John Smith, Being John Smith (2024) frame enlargement. Courtesy the artist.

Location

Reflet Médicis
3 Rue Champollion
Paris, France 75005

Date

11 December 2025

Time

8:30 PM – 10:30 PM

Cinédoc Paris Films Coop Screening: MFJ 82 "Real Life"

Program Notes.

This program celebrating the launch of MFJ No. 82 “Real Life” consists of works discussed in the most recent issue, and one film from issue 77. These films and their accompanying texts are attempts to understand an increasingly convoluted world, in which images are not just a reflection of reality, but part of its very substance. This screening is part of the Cinédoc cine-club program at Reflet Médicis.

Programmed by Grahame Weinbren, Vince Warne, and Jonathan Ellis.

Texts excerpts from MFJ No. 82 “Real Life and MFJ No. 77 “RIFTS.

Samy Benammar ADIEU UGARIT (2024, 15’, 16mm-to-digital)

“The main character, a survivor of the Syrian civil war, is traumatized by his memory of a friend’s execution. Shadows of the past pervade the film, a tone evoked by a dissonance between the dark emotions of the subject and the calming qualities of the Laurantian Waters… Were we to mute the audio and the subtitles, Adieu Ugarit would read as a modest celebration of sylvan lake-country lovingly recorded in black and white and intercut with images of a fine-looking man—with no suggestion of an absent voice-over narrative. It is in the contrast between image and text that a bitter emotional tone conveys the horror of violent death in the mind of someone who can’t escape it.”

War in Pieces Continued, Grahame Weinbren

 

Riccardo Giacconi w/ Andrea Morbio Diteggiatura (Fingerpicking) (2021, 17’, Digital)

“[In] Diteggiatura (Fingerpicking) (2021)… the figures of action are the hand-crafted marionettes of the Compagnia Marionettistica Carlo Colla e Figli in Milan, one of the oldest puppet theatres in the world. Detailing the intricate gestures of the artists that fabricate and then those that animate these figures, the film builds a tactile depiction of raw materials being shaped into unique characters, each with its own expressive features. Each face tells a story, imbued with history and the experience of previous performances.”

—Kim Knowles Currents Program 3: Action Figures (MFJ 77)

 

Claudia Hart MEMORY THEATER 2 (2022-25, 5’, digital)

“…One piece features a Bladerunner-meets-Las Meninas cyborg transformed into a high-contrast billboard for an intermedia fashion show (Doll Dance (Illumination), 2014/2025). Whether angel, tree, or silvery blob, Hart’s uncanny figures and their environments are wholly expressive. They drift, warp, and decay, seemingly under the spell of unknown pressures, whether internal or environmental…”

Claudia Hart: Illuminations, Corinna Kirsch

 

Mike Hoolboom RAIN(2025, 3’, digital)

Mike Hoolboom WHITE HARLEM (2024, 10’, digital)

“The work you’re about to see is not alive, until someone performs the labour of unfolding them. They need to be touched and unfolded. Is that too much to ask? Of course it is. Of course that’s too much. I think the beginning, the establishing shot, the doorway that we walk through to find each other at an artist’s movie screening always begins the same way. By asking too much. By making preposterous statements. What do you call this place anyway: utopia? It literally means: No place.”

What Is An Artist? An Introduction to the Brakhage Symposium, Mike Hoolboom

 

Tomonari Nishikawa SOUND OF MILLION INSECTS, LIGHT OF A THOUSAND STARS (2014, 2’, 35mm-to-digital)

“On a first glance, the two-minute film’s images look like any number of cameraless film experiments—a rush of blue color and light leaks, scratched frames jumping with flickering energy, and a hushed soundtrack of noise and pops. Beautiful, strange, and abstract—you’d be forgiven for thinking it was a hand-painted work, or an exercise in unconventional darkroom processing techniques. But after a brief cut to black, onscreen text matter-of-factly reveals the significance of the images we’ve just seen…”

MFJ 82 Introduction, Vince Warne

 

Undertime Slopper SELECTED WORKS (2025, 5’, digital)

“Undertime Slopper is an anonymous short-form video artist (or maybe a group, or a self-aware AI, who’s to say?) best known for posting to TikTok. Their videos are compact, usually disheveled collages of AI voiceovers, photogrammetry scans, lip-dubbed characters, and wobbly 3D animation. The character animations hover in an aesthetic limbo, not quite amateurish, not quite refined. They occupy a visual space shaped by algorithmic leftovers: low-poly scans, warped perspective, and uncanny ‘deepfake’ digital mouths. But beyond the noise (or slop), he’s built an absurdist ecosystem, half-myth, half-meme, populated by recurring figures and worlds like King Undertime, Nephew, and the whimsical Albert’s Forest. It’s surreal, funny, occasionally unnerving, and best of all, completely detached from the fine art world.”
I Love Undertime Slopper, Ari Temkin

 

John Smith BEING JOHN SMITH (2024, 27’, digital)

“The film sparkles with the filmmaker’s skillful employment of the inbuilt powers of cinema to refer to self-confessed flaws and insecurities. Is it flippant, facetious, ironic, wry, ironical, cynical, dry, poignant? Do we feel by the end of the film that we’ve come to know the filmmaker? Hardly. He warned us not to believe him.”

War in Pieces Continued, Grahame Weinbren

Total running time: ca. 84 min.

Cinédoc Paris Films Coop Film Notes

The Millennium Film Journal is affiliated with Millennium Film Workshop, Inc.
Email: mfj@millenniumfilmjournal.com
Web: millenniumfilmjournal.com
Copyright © 2024 by Millennium Film Workshop, Inc. ISSN 1064-5586
Distributed internationally by Central Books.

This program is partially funded by NYSCA through the Millennium Film Workshop.

The Millennium Film Workshop gratefully acknowledges support for the Millennium Film Journal by the following individuals and organizations:
• Deborah and Dan Duane
• Walter and Karla Goldschmidt Foundation
C. Noll Brinckmann
New York State Council on the Arts
• Anonymous Donors
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