Experimental Cinema

News and resources about experimental films

Sat12012012

Personal tools
English (United Kingdom)Español(Spanish Formal International)
Namespaces
Variants
Actions

Phantom Rhapsody

From Experimental Cinema
Jump to: navigation, search
Phantom Rhapsody by Sarah Pucill (2010)

Film made by Sarah Pucill in 2010.


Contents

Synopsis

Distinctive in its stark use of black and white and reminiscent of early silent cinema, this film is composed of a series of theatrical side-show ‘magic’ acts. Three women stage tricks of appearance and disappearance, punctuated by trumpet, cello and drums.Interchanging between the roles of magician, nude and filmmaker, they perform the preparation of an image and the prepared or completed image, drawing on iconic paintings. 16mm camera techniques as well as performance techniques with props - such as cloaks, drapery, curtains, wigs, mirrors, frames, wands and lighting – determine what is visible or absent in the film frame.With its surrealist sensibilities of artifice and reality and insistence on doubling and substitution, Phantom Rhapsody probes the notion of identity as surface that can be worn or shed and which can extend beyond the boundary of the skin, into the light in the room, the set and the props.


Technical data

Original format 16 mm. (1 reel)
Speed 24fps
Screen 1.37 - standard
Colour Black & white
Sound sound optical track
Length 19 minutes


Crew

  • Direction: Sarah Pucill
  • Camera & lighting: Lucy Pratt, Vicky Smith
  • Camera, text and Edit: Sarah Pucill
  • Performance: Cecile Chich, Kayla Ente, Lucy Pratt, Sarah Pucill
  • Sound design: Tudor Petre Music
  • Music Composition: Lennert Busch
  • Trumpet: Howard Jacques Peryer
  • Cello: Alice Biddulph
  • Funded: Arts Council of England


Distribution/sales

Copies for rent:

No copies available yet.

Sales:

Phantom Rhapsody is included in the forthcoming LUX DVD.