) is a cinematic poem utilizing slow motion and soft focus camera to evoke
the wild horses of the Camargue District of France, as they roam on the beach
running through walls of fire and water. Plus preshow trance patterns for early arrivals!
Date: Friday, September 19th, 2014 at 8:00PM.
Venue: Oddball Films, 275 Capp Street San Francisco
Admission: $10.00 Limited Seating RSVP to RSVP@oddballfilm.com or (415) 558-8117
Web: www.oddballfilms.blogspot.com
Featuring:
Anastenaria (1970, B+W) This rare film documents
the Anastenaria, a form of popular worship surviving from the days of ancient
Greece but now disappearing. The ceremony includes the slaughter and communal
eating of a special calf and a spectacular fire-walking ritual.
A Pomo Indian
shaman participates in a healing ceremony during which she enters a trance and
cures a patient with the aid of a spiritual instrument in the throat used to
suck out illness.
This film
documents the second and final night of a Kashaya Pomo healing ceremony lead by
Essie Parrish (1903-1979), a spiritual, cultural and political head of the
Kashaya Pomo community and one of the only southwestern Pomo sucking doctor who
still practiced this ancient form of doctoring. Along with her good friend, Cache
Creek Pomo medicine woman and fellow basket weaver Mabel McKay, Parrish would
be the last of the sucking doctors in California—and probably the last in the
entire country.
The ceremony
took place June 1, 1963 in a ceremonial roundhouse of the Southwestern Pomo
(now more commonly referred to as Kashaya or Kashaya Pomo) near Stewarts Point,
California. During the ceremony (which is presented without narration), Parrish
enters a trance and cures a patient with the aid of a spiritual instrument used
to suck out the patient’s illness. Parrish only gave the film crew one chance
to shoot the ceremony, with no equipment allowed inside the roundhouse where
the ceremony took place. All cameras and lighting were setup to shoot through
knot-holes in the walls, which explains the films dark, high contrast
appearance.
William Heick’s
POMO SHAMAN grants us a rare chance to experience a ceremony generally
off-limits to cameras. According to Essie’s son, Parrish only agreed to be
filmed knowing that their traditions were going to be preserved on film for
both their community as well as the outside world. To this day, the Kashaya
watch this film before performing healing ceremonies since the film, according
to Essie’s son, is “infused with her healing powers. Music by Bernice Dollar,
Bertha Antone, Julia Marrufo.
Noted anthropologist filmmaker John Marshall’s film documents
a formalized Bushman curing ceremony in the Kalahari Desert area of Southwest
Africa by showing an all-night "medicine dance" in which a number of
men go into trance and exercise special curing powers. Divided into two parts:
the first reviews and explains typical dance scenes; the second shows the
ceremony without subtitles or narration. A fascinating and riveting film.
Meshes of the Afternoon (B+W, 1943)
One of the
most influential works in American experimental cinema. Maya Deren's
non-narrative work been identified as a key example of the "trance
film," in which a protagonist appears in a dreamlike state, and where the
camera conveys his or her subjective focus. The central figure in Meshes of the
Afternoon, played by Deren, is attuned to her unconscious mind and caught in a
web of dream events that spill over into reality. Symbolic objects, such as a
key and a knife, recur throughout the film; events are open-ended and
interrupted. Deren explained that she wanted "to put on film the feeling
which a human being experiences about an incident, rather than to record the
incident accurately."
World Renowned
ethnomusicologist Alan Lomax’s very rare 1965 film Buck Dancer, is a eloquent,
stirring and mesmerizing musical artifact from Northern Mississippi featuring
fife player/buck dancer Ed Young and the Sea Island Singers.
This film was
produced by Gregory Bateson and Margaret Mead and records a performance of the
Balinese ceremonial kris (dagger) dance-drama, which depicts the never-ending
struggle between witch (death-dealing) and dragon (life-protecting), as it was
given in the village of Pagoetan in the late 1930s. The dancers experience
violent trance seizures, turn their krises against their breasts without
injury, and are restored to consciousness with incense and holy water. Narrated
by famed anthropologist Margaret Mead against a background of Balinese music.
This “ecstatic ethnography” was an extraordinary effort to use film and
photography in the field, and the precursor to much of the visual anthropology
that has gone on since then.
Himalayan Shaman of Northern Nepal (Color, 1966)
Produced by famed ethnographic filmmakers John and Patricia
Hitchcock with the support of grants from the National Science Foundation this
film examines the practice of shamanism in Northern Nepal. Shot in the
Himalayan valley near the Dhaulagiri massif the film focuses on the work of a
shaman, his costume and procedures including possession, sucking out evil
spirits from his clients, contact with the "other world" and
purifying his mouth with fire.
Directed by Denys Colomb de Daunant with innovative musical score by
Jacques Lasri this cinematic poem which uses slow motion and soft focus camera
to evoke the wild horses of the Camargue District of France, showing them as
they roam on the beach running through walls of fire and water. A remarkable film.
Watch a clip here: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6I_eMebAqoM
Curator's Biography:
Stephen Parr’s previous programs have explored the erotic underbelly of sex-in-cinema (The Subject is Sex), the offbeat and bizarre (Oddities Beyond Belief), the pervasive effects of propaganda (Historical/Hysterical?) and oddities from his archives (Strange Sinema). He is the director of Oddball Film+Video and the San Francisco Media Archive (www.sfm.org), a non profit archive that preserves culturally significant films. He is a co-founder of Other Cinema DVD and a member of the Association of Moving Archivists (AMIA) where he is a frequent presenter.
|
About Oddball Films
Oddball films is the film component of Oddball Film+Video, a stock footage company providing offbeat and unusual film footage for feature films like Milk, documentaries like The Summer of Love, television programs like Mythbusters, clips for Boing Boing and web projects around the world.
Our films are almost exclusively drawn from our collection of over 50,000 16mm prints of animation, commercials, educationals, feature films, movie trailers, medical, industrial military, news out-takes and every genre in between. We’re actively working to present rarely screened genres of cinema as well as avant-garde and ethno-cultural documentaries, which expand the boundaries of cinema. Oddball Films is the largest film archive in Northern California and one of the most unusual private collections in the US. We invite you to join us in our weekly offerings of offbeat cinema.