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Cineblatz

Cineblatz (1967)

Directed by Jeff Keen
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3min

Overall average

5.0/10

Plot

In Cineblatz, the viewer is subjected to a high-impact barrage of evolving images, at once comic and terrifying. Glossy magazines are cut up and reconfigured, newspaper pages are defaced with animated squiggles, comic-book superheroes fly out, over and through at superspeed. Pictures appear only to burn up or be torn apart, toys dance in ferocious stop-motion before melting into pools of plastic decay, a hammer plunges down on an image of the assembled House of Commons - all to a crackly soundtrack of treated shortwave static. It is a hyperkinetic panorama of 1960s popular culture in meltdown, where seemingly nothing stays still for more than a single frame, as the artist ejaculates ideas onto the screen faster than the eye can properly register. Lasting just three minutes, Cineblatz is exhilarating, orgasmic even--but also thoroughly exhausting.

Technical details

DetailValue
Original titleCine Blatz
Original languageEN
Spoken languagesNo Language
Production countriesUnited Kingdom
StatusReleased
Release date1 gennaio 1967
Assistant directorsJeff Keen

Release dates

Theatrical release

United Kingdom / Jan 01, 1967

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