Store

Ann Arbor Film Festival DVD Collection Vol. 2

Unexplored Territories

47thDVDCross over borders of independent and experimental cinema with Unexplored Territories, delivering nine award-winning and favorite short films from the 47th Ann Arbor Film Festival. DVD includes exclusive behind-the-scenes video, "Making the Arbor Art Mobile."
See the preview trailer of highlights!

All sales revenues of Unexplored Territories are shared with the filmmakers, furthering the Ann Arbor Film Festival's mission to help support talented artists working with film and video. 

$18 plus shipping

NTSC DVD Region 0 (All)

Total Runtime: 106 minutes

* For educational and library licensing, please contact us at mail [at] aafilmfest.org. 

DVD Selections

This second DVD collection of the Ann Arbor Film Festival features the following films:


Dahlia, Michael Langan | San Francisco, CA {5 min}
An animated, fast-motion portrait that explores the bustle and permanence of a city: San Francisco. Set to a driving score of vocal percussion, this film is a high-velocity contrast of stable forms and the dynamic patterns of life.

Studies in Transfalumination, Peter Rose | Philadelphia, PA {5 min}
The visual complexities of the ordinary world – a tunnel, a clump of grass, a discarded table, a piece of rock – are examined with modified flashlights and stripped down video projectors in this otherworldly exploration of place and perception. Winner of the Transfalumination Jury Award 47th AAFF.

Quiero Ver, Adele Horne | Los Angeles, CA {6 min}
 On the 13th of each month, hundreds of people gather at a site in the Mojave Desert to see visions of the Virgin Mary appear in the sun. They point Polaroid, cell phone, and video cameras at the sun, and compare interpretations of the resulting images.

Cattle Call Mike Maryniuk & Matthew Rankin | Winnipeg, Canada {4 min}
Structured around the mesmerizing talents of 2007 Manitoba /Saskatchewan Auctioneer Champion, Tim Dowler, this film tries to create images as dazzlingly abstract, absurd and adrenalizing as the incredible language of auctioneering itself. It is the filmmakers hope that the film will induce near-bovine levels of dumbfoundedness in all those who gaze upon it.

Blue Tide, Black Water Eve Gordon and Sam Hamilton | Wellington, New Zealand {10 min}
Amid an ocean of wax one might chance upon a garden of flowering chemicals, where the filmmakers have circumnavigated microscopic reactions, creating an epic in miniature.

Nora, Alla Kovgan & David Hinton | Somerville, MA {35 min}
Shot in Southern Africa, NORA is based on childhood memories of the dancer Nora Chipaumire who was born in Zimbabwe in 1965. Using performance and dance, she brings her history to life in a swiftly-moving poem of sound and image. The original score was composed by a Zimbabwean legend - Thomas Mapfumo. Winner of the Eileen Maitland Award 47th AAFF.

Reincarnation, Takeshi Kushida | Tokyo, Japan {5 min}
An otherworldly and poetic portrayal of one man's journey between lives, expressed through movement, flesh and color.

Video Terraform Dance Party Jeremy Bailey | Toronto, Canada {12 min}
Based on his live performances, Bailey shows off his latest software program that allows the user to design a better world. Combining improv monologue, social commentary, and interactive software, Bailey provides a platform to laugh and dance in our seats while contemplating the ways we live together. Winner of the Funniest Film Award 47th AAFF.

A City to Yourself Nicole Macdonald | Detroit, MI {24 min}
In 1950, Detroit's population reached 1,849,568 people in the city; today there are fewer than half remaining. We hear a lot of negativity about the crumbling infrastructure of a shrinking, post-industrial city like Detroit, but what about the pluses of having a city to yourself? Winner of the Best Michigan Film Award 47th AAFF.

Unexplored Territories is a project of the Ann Arbor Film Festival, a 501(c)(3) Non-Profit organization. All films were licensed for this collection and all filmmakers maintain full copyright of their work.

 

Ann Arbor Film Festival DVD Collection Vol. 1

Time Pieces 

This is a very worthwhile collection of short films, a must for anyone seriously interested in animation, experimental and surrealist cinema. Highly Recommended. - DVD Talk

Ten award-winning and favorite short films from the 46th Ann Arbor Film Festival, covering all dimensions of the frame: avant garde film art, experimental animation comedy, alternative narrative, poetic and abstract explorations of nature, indie documentary. Time Pieces also includes rare bonus material with deleted scenes, director commentary, artist statements, video installations and audition outtakes. See the trailer!

46th

All sales revenues of Time Pieces are shared with the filmmakers, furthering the Ann Arbor Film Festival's mission to help support talented artists working with film and video.

$18 plus shipping
NTSC DVD Region 0 (All)
Total Runtime: 104 minutes

* For educational and library licensing, please contact us at mail [at] aafilmfest.org. 

 

 

 

DVD Selections

This first DVD collection of the Ann Arbor Film Festival features the following timeless films:

A Painful Glimpse Into My Writing Process (In Less Than 60 Seconds), Chel White {2 min}
A stream-of-conscious look at the writing process, told with animated images straight from the subconscious... or somewhere. The narrative originates from an unpublished satirical essay by poet Scott Poole about his own writing process. It was the inspiration for filmmaker Chel White to build this one-minute film upon.
To learn more: www.skysociety.com/chelwhite.html

Doxology, Michael Langan {7 min}
Before reaching spiritual enlightenment, one sweater-vested young man must face a dancing Oldsmobile, endure a boozy encounter with God on a frozen tundra, and brush his teeth, comb his hair, floss, Q-Tip, lather and shave simultaneously. Doxology combines groundbreaking stop-motion animation techniques and unusual storytelling with the time-honored quest for spiritual awakening. Winner of Tom Berman Award for Most Promising Filmmaker at the 46th Ann Arbor Film Festival.
To learn more: www.mlangan.org/

The Drift, Kelly Sears {9 min}
The disappearance of a group of astronauts and a mysterious transmission from outer space launches the counter-cultural revolution in this fable from an alternate universe. The Drift explores both the American frontier spirit and it's apathetic polar opposite.
To learn more: www.kellysears.com

The Adventure, Mike Brune {22 min}
A couple's leisurely drive through the woods is interrupted by a panicked mime. The couple becomes a captive audience to, and then reluctant participants in a high stakes drama as it unfolds. The Adventure is an existential comedy that may challenge the viewer's perception of mimes forever.
To learn more: fakewoodwallpaper.com

Li: The Patterns of Nature, John Campbell {9 min}
Employing time-lapse, microscopy, animation and cymatic imagery, Campbell's exceptional cinematography explores the Chinese concept of Li - organic patterning, and the underlying inherent order of the physical world as revealed in its natural patterns and rhythms. Winner of the Kodak/Filmcraft Imaging Award for Best Cinematography at the 46th Ann Arbor Film Festival.
To learn more: www.filmbaby.com/films/2961

Frog Jesus, Ben Peters {2 min}
He thought he could make a frog Jesus.
To learn more: www.kijo.com

Number One, Leighton Pierce {11 min}
With water imagery as the foundation, Number One engages the experience of elasticity between varying states of mind. Winner of an Honorable Mention Award at the 46th Ann Arbor Film Festival.
To learn more: www.leightonpierce.com

Office Suite, Robert Todd {14 min}
This officescape reflects the rhythms of Todd's mind from daybreak-to-break: light journeys within and without his office, in 3 movements: InnerClose with Shadow and Steam (Andante Up, Down, and Sidelong), Exterior Fantasy from Dawn to Break (Allegro in moving colors), and Hallway (the End of that World). Winner of the Gus Van Sant Award for Best Experimental Film at the 46th Ann Arbor Film Festival.
To learn more: www.roberttoddfilms.com

Energie!, Thorsten Fleisch {5 min}
An uncontrolled high voltage discharge exposes photographic paper, which is then arranged in time to create new visual systems of electron organization. Even though the result is abstract, it tells a universal story older than the world itself. Winner of The Barbara Aronofsky Latham Award for Emerging Experimental Video Artist at the 46th Ann Arbor Film Festival.
To learn more: fleischfilm.com

Portrait #2: Trojan, Vanessa Renwick {5 min}
The Portrait Series is part of an ongoing series of filmed places, stories and histories of Cascadia with scores by musicians living in the Pacific Northwest. Portrait #2: Trojan is an arresting examination of the dynamics between industrialization and nature.
To learn more: www.odoka.org/about/

Time Pieces is a project of the Ann Arbor Film Festival, a 501(c)(3) Non-Profit organization. All films were licensed for this collection and all filmmakers maintain full copyright of their work.