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Jan Kounen / Bluberry / Ayahusca trip

6 Jul

As a Jan Kounen’s movie, I wanted to present a short sample…

Depiction of an ayahuasca trip from the movie Renegade aka Blueberry.

One of the best way I found to describe it in a movie…since it will never be possible to describe it as it is in reality…

Kodachrome Film Test: 1922 in Motion and Color

26 Jun

This is one of the most magical things I ever came across in the www.  I keep coming back to it and it never looses any of its strange emotional power. The pulsing light gives an enchanted life to the dance of picture postcard poses and the color is such an otherworldly hue, you might think the apparatus just blushed because of the overwhelming  intimacy.

When we experience new technologies like the recent reinvention of 3d cinema, we feel a kind of psychedelic stimulation. This little film test might give us an idea of the thrill of the first color motion pictures.

Die Reise ins Glück by Wenzel Storch

12 Jun

Die Reise ins Glück (2004) – that is the german original title of “A Journey Into Bliss”, – is a german underground movie by Wenzel Storch. When the credits were running I turned around in the cinema because I wanted to see if there were others who had witnessed this madness. This is a work of love and anarchic spirit. It’s kitsch and bad taste on lsd. It’s the end of psychoanalysis and most other ways of making sense. It’s something that should not even exist, something that needs you to confirm it’s very own way of resistance.

Thanks to Arjan for reminding me of it.

I love to laugh – A high dinner

10 Jun

A very high dinner, from Mary Poppins (1964).

(Link: Galia. Thanks!)

The Porpoise Song, The Monkees, out of Head (1968)

4 Jun

In 1968, with the psychedelic and political revolution at its peak, even The Monkees, who were previously known as a standard commercial-pop group were working on a psychedelic film with revolutionary themes.

“Head” (1968), was very different from anything the Monkees have done before. It was psychedelically inspired and this is noticeable both in terms of music, as well as in terms of narrative and the character of the film.

The movie actually makes fun of the commercial plastic image of the monkees in a silly sounding song which goes:

He, hey, we are The Monkees

You know we love to please

A manufactured image

With no philosophies.

[…]

You say we’re manufactured.

To that we all agree.

So make your choice and we’ll rejoice

in never being free!

Hey, hey, we are The Monkees

We’ve said it all before

The money’s in, we’re made of tin

We’re here to give you more!

The money’s in, we’re made of tin

We’re here to give you…

The final “We’re here to give you…” is interrupted by a gunshot, and footage of an execution of a Viet Cong operative. The line between commercialism, revolution and psychedelics becomes blurred again and agin. Such messages are interspersed throughout the film, which has a variety of subversive moments.

The Porpoise Song which appears near the beginning of the film features Micky Dolenz and some beautiful psychedelic underwater colors. A prime example of 1960s psychedelic film aesthetics.

(Link: Morningloria. Thanks!)

Indicium part …

1 Jun

Remember this last story…

DPV first year anniversary special // M. Devavry interview //

there’s something then,

just out from first show…

work in progres…

Dreams that Money can Buy

18 May

[ From Wiki]:

Dreams That Money Can Buy is a 1947 American experimental feature color film written, produced, and directed by surrealist artist and dada film-theorist Hans Richter.

The film was produced by Kenneth Macpherson and Peggy Guggenheim.

Collaborators included Max Ernst, Marcel Duchamp, Man Ray, Alexander Calder, Darius Milhaud and Fernand Léger.

The film won the Award for the Best Original Contribution to the Progress of Cinematography at the 1947 Venice Film Festival.

Music: John Cage(segment “Discs”)

DPV first year anniversary special // M. Devavry interview //

27 Apr

M. Devavry

Mathieu Devavry lives in my city : Lyon,France.  I first met this unique dancer, painter, scriptwriter and movie director in the street.  Later on, we met several more times randomly in my quarter. The connection was obvious, exciting and really cool.

Not so long after, he asked me if I would like to work with him on his dance/theatre and video project, a huge show mixing different people and media, I accepted this exciting opportunity immediately.

When I had to pick an artist to interview for the first DPV anniversary, Mathieu was the first to come to mind. We corresponded (in French, this piece was later translated to English) regarding the story of his artistic activities from 2003 to 2011.

Mathieu tells about the last years:

During the summer 2003, after I’ve met three artists and a producer, we started to write a scenario but never put it in images.

Then, in 2005, with the collective “Chouech”, we got back to the project, giving it a name – “Sous Cid Toi” – which, as its name in French points, is a suicidal project based on The Dance of the Painter, but it was a failure… Our copyrights were stolen by the fake producer…and we forbid the use of our images.

In 2007, after I settled in Lyon, I met Jean Baptiste Lepreux and Jeanne Morel  and decided to write the scenario again. The first images revealed themselves, the framework was born, and the introduction in “stop-motion’ was realized: “the suicide in the bathtub”. We were setting up the cube, the main point of the story, but then a drama occurred. The project was put on hold after one of the film makers died…

Three years passed, and here we are in the summer 2010, after some discussion, meetings, and making contacts with the video team, the light team, the music team, the photo team and the writers, it became a 18 persons engaged in this project called “Indicium”. It was a fantastic experience!

 « INDICIUM »

Babasama:  Let’s talk about the story of the central character in this

Devavry: The first idea was to tell the story of a girl in trouble who is between life and death, or more exactly, in a slice of life, in a tunnel, before the light at it’s end, between the little death, a coitus, a Sleep apnea…This moment is transcribed with different medias, it represents her mental imprisonment, materialized by a white cube (a square, an episode…). She appears in a fetal position, between reincarnation, rebirth and shamanic vision. A naked body in the middle of this cube, between disappearance/appearance/dream/reality, it takes life, takes consciousness of his limbs.

She glides into this restricted frame, always in interaction with various evolutions: birth, awakening, body consciousness, observation, retrospection, seeking for freedom, mental imprisonment, observation, aloneness, irritation, anxiety, crisis, escape, destruction of the cube with strips of her life, tearing down pieces of journal paper from the wall of the cube…

Flooded in the journal paper, she get lost inside it, then comes out again cleared, dressed with her souvenirs,  she realizes that she can’t get out of being alone, this psychedelic craziness, between a bad-trip, dream, reality, consciousness. It’s an open window between ambiguity of the suicide and a psychedelic orgasm.

Babasamas: What are your artistic references in this story?

Devavry: For the first part (2003-2010), concerning the video part, Yves Klein is THE reference!

His live performances are situated between a plastic showpiece and a scenic piece. For the second part, the one we’re working on at the moment (2011), Josef Nadj was an important artist in my aesthetic construction. He helped me, he was a bridge. For me, he is the link between the canvas and the stage. He found the process that reveals for me the astral travel (how the lifeless doll on a painting in an attic and the dancer on the stage, living the canvas through the motion, the sound and obviously, the aesthetic…

Babasamas: Can you tell a bit more about the psychedelic side of the project?

Devavry: Our goal with these effects was to calibrate, with blue tones, to get away from the “real”. The mesh size of the beginning brings this world between virtual and reality. Disappearance of the character emphasizes this psychedelic state.

She takes out “strips of her life”, letting some blurred images, destructing this solitude, this bad-trip, and coming out from this negation to enter the reality of life, like awaking to consciousness.

In the second part, she gets out of her body, like an astral rise, an awakening after death. Now, she travels inside this known environment, in relative freedom, between life and death. The mouse hole could symbolize an exit, an escape, but also an endless loop, an eternal renewal.

Babasamas: Finally, can you tell us a bit your 2011 project?

Devavry: While trying to schedule “Incidium” in several short film festivals, I realized it was not complete, and hardly comprehensible.  I tried to develop the project on stage, then met Manuel Pons (director) and Samantha Barenson (writer). We wrote again the text, the script, the choreography and ending of the whole story…

We are now in a final stage of creation, with 45 actors, artists and technicians; the play is being staged for the first time onMay 31, 2011and takes the forms of an exhibition a show and meetings.

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Moreover, here are the links of his other stuff, enjoy !

Paintings:  http://www.facebook.com/media/set/fbx/?set=a.216185532364.135028.621437364

Various stuff: http://www.myspace.com/devavry_mathieu/photos

Poems (in French and Spanish): http://www.facebook.com/media/set/fbx/?set=a.216185532364.135028.621437364

and for anything else: devavry_mat[at]hotmail.fr

The Transpersonals – I’m Not A Seeker I’m A Founder

8 Apr

“My head is in Shambala”. I always found Bollywood films to be mysteriously psychedelic. This clip makes the obvious even more conspicuous. A beautiful Indian flavored psychedelic candy from The Transpersonals.

(Link: Matty. Thanks!)

Alice in Wonderland (1951)

25 Mar

“In a world of my own all the flowers would have very extra-special powers/They would sit and talk with me for hours”. Alice only needed to go down a particular rabbit hole and drink that magic potion and she got to the place she wanted.

A one charming Alice from the classic 1951 Disney version of “Alice in Wonderland”.