Excellent Video Essay on the Art of Cinematic Space in Experience. Truly inspiring to witness the medium of video essays enter into the cinematic age. ❂
You, of all people, really ought to make a video on How Do You Live. Surrealism is right up your alley, right? I would love to hear your perspective on what I consider to be the best japanese film of the decade alongside Drive My Car.
This made me think of AKA Serial Killer (Masao Adachi, 1969), a Japanese film compared with Benning’s work that seeks to find an affinity between the landscape and its effects on human psychology. I’d love to see more like this video, especially something incorporating formalist discussions of the style, maybe pushing back against Paul Schrader’s views of it as purely festival fare. In the age of streaming, can we condemn this contemplative cinema as something solely for festivals, or are there not large audiences watching at home, enjoying, thinking, and writing about these works?
I don’t have much, but here’s 5 whole buckaroo’s. I’ve never thought about donating to a creator before, it’s a waste. Kids, do not do what I’m doing. here’s my brief interpretation: I would describe this video as art without humans, indeed not art in itself (this video is in no way romanticizing art), just art in post-humanity. It is art with a human imprint, but missing the human. And yet paradoxically, this art is then interpreted by existing humans. It’s interesting that you title this “films from the end of the world”. And then proceed to acknowledge the ‘world’ in its relationship to the interpretation of “still art” (not about characters/story in the traditional sense). *Appreciation is shown for both the subject who interprets and discovers art, and the object of discovery.* This is the relationship between the landscape and the culture who occupies it. The landscape stands by itself as itself, and (as in the “Like Rivers to the Sea” section of the vid) the subject is to discover what it is. As someone who focuses on sociology, this video is very different. To me, everything relates to societal systems (especially when you think it doesn’t, for example metaphysics), we are social creatures after all. Few youtube videos force me to give it my full attention. The slow yet schizophrenic (as in complicated and indescribable) way you presented this conveyed the concepts perfectly. The story’s structure is a perfect reproduction of the story’s idea. The footage and audio is not merely there to look pretty as in a lot of youtube videos, but an active part of the video itself. That is what makes this a film, and not a video.
so true, I am deeply disappointed mr beast was not in this video to entertain the audience. His art has fallen off a cliff and he will be hearing from my lawyers
Great video; "there is always something happening" is a great cinematic thesis.
fuuuuuuck this is good how do you not have more subscribers
where family guy
Holy crap Lois, it's bibibiok5722
Great video!
Excellent Video Essay on the Art of Cinematic Space in Experience. Truly inspiring to witness the medium of video essays enter into the cinematic age. ❂
love this.
He’s back!
You, of all people, really ought to make a video on How Do You Live. Surrealism is right up your alley, right?
I would love to hear your perspective on what I consider to be the best japanese film of the decade alongside Drive My Car.
This made me think of AKA Serial Killer (Masao Adachi, 1969), a Japanese film compared with Benning’s work that seeks to find an affinity between the landscape and its effects on human psychology. I’d love to see more like this video, especially something incorporating formalist discussions of the style, maybe pushing back against Paul Schrader’s views of it as purely festival fare. In the age of streaming, can we condemn this contemplative cinema as something solely for festivals, or are there not large audiences watching at home, enjoying, thinking, and writing about these works?
I don’t have much, but here’s 5 whole buckaroo’s. I’ve never thought about donating to a creator before, it’s a waste. Kids, do not do what I’m doing.
here’s my brief interpretation:
I would describe this video as art without humans, indeed not art in itself (this video is in no way romanticizing art), just art in post-humanity. It is art with a human imprint, but missing the human. And yet paradoxically, this art is then interpreted by existing humans.
It’s interesting that you title this “films from the end of the world”. And then proceed to acknowledge the ‘world’ in its relationship to the interpretation of “still art” (not about characters/story in the traditional sense). *Appreciation is shown for both the subject who interprets and discovers art, and the object of discovery.* This is the relationship between the landscape and the culture who occupies it. The landscape stands by itself as itself, and (as in the “Like Rivers to the Sea” section of the vid) the subject is to discover what it is.
As someone who focuses on sociology, this video is very different. To me, everything relates to societal systems (especially when you think it doesn’t, for example metaphysics), we are social creatures after all.
Few youtube videos force me to give it my full attention. The slow yet schizophrenic (as in complicated and indescribable) way you presented this conveyed the concepts perfectly. The story’s structure is a perfect reproduction of the story’s idea. The footage and audio is not merely there to look pretty as in a lot of youtube videos, but an active part of the video itself.
That is what makes this a film, and not a video.
Kids, follow this guy's example! He gets it.
@@StudioErsatz What example? Giving you money??
I'm out..
@@Big_Dai This guy doesn't get it
Letssssssss goooooo new vid
Does anyone know where I can watch 'I Know Where I'm Going"?
vk
That's my friend
i tried SO HARD to be interested in this video.
That’s exactly how I feel I understand what he’s going for I just don’t think it’s very entertaining the way he presents it.
so true, I am deeply disappointed mr beast was not in this video to entertain the audience. His art has fallen off a cliff and he will be hearing from my lawyers
Do more Anime stuff.