Reflections on the 21st annual Experiments in Cinema festival of experimental film at the Guild Cinema in mid-April.
We caught three programs this year: a long-form documentary, a retrospective of the films of a San Francisco artist, and a typical mish-mash of short pieces.
We snuck out on a Friday afternoon to absorb the one-hour 2018 documentary "Washing Society" by Lynne Sachs and Lizzie Olesker. It spends time with New York City laundromat workers and also dives backward into the history of the trade. Often the purview of Asians and other people of color, and often women, the work itself involves an intimate interaction with the customers and their delicates. The filmmakers play with close-up visuals of lint, pulling clumps apart and studying the shapes. I would have preferred more of those experimental images. (At the screening, viewers were gifted with a tiny envelope that held a piece of lint.) One focus is on a mother-daughter team -- often captured ritually donning and doffing their smocks -- and the daughter stubbornly fought any pretensions the filmmakers might have about elevating the work to a noble profession. "It's just a job," she insisted. "There's nothing more to say about it."
Friday night was devoted to Dominic Angerame, who was in attendance. Angerame tends to ruminate on places, in particular his home of San Francisco, including a 10-minute shuddering study of the Embarcadero Freeway, a piece which incorporated snippets of archival footage. He also presents a haunting homage to the shuttered San Francisco Art Institute after its closure in 2022. He studies nature around Joshua Tree and the Salton Sea in California's Imperial Valley. ... I was disappointed in an 8-minute study of a toxic copper mine, titled "Bigger than US, The Berkeley Pit, Butte Montana," one instance when a straightforward documentary would have been preferable to this artsier take. ... "Habana 2006" takes a bifurcated view of the Cuban capital -- the first half's travelogue images celebrate the revolution, while the second half wallows in the city's decay. ... My favorite of Angerame's was 2022's "Prometheus," a stunning, inky visual experiment in which the black screen is pierced by flashes of light. At first the opening image could be stars in the sky -- until you realize what those sparkles represent. Soon a flare of a flame on the left side of the screen allows you to barely make out the profile of a welder. The mesmerizing visuals are accompanied by Angerame's own plinking, urgent score.
The closing series of films was hit-and-miss. "Death in the Archive" by David Sherman returns to the San Francisco scene to pay homage to experimental filmmaker Dion Vigne, but it drags at 15 minutes and feels like too much inside baseball in paying tribute to the heroin addict who died in the 1970s. A couple of glorified music videos -- "Prefer Not to Say" and "Cleanup on Aisle Adorno" -- were more annoying than insightful, though the latter made good use of retro supermarket ad footage from the 1950s.
The best of the final program was from Romanian director Laura Lancu. Her "Hollowgram," according to the notes, "conjures varicolored clusters of swirling images and sounds from places real and imagined as if looking through a flip book in a dream." Toward the end of its seven minutes it ruminates on nature, with images that remind us that we will soon be one with the earth again and that we will then, according to its final words, "taproot into silence." Haunting.
BONUS TRACKS
From the Cuba travelogue, "Patria Querida" by Los Guaracheros de Oriente:
Our title track:



















