Parábola (1937)
They got so much out of just light and camera angles.
25 August 2011
This is just one of many strange films from the DVD collection "Unseen Cinema: Early American Avant-Garde Film 1894-1941" and it's from Disc 3. This is the third film on the disc in which Mary Ellen Bute participated--this time accompanied by Rutherford Boyd and Theodore Nemeth. Boyd created a sculpture and Bute and Nemeth filmed, frame by frame, this process.

It all begins with some words on the screen about parabolas and art. What followed were various non-anamorphic sculptures (almost as if modeled after Spirograph pictures) that appeared to move slinky-like to the music. Through the use of expert lighting, they were able to get so much out of so little and while I think the average person would NOT love this film, it is pleasant and watchable.
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