Plenty: The End
PLENTY: THE END
London Event Gallery
Tuesday 2 November 2010, from 7pm
PLENTY proposes a new way of looking at artists’ films by showing only a single work, regardless of its duration. Each film is given the freedom to unfold on its own terms, and the viewer is given the time and space to consider it.
Tuesday 2 November 2010, from 7pm
THE END
“Ladies and gentlemen. We asked you before to insert yourself into the cast, now we ask you to write this story. Here is a character. Here is the most beautiful music on earth. Here are some pictures. What is happening?”
THE END
Christopher Maclaine, USA, 1953, 35 minutes
The End follows the last day on earth for six of ‘our friends’ living in the shadow of the atomic bomb. Cryptic camerawork and disjointed cutting conspire to salvage narrative from unrelated images, accompanied by a barely coherent rant of existential despair. An anti-film infused with dark, ironic humour; deliciously inept and inadvertently glorious.
Christopher Maclaine (1923-75) was a marginal figure in the early beatnik scene of North Beach, San Francisco. He wrote poetry and prose, and made four films. Maclaine’s heavy use of amphetamines ultimately rendered him debilitated, resulting in hospital internments and early death.
PLENTY is a free monthly screening series selected by Mark Webber, and forms part of the Brief Habits programme curated by Shama Khanna.
at
E:vent Gallery
96 Teesdale Street, London, E2 6PU
MAP OF AREA
Nearest Tube: Bethnal Green
FREE ADMISSION
Small space. Arrive early.
www.eventnetwork.org.uk
London Event Gallery
Tuesday 2 November 2010, from 7pm
PLENTY proposes a new way of looking at artists’ films by showing only a single work, regardless of its duration. Each film is given the freedom to unfold on its own terms, and the viewer is given the time and space to consider it.
Tuesday 2 November 2010, from 7pm
THE END
“Ladies and gentlemen. We asked you before to insert yourself into the cast, now we ask you to write this story. Here is a character. Here is the most beautiful music on earth. Here are some pictures. What is happening?”
THE END
Christopher Maclaine, USA, 1953, 35 minutes
The End follows the last day on earth for six of ‘our friends’ living in the shadow of the atomic bomb. Cryptic camerawork and disjointed cutting conspire to salvage narrative from unrelated images, accompanied by a barely coherent rant of existential despair. An anti-film infused with dark, ironic humour; deliciously inept and inadvertently glorious.
Christopher Maclaine (1923-75) was a marginal figure in the early beatnik scene of North Beach, San Francisco. He wrote poetry and prose, and made four films. Maclaine’s heavy use of amphetamines ultimately rendered him debilitated, resulting in hospital internments and early death.
PLENTY is a free monthly screening series selected by Mark Webber, and forms part of the Brief Habits programme curated by Shama Khanna.
at
E:vent Gallery
96 Teesdale Street, London, E2 6PU
MAP OF AREA
Nearest Tube: Bethnal Green
FREE ADMISSION
Small space. Arrive early.
www.eventnetwork.org.uk
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