Scenes from Under Childhood

American film From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Scenes from Under Childhood is a series of 16mm film in four independent sections by the American experimental filmmaker Stan Brakhage produced between 1967 and 1970. All four sections are silent, though Brakhage made a version with sound available for the first section.

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Scenes from Under Childhood
Directed byStan Brakhage
Running time
Approx. 135 min. (Total)
CountryUnited States
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The film is often described as an attempt by Brakhage to visualize how his children saw the world.[1][2][3] In a 2008 Village Voice review, critic J. Hoberman wrote described the film as a "glorious, two-hour plus romantic epic."[4] In a 1992 poll for the British film magazine Sight & Sound, experimental filmmaker Michael Snow named Scenes from Under Childhood as one of the ten greatest films of all time.[5]

When asked to describe the film, Brakhage himself wrote that it was "a visualization of the inner world of foetal beginnings, the infant, the baby, the child – a shattering of the ‘myths of childhood’ through revelation of the extremes of violent terror and overwhelming joy of that world darkened to most adults by their sentimental remembering of it… a ‘tone poem’ for the eye – very inspired by the music of Olivier Messiaen."[6]

Sections

More information Year, Title ...
YearTitleFormatLength
1967Section One16mm2412 minutes
1969Section Two16mm40 minutes
1969Section Three16mm25 minutes
1970Section Four16mm45 minutes
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Archive

Film elements for all four sections of Scenes from Under Childhood are held by the Academy Film Archive as part of the Stan Brakhage Collection.[7] Sections 1 and 3 were preserved by the archive in 2018.[8]

See also

References

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