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Wavelength

Not Rated
Short Film196745mEnglishDrama
5.1
User Score
52%
Critic Score
IMDb
Director: Michael Snow
Writer: Michael Snow

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Overview

Wavelength consists of almost no action, and what action does occur is largely elided. If the film could be said to have a conventional plot, this would presumably refer to the three “character” scenes. In the first scene two people enter a room, chat briefly, and listen to “Strawberry Fields Forever” on the radio. Later, a man (played by filmmaker Hollis Frampton) enters inexplicably and dies on the floor. And last, the female owner of the apartment is heard and seen on the phone, speaking, with strange calm, about the dead man in her apartment whom she has never seen before.

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Featured Comments/Tips

Curiously enough, there is an interview with Jean-Luc Godard in _Cahiers_ in which he talks about cinema in relation to spectacle. In this interview, the filmmaker says that he would like to film people reading and, after a pause, he adds that even in a wall there is spectacle: "We look at a wall and end up seeing things." Curious medium-length film. My respects.

I love these kinds of films! One anticipates everything and nothing and somehow gets both. Although I would have been fully immersed if not for the sound that became just unbearable. My ears actually hurt!

Unrateable, and not really reviewable in any normal way. At least not by me.

Featured User Reviews

This has been a bit of a funny week. It's involved me diving headfirst into a couple of notoriously mind-bending works of art, and being surprised by their accessibility. The first was Infinite Jest, which is a book I'm currently reading and loving. A lot of critics online had made it out to be impenetrable without a dictionary on hand, and yet aside from a lot of obscure words related to academia, the book itself is hilarious, gripping and easy to follow. Basically, I feel the same way about Wavelength. I knew what I was getting into from the start, because I had read a little bit about it online, and knew that it would involve a 'screeching' sound and one, long 45 minute zoom in. I thought it was going to be almost unbearably minimal, and so planned to watch it with another film on standby. But surprisingly that wasn't the case at all. People constantly walk in and out of the room, sound plays a very important role and lulls the viewer into some kind of hypnotic trance, and the screen flashes with the same kind of vibrant colours that you'd expect at a rave. I would be a liar if I said I completely understood what I saw, so here is a bit of background information. Basically, this film is considered a landmark in avant-garde cinema. It was one of the earliest 'structural films' that employed a minimalistic approach over the more densely packed films of other 50s and 60s experimental directors. According to Michael Snow, the director here, it is about 'religion, space and aesthetics'. I definitely understand the 'space' aspect. The film often transitions seamlessly between multiple times of the day, and obviously there are fairly lengthy gaps where nothing tends to happen thanks to it's minimalist approach. But the main thing I got from this film was that it was more of an exercise in sound and confusion than anything else. The soundtrack is incredible, first of all from the grainy radio playing Strawberry Fields Forever to the sine wave culminating in a the whirling sound of an ambulance siren. Then there are the frequent blinding colour filters that wash over the visuals. It's seemingly an attempt at creating a sensory overload. Makes sense when you consider the year it came from; 1967. I feel like these things combined with the film's focusing on the 'non-film', ie. the deliberate avoidance of the events that happen on screen such as a person being shot and an ambulance arriving, make it the oddity that it's known for today. At least from my interpretation, it's a call to appreciate the aspects of a film that wouldn't ordinarily be looked at. The room for example, is such an ordinary setting, and yet the edits between lighting and the ghostly effects towards the end make it almost ethereal. I'm not sure I'll be watching this again anytime soon, as I would rather get a little bit more 'into' film before revisiting, but for what it's worth I'm very glad I checked it out, and it certainly made me think of film in a different way.

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