Last night, I headed down to the beautiful Bell House in the Gowanus section of Brooklyn to attend Night 7 of the Imagine Science Film Festival, a joint venture of Imagine Science Films and The Secret Science Club. Friend of the Bastard and all-around Good Guy Dr. Alexis Gambis is the genius behind the film festival and Secret Science Goddess Margaret Mittelbach (one of a pantheon of two) played the role of M.C.
The night began with a piece that caused a bit of controversy, a "musical" piece by French artist Luis Nieto, "played" on an electrified fetal pig, various dead lab rodents, and a dead frog. The bit was quite morbid, although the general intent was to demonstrate the role of electricity in the nervous system (I was reminded Luigi Galvani's "frog leg" experiment). Throughout the performance, one could hear a bemused bastard muttering "That's more messed up than a football bat" if one were close enough to said bastard. In the post-presentation Q&A, a visibly upset biology grad student asked Monsieur Nieto if he were aware of the possible repercussions of performances such as his, in light of the threats that researchers using live animals face- Smut Clyde touched upon this in a recent blog post... it's like he knew. Nieto's Locus Solus was a similar short, involving a pig's head attached to electrodes.
Now, onto the shorts which stuck out in my mind... the piece with photomicroscopy pioneer Roman Vishniac was dated, but sweet, and the imagery was beautiful. The scene in which Vishniac returns his "friends" to the pond from which he scooped them up was particularly charming. Vishniac's gorgeous footage of microorganisms played throughout the festival, bookending the other shorts.
Whiskey Water Trick was an amusing bit, and would be a great party stunt to pull off.
Periodic Table Table was a fun piece about a man who built the eponymous piece of furniture. It was a funny bit about a charming dreamer with an eccentric vision.
Flutter was a poignant short about an elderly, solitary butterfly collector. It was somewhat depressing, here's a man who is entranced by the object of his obsession, but he kills the very things he collects.
Insane in the Chromatophores, another Smut-approved piece, was shown in the festival.
Discovering Mount Gorongosa chronicled an expedition sponsored by Chicago's Field Museum to a mountain in a park in Mozambique. This gorgeous little film detailed the field work done by the museum staff and its African colleagues, specifically the collection of mammal and bird specimens, and the various pathogens which infect them. The scientists from Mozambique were an engaging group, their dedication to the conservation of their nation's natural resources (if the trees aren't preserved, the water won't be pure, as one of them observes) was heartening. This was, for me, the highlight of the festival.
Legs-Atavism was another highlight- a blackly hilarious film about a Russian scientist who is obsessed with "elongating" subjects (because the world's tallest man should be from the Soviet Union) until he has an epiphany... legs gotta go. While it was a screamingly funny "mockumentary", I read it as an indictment of the Soviet-era embrace of Lysenkoism and the persecution of actual scientists who didn't toe the party line.
X-Inactivation and Epigenetics and Superluminal Neutrinos in 5 Minutes were great, informative shorts which concisely summarized complicated scientific research.
Those were the standouts, I'm a little pressed for time, so I'll leave things at that. I'll see if I can hunt down embeddable videos in the next few days. All told, it was a great night, and I was very excited to hear that Dr Gambis is working on a feature length film. Hopefully, I'll be able to post a review of it in several months.
1. Did anyone install Linux on a dead badger?
ReplyDelete2. It is not the true Locus Solus unless there is a pink depilated Siamese cat animating Danton's withered head, while both float in a diamond-shaped tank of oxygenated water.
Important to remember that the Dead Badger distro is extremely limited due to memory constraints and has NO USB drivers and very primitive video. You're going to need to order the earport connectors...
ReplyDeleteLast time I was in NY there was a Moma show that was pretty much all science geekery...it was FUN.
ReplyDeleteI learned through Feuilleton that MoMA is showing a retrospective of the Quay Brothers. The FECKIN QUAY BROTHERS,
ReplyDeleteDid anyone install Linux on a dead badger?
ReplyDeletePpht. That is so last year. The current project is getting OpenBSD onto a live meerkat. The damn thing keeps jabbering on about "needing root" and I keep explaining to it that no, you are not a qualified admin and maybe if you're good I'll give you some sudo access! Stupid meerkat.
And I want to see a video of the Whiskey Water Trick. Because whiskey.
ReplyDeleteSmut, you really shouldn't speak so harshly about your piers...
ReplyDelete2. It is not the true Locus Solus unless there is a pink depilated Siamese cat animating Danton's withered head, while both float in a diamond-shaped tank of oxygenated water.
ReplyDeleteSounds like Mr Nieto needs a talking to...
You're going to need to order the earport connectors...
Don't forget the bunghole!
Last time I was in NY there was a Moma show that was pretty much all science geekery...it was FUN.
More fun than a baby biergarten?
I learned through Feuilleton that MoMA is showing a retrospective of the Quay Brothers. The FECKIN QUAY BROTHERS,
This merits some looking into!
Ppht. That is so last year. The current project is getting OpenBSD onto a live meerkat. The damn thing keeps jabbering on about "needing root" and I keep explaining to it that no, you are not a qualified admin and maybe if you're good I'll give you some sudo access! Stupid meerkat.
And here I am thinking they're carnivores!
And I want to see a video of the Whiskey Water Trick. Because whiskey.
You wish it, I dish it! Not the same video, though...
Smut, you really shouldn't speak so harshly about your piers...
Watch it, dock!
It is good to see that the Hurricane did not deter the geekery.
ReplyDeleteGood onya, NooYorkerzoids.
You're nearly as tough as us Wisconsinids.
ReplyDeleteIt is good to see that the Hurricane did not deter the geekery.
ReplyDeleteIt's been a while.
You're nearly as tough as us Wisconsinids.
It's a different sort of tough- nobody talks about "New York nice".
SPILLING? WHISKEY? YOU BASTARD.
ReplyDeleteYou do the neatest things. I live vicariously through you, my friend.
It's a different sort of tough
ReplyDeleteCome out to play-ay...
~
You do the neatest things. I live vicariously through you, my friend.
ReplyDeleteDon't do that- there's some downtime, like slogging through double shifts without electricity.
Come out to play-ay...
Can you dig it?
You wish it, I dish it! Not the same video, though...
ReplyDeleteThanks!