The best Stoney Emshwiller’s movies

Stoney Emshwiller

Stoney Emshwiller

05/02/1959 (65 años)
If you love cinema, you will share this ranking of the best Stoney Emshwiller’s movies, although you may have ordered them differently. In any case, we hope you love it and with a little luck discovering a movie that you still don’t know about Stoney Emshwiller.

Scape-Mates

Scape-Mates
6.2/10
  • Genre: Documentary
  • Release: 27/07/1972
  • Character: (voice)
In one of his first experiments in video, Emshwiller creates an electronic landscape of both abstract and figurative elements, where colorized dancers are chroma-keyed into a mutable, computer-animated environment. Working with the "Scan-i-mate," an early analog video synthesizer, Emshwiller choreographs an architectural, illusory video space, in which frames proliferate within frames, disembodied heads and hands move within a collage of animated forms, and the dancers and their environment are subjected to constant transformations through image processing. With its witty interplay of the "real" and the "unreal" in an electronically rendered videospace, and the skillful manipulation and articulation of a sculptural illusion of three-dimensionality, Scape-mates introduced a new vocabulary of video image-making.

Sunstone

Sunstone
6.2/10
  • Genre: Animation
  • Release: 31/12/1979
  • Character: The Shape
Experimental computer animation from pioneering artist Ed Emshwiller.

Hallelujah the Hills

Hallelujah the Hills
6.2/10
Jack and Leo vie for the affections of Vera- who appears a little differently to each man- over the course of a series of energetic sketches, flashbacks and homages.

Family Focus

Family Focus
  • Release: 05/05/1976
  • Character: Himself
Emshwiller terms Family Focus a "family self-portrait, a stylized autobiography," which takes the form of an intimate collage of home movies, black-and-white videotape and photographs that have been colorized, synthesized or otherwise visually transformed in an electronic mediation by the artist. The viewer is witness to the spontaneous activities and conversations of the family's quotidian home life, which is accompanied by Carol Emshwiller's ironic, often poetic commentary. In one sequence of home movies, the children are seen "growing" over a span of twenty years. Using the video camera as a kind of psychological mirror, Emshwiller integrates video's intimacy, reflexivity and realism with its "unreal" technological manipulations to form what the artist describes as a "documentary/video art transformation of self-revealing images."

Relativity

Relativity
6.6/10
  • Genre: Drama
  • Release: 17/08/1966
  • Character: Running Child
Emshwiller made this film on a Ford Foundation grant, and in his original proposal to the Ford Foundation, he outlined the film as "something that deals with subjective reality, the emotional sense of what one's perception of the total environment is -- sexual, physical, social, time, space, life, death."

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