Tonyconradtheflickerremake

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REMAKE OF TONY CONRAD'S THE FLICKER - ABSOLUTE FLICKER, DIGITAL VERSION, EXACT COPY BUT WITH PURE BLACK/WHITE FRAMES. DIGITAL FORMATTED INTRO TEXT CREDITS. NO GRAIN, NO DIRT, NO SCRATCHES - The Flicker is a 1966 experimental film by Tony Conrad. The film consists of only 5 different frames: a warning frame, two title frames, a black frame, and a white frame. It changes the rate at which it switches between black and white frames to produce stroboscopic effects.

DOWNLOAD FROM YOUTUBE

REMAKE A OCCHIO - STEP BY STEP FRAME BY FRAME

SOUND?

Conrad spent several months designing the film before shooting it in a matter of days. He produced and distributed The Flicker with the help of Jonas Mekas. The film is now recognized as a key work of structural filmmaking.

https://ubu.com/film/conrad_flicker.html


https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Flicker


The film starts with a warning message, which reads:

WARNING. The producer, distributor, and exhibitors waive all liability for physical or mental injury possibly caused by the motion picture "The Flicker." Since this film may induce epileptic seizures or produce mild symptoms of shock treatment in certain persons, you are cautioned to remain in the theatre only at your own risk. A physician should be in attendance.

The warning is accompanied by the ragtime tune "Raggedy Ann" played on an old gramophone. The film then goes on to a frame that says "Tony Conrad Presents," and then to a frame that says "The Flicker," at which point it starts. The screen goes white, then after a short while, the screen flickers with a single black frame. This is repeated, at varying rate, again and again until it creates a strobe effect, for which the film is titled. This continues until the film stops abruptly.


(veeeery interesting description - use it somehow?)

I wanted to understand flicker effect/device in experimental film. Why not to make a cover/copy/exact reproduction of The Flicker? Just like young painters/sculptors used to copy masterpieces from the past.

ctrl c ctrl v

copy and paste

frame by frame, no cheating

the same process, in digital

made me think of Interface by Farocki, should watch it again?

The usual (?) - recurrent filter-ing through the digital - remediation / shift between technologies

Conceptual take

Appropriation

UPDATE: FEBRUARY, FRIDAY 17TH - DAVINCI PROJECT FILE IS CORRUPTED I CANNOT OPEN IT ANYMORE - I HAVE TO DO ALL THE WORK ALL OVER AGAIN


I am making it for the second time. This time I am trying to be more analytical. Break down the structure, counting every frame, how many times each part is repeated. What changes happen. I might want to write an accurate account of this. As a self-standing piece? A description, a score, a set of instructions to remake the flicker.

(tautology - descrip[tion)

also:

a series of short loops for every white/black flicker sequence of the film)


UPDATE: FEBRUARY, MONDAY 20TH - DAVINCI PROJECT FILE IS CORRUPTED I CANNOT OPEN IT ANYMORE - I HAVE TO DO ALL THE WORK ALL OVER AGAIN - THIS DID NOT HAPPEN TO TONY CONRAD FOR SURE - IS ANALOG FILM SAFER?

list of outcomes from this work

an excel file as a visual score

a text with precise information about the sequences that make the film. their composition, number of frames, timecode, as specific as possible

a series of video loop, for every sequence of the piece. ideally displayed in the order they are in the film, but on separate screens, one next to the other

the full remake version of the piece

a written reflection of the process? a breakdown of the piece? a lecture-performance?



references:

https://research.gold.ac.uk/id/eprint/23575/1/B%20Crone%20Flicker%20Time.pdf

https://www.academia.edu/9456134/The_Flicker_and_the_Image_Machine

https://open-assembly.calarts.edu/index.php/2018/12/12/beyond-the-flicker/


Deleuze in Time-Image




This research project started by a long time fascination for the flicker effect that I often experienced-witnessed in my experimental/avantgarde/younameit film watching/meandering/researching of the past few years. It was a common, recurring encounter, element, that i Intuitively, from the gut, from the back of my head/eyeballs found appealing, intriguing, fascinating/stunning, that stuck in the back of my head/eyeballs.

I tried to use it in some of my projects, but I realised I was only using it as a merely aesthetic device, a visual effect, and it felt not enough. I felt that there was more to it, more potential, more dimensions, more depth, then just a plain visually shocking-striking effect.

I then started making research about it, trying to understand why and how it was/could be used in a moving image-making practice.


I gathered some bibliography:

....

I almost immediately came across Tony Conrad's The Flicker, as one of the staple pieces in the use of flicker in experimental film. I found it online, downloaded it, watched it. I fell for its absolute simplicity yet stunning complexity. A masterpiece


Some info from The flicker's wikipedia page:

...


I decided to embark on making a frame-to-frame copy of it, from beginning to end. A remake (to use a film word), or a cover version (to use a music word - which feels relevant as Tony Conrad was also a musician and composer). Appropriate and copy to understand, to learn the craft, the tricks. Just as painters and sculptors used to copy the masterpieces from the past to learn their art.


I imported the downloaded file in my editing softare, zoomed in to the max, and started adding black frames on black frames, white frames on white. The project file I was working on got corrupted twice in the making, which means that I had to start from scratch three times in a row. It was helpful, though, At first I was simply matching black frames to balck frames, white to white, in an almost automatic yet playful game of copying and pasting. After the first and second crashes, I started to pay more attention at the overall structure of the film, .... repeated sequences, counting the number of black and white frames that they are made of, counting the number of repetitions/iterations before the following one took over, spotting and highlighting allegedly mistakes in the film structure - extra or missing frames - and kept track of all this in a separate text file, so that I could easily re-make the work if the project crashed again. It took me almost a week of work, but I finished it.

It then began as a sort of impossible, unproductive, crazy, absurdist, self-imposed/self-inflicted challenge/quest - making a frame-by-frame copy of a boring ass film from the sixties consisting only of black and white frames - but then became much more, and I consider this as a research in progress.


The punctum of this research is yet to found, I feel, but I can definitely list some topics that have arisen from this act of appropriating and remaking and breaking down of The Flicker


Analog/Digital

visibility invisibility

moving image technological apparatus

appropriation, image ownership

loop, repetition

errors


....


Envisaged outcomes of this research:

a full-length, HD/4K digital copy/remake/cover version of The Flicker

a visual score of the film

a textual, detailed, instructional description/breakdown of the film, so that everyone can make it

a set of self-standing flicker loops (10X) - where each loop is one of the sequences that The Flicker is made of


some notes/writing about this research, to be possibly presented alongside the above-listed materials in the form of a lecture-performance (?)


Also, most importantly, a base to understand the potential of the flicker technique to use in my own works.