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neige noire (2003)

Directed by Carl E. Brown
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1h 4min

Overall average

5.0/10

Plot

"Carl Brown makes celluloid dance. [His] new film work will burn colours so deeply into your brain, you'll be watching a light show inside your eyelids for hours. Titled Neige Noir ('Black Snow'), a name that conjures up Toronto winters but actually refers to the trenches of the First World War, the piece is a visual feast. It opens with a calming sequence of manipulated representations of a swimmer and the sea set to a lulling jazz tune, and then crashes into a steady techno and white noise assault with pulsating images. Brown radically alters the celluloid itself, experimenting like a mad scientist to create gorgeous colour patterns. He sometimes refilms an image up to eight times to bring its dance of distortion to a climax. Any single still from this film could bring you to a stop in an art gallery, and Brown gives us some 86,000 of them." (Thomas Hirschmann)

Technical details

DetailValue
Original titleneige noire
Original languageEN
Production countriesCanada
StatusReleased
Release date1 gennaio 2003
Assistant directorsCarl E. Brown
MusicJohn Kamevaar
SoundJohn Kamevaar

Release dates

Physical media

Canada / Jan 01, 2003

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