In 2000, the following movie was selected for preservation in the United States National Film Registry by the Library of Congress as being “culturally, historically, or aesthetically significant”. Multiple Sidosis is the work of Sid Laverents, an amateur filmmaker. It was made in 1970.
Link (YouTube) |
Sid was around 60 when he made that film. (He died earlier this month, a bit short of his hundred and first birthday.) It’s amazing what he was able to accomplish with such primitive tools. Imagine what he could have done with a modern Mac. He also wrote an autobiography: The first 90 Years are the Hardest. (Out of print, sadly.) I can only hope to stay on top of the tech curve half as well as Sid was able to.
Joker's Last Laugh
Did you anticipate the big plot twist of Batman: Arkham City? Here's all the ways the game hid that secret from you while also rubbing your nose in it.
Trekrospective
A look back at Star Trek, from the Original Series to the Abrams Reboot.
PC Gaming Golden Age
It's not a legend. It was real. There was a time before DLC. Before DRM. Before crappy ports. It was glorious.
Bad and Wrong Music Lessons
A music lesson for people who know nothing about music, from someone who barely knows anything about music.
Crash Dot Com
Back in 1999, I rode the dot-com bubble. Got rich. Worked hard. Went crazy. Turned poor. It was fun.
20 Sidded? :P
I found it hard to show appreciation for this film because, other than the scratching that sounds really soothing, it didn’t appeal to any of my tastes. Stylistically boring in my opinion, and technologically unimpressive by today’s standards.
It wasn’t until I learned how he had to make the film through multiple, unerring exposures to the same film roll and the dedication to sit through that crap for four years that makes me think on how much this guy must have loved making movies.
Because taking four years and risking losing your film every time you did another scene has to be the most annoying, mind-wrecking activity I could imagine short of digging holes.
He might’ve found it depressingly simple to do all that now.
Forget a Mac, imagine what he could have done with a PC!
(I’m sorry, there was no call for that.)
Also: more movies need to end with an epic “BOIIIIING”.
I wanted to stop watching but couldn’t. I guess because it reminded me of the vintage Wollensak recorder the bank allowed me to pilfer from our dead neighbor’s house since they had no next of kin. Creepy, but some kick-ass retro loot!!
TehShrike, He could do the exact same thing with a PC as a Mac. It would just be a few grand cheaper to produce :)
I love seeing the one man band movies, but never realized that they are more than forty years old!
that’s awesome
What’s especially cute about this film is that it focuses on over-dubbing to create a complex musical track, while at the same time employing a similar method of compositing multiple images. The video (film?) work was undoubtedly the greater technical challenge, but in keeping with the advice offered by Castiglione in the Courtier, the artist here passes that off a matter of brilliant improvisation.
I kept watching, waiting for the inevitable brain-breaking twist for the darker.
The brain-breaking twist was that there wasn’t one.
This has to be commentary on modern ‘art’ in some way or another.
I thought the best part was when his wife said save the ribbons. I hear that every year. :-)