White Light Cinema Presents
The Complete Films of Fred Camper (Two Screenings)
Program One:
A Sense of the Past: Short Films by Fred Camper (1967-1976)
Friday, March 4, 2011 – 8:00pm
&
Program Two:
Fred Camper’s SN
Saturday, April 16, 2011 – 8:00pm
Fred Camper in Person at Both Screenings
Both Screenings at The Nightingale (1084 N. Milwaukee Ave.)
White Light Cinema is extremely pleased to present these very rare public screenings
of the complete films of Fred Camper. Camper has been a thoughtful and articulate
writer on film for over forty years (much of his writing is available on his
website) and, more recently, has been producing an astonishing body of digital
artworks. His earlier filmmaking practice, however, is little known. Long out
of distribution (some never in distribution), his short 16mm and Super-8mm films
have not been publicly screened for decades. And this presentation of his stunning
feature-length Super-8mm film SN is only its third-ever public showing. These
films may not be screened again for many years, due to their irreplaceability.
PROGRAM DETAILS:

Dan Potter
Program One:
A Sense of the Past: Short Films by Fred Camper (1967-1976)
Friday, March 4, 2011 – 8:00pm
Joan Goes to Misery (1967, 8 minutes,
16mm, sound)
A Sense of the Past (1967, 4 minutes, 16mm, silent)
Dan Potter (1968, 39 minutes, 16mm, silent)
Welcome to Come (1968, 3 minutes, 16mm, sound)
Bathroom (1969, 25 minutes, 16mm, silent)
Ghost (1976, 1 minute, super-8, silent)
“My five early 16mm films were made in a two year period when I was between
19 and 21, after I had been interested in cinema for only a few years. Each
of my early films is somewhat different. Joan Goes to Misery was actually
commissioned by a television show that wanted an "underground" film.
It's my only film with a narrative, one with psychological overtones, and, like
the others, shows influences from both classical Hollywood and avant-garde filmmaking.
A Sense of the Past was shot without pre-planning during a long weekend
reading Henry James, and I would like to think that its form was somewhat influenced
by his passive descriptions that seem to both evoke and conceal great, not fully
articulated, traumas. Dan Potter, showing a young man in the woods,
was shot over many months as the landscape changes from summer to winter. Though
not a portrait, it was inspired by the way Gregory J. Markopoulos's portraits
in Galaxie intermingle the identities of his figures with objects around
them; less obvious influences are F.W. Murnau's Tabu and the relationships
between figures and backgrounds in the films of Howard Hawks. Welcome to
Come, which depicts a somewhat mysterious transformation of the image in
the course of a single zoom, was my only film to achieve a small measure of
"popularity," with a short write up in Variety and prints
purchased by several film teachers who still show it today. Bathroom
shows a somewhat seedy bathroom, beginning with a stab at seeing it "objectively"
that soon fails; the forms descend into what I hope is a terrifying, even self-destroying
irrationality. One inspiration was the long take depiction of madness at the
end of Edgar G. Ulmer's Detour; another, the two out-of-focus shots
of the altar near the end of Douglas Sirk's The First Legion. The program
ends with my less-than-one-minute long super-8 film Ghost, which leads
to a fleeting final image I hope worthy of its title, and which will be screened
twice in a row, my usual practice with this film.” (Fred Camper)
***************************************************

SN
Program Two:
Fred Camper’s SN
Saturday, April 16, 2011 – 8:00pm
SN (1984, c. 110 minutes, super-8, silent)
“SN was born out of an intense personal despair, and a desire
to depict a failure of the self, coincident with my discovery of super-8 as
a medium completely different from 16mm, well suited to a kind of analog for
the written diary. Its images' natural lack of illusionistic presence and authority
contributes to the failure theme. The original plan for the film would have
required perhaps twenty years of full time work and a great deal of money, leading
to a very long film only a small part of which would have been screened each
time, selections made with a controlled use of random numbers. What I show now
is in ten sections, and in the eighth, on three short reels, a tiny piece of
the original plan survives: sixteen shorts serve as the source for this section,
and which three are screened and the order in which they are screened at each
showing is determined randomly. I have no final prints of any of SN;
most sections are edited workprint or edited original, and are thus not exactly
as they were intended to look. Still, I believe in it as a film. In part a portrait
of Manhattan's constricted spaces, and more generally of the way humans occupy
space, it also presents the failed journey of a self to organize, or become
present in, the world. The film has only been screened publicly twice before,
and will likely only be screened rarely in its original format in the future.”
(Fred Camper)
Fred Camper has been writing and publishing on cinema since the late 1960s, and on art since the late 1980s. He has taught at a number of colleges and universities, and presented film programs throughout the world. For the last six years, he has mainly concentrated on making his own art, mostly photo based digital prints; cinema is one key inspiration. His Web site is www.fredcamper.com.
Admission: $7.00-10.00 sliding scale