We've all seen variations on the personal time-lapse video --
a snapshot every day for six years, or a look at
a young girl's first decade. But nobody's done it quite like
Sam Klemke. For thirty-five years the
itinerant freelance cartoonist has documented his life in short year-end reviews, a funny, weary, eccentric, and hopeful record dating all the way back to 1977. Recently optioned for
documentary treatment by the
government of Australia, you can skim Sam's opus in reverse in the striking video
"35 Years Backwards Thru Time with Sam Klemke," an ever-evolving home movie montage that grows grainier and grainier as it tracks Sam
"from a paunchy middle aged white bearded self deprecating schluby old fart, to a svelt, full haired, clean shaven, self-important but clueless 20 year old."
posted by Rhaomi
on Dec 31, 2011 -
7 comments
Wanwanlink weaves together a sequence of motion in realtime, using fragments of archival footages that are being collected daily. When a human figure appears on the screen, the sound is deliberately distorted into a slow 'wan wan.' This project, with a theme linking to classification and dependency, shall continue to be developed for a very long time. (Footages featured on this website belong to the public domain. Clips were downloaded from http://www.archive.org/).
posted by bonsai forest
on Oct 30, 2011 -
14 comments
Great Training Montages throughout history And a few of my own choosing to inspire you all to keep to your New Year's resolution-mandated training regimens:
Rocky,
Rocky II,
Rocky III,
Rocky IV,
Footloose,
Team America: World Police,
Karate Kid,
the Breakfast Club,
Flashdance, and arguably the best of all time,
Turkish Star Wars
posted by psmealey
on Jan 2, 2008 -
41 comments
The visual interplay of helicopters and fan blades in the
opening scene of
Apocalypse Now. The
idiot-future soundscapes in
THX-1138. The concept for the
baptism montage in
The Godfather. The actual cut of the "Director's Cut" of
Touch of Evil. The man responsible for all of these is
Walter Murch, one of the greatest film and sound editors of all time.
More Inside.
posted by Iridic
on Sep 19, 2006 -
20 comments
Eyeballoverload can be described as follows: "Nick Spark is a California-based photographer who specializes in montage or composite photography. This is a technique in which dozens, if not hundreds, of photos are seamlessly pasted together to create a unified image. The result is a balanced, yet highly detailed view of reality... albeit slightly enhanced."
posted by euphorb
on Jul 22, 2004 -
8 comments