Film Review: CALO MESA – TECHNO HIPPIE, (Experimental/Music Video) 

This three minute USA film is a homage to retro music and neo-classic musical cinema. A simple set up with two dancers, a musical piece and a old-school style video feedback, creates a series of bright images while re-creating a nostalgic feel from generations past.

What is excellent about TECHNO HIPPIE is how beautifully is draws ties together two different worlds. It is a film made and constructed in the twenty-teens, executing the stylings and techniques of decades prior. An homage, a love letter, and tribute to a style of musical cinema we do not see anymore in our current ingestion of media, TECHNO HIPPIE shines a light on the past through the music of today.

Review by Kierston Drier

Watch the Audience FEEDBACK Video of the Short Film:

CALO MESA – TECHNO HIPPIE, 3min., USA, Experimental/Music Video 
Directed by Jon MeyerMusic video using nothing but old school video feedback manipulation with two dancers.

CLICK HERE – and see full info and more pics of the film!

Film Review: THE NIGHT SKY, (Sweden, Experimental) 

THE NIGHT SKY, a three minute Swedish film, captures something truly difficult to encapsulate in film- a sense of awe. In three short minutes, without any words, we are taken on a journey through the vistas of a night sky. The camera acts as our eyes as we look upon treetop lined horizons and see millions of years of light from the stars shining back at us. Countless hypnotically moving images of the night sky transport the viewer to those blissful and serene moments of time where the world is quite and full of starlight. Rarely in a film are you able to experience the solitude and beauty and majesty of the great outdoors. THE NIGHT SKY takes you there.

Review by Kierston Drier

Watch the Audience FEEDBACK Video of the Short Film:

THE NIGHT SKY, 3min., Sweden, Experimental 
Directed by Leigh Bloomfield

A night looking up at the stars can reveal many surprises.

CLICK HERE – and see full info and more pics of the film!

Film Review: VOICES, (Italy, Experimental/Music Video) 

Musically vibrant and full of life, VOICES, a six minute piece from Italy, is a black and white acapella music video. Boasting crystal clear voices of a talented Choir and a haunting and entrancingly beautiful song, VOICES is a strikingly piece to behold. Both visually, with its sharp editing and it’s beautiful composition, and auditorily with its moving vocal chords.

VOICES is startling simple, as a cinematic piece. Like any true experimental film it’s primary focus seems to be to make you feel and experience a wide range of emotions in the course of the work. Yet, like a music video, it’s goal is to showcase the song and the performers. On both fronts, VOICES succeeds, and the viewer of the film walks away feeling uplifted and moved by the music, and visually engaged. A gorgeous song with a beautiful composition, VOICES is a wonderful film.

Review by Kierston Drier

Watch the Audience FEEDBACK Video of the Short Film:

VOICES, 6min., Italy, Experimental/Music Video 
Directed by Alberto Nacci

Seventh short film of the Body & Sound series by Alberto Nacci on the relationship between musicians and their musical instruments. A b/w film on the relationship between body and voice with the collaboration of the vocal quartet Leg’gio with Paola Milzani, Caterina Comeglio, Elena Biagioni and Simona Zambetti.

CLICK HERE – and see full info and more pics of the film!

Film Review: NIGHT LIVE, (China, Experimental/New Media)

This strong and compelling seven minute film from China is a statement on society, and modern love in the age of technology. Our young hero, a gay techno-savvy man with a father bent on his professional success, hooks up with a online celebrity he meets on an online dating app.

Their encounter is fun, effortless and almost seems meaningless, but the entire process is steeped in technology. From their app-based connection to their live-streamed meeting, to their most intimate moments revolving around watching a screen. Technology both unites them together and divides them from a real human connection. But who is to say what is a human connection anymore when our worlds are so fully integrated with technology? The plot peppered with political commentary and overrun with the youth-in-revolt vibe, NIGHT LIVE tells  remarkably relatable stories for young and old alike. It is about a generational clash of a father and his son, it is about self discovery and the trails of youth, it is about technology and world around us.They are age-old stories done in a startlingly relevant light. A strong piece with deep undertones, NIGHT LIVE is not to be missed.

Review by Kierston Drier

Watch the Audience FEEDBACK Video of the Short Film:

NIGHT LIVE, 7min., China, Experimental/New Media 
Directed by Dazhi HuangA young gay man starts an online livestream with someone he just met on the gay social app, and of course, it leads to unexpected consequences.

CLICK HERE – and see full info and more pics of the film!

Film Review: WHAT GOES AROUND COMES AROUND, (USA, Experimental/Music Video)

Experimental film is all about an “experience”. It invites you to sit back and engage with the media is an often profound but not always linear fashion. WHAT GOES AROUND COMES AROUND is one such production. It is a six minute piece coming from the USA which animates the live musical sessions. The animations are not the classic geometric shapes against black backgrounds- but vivid colorful geometrics, moving, ebbing, flowing and building.

WHAT GOES AROUND COMES AROUND is an exploration in visual textures interpreting auditory textures. A beautiful, hypnotic visual journey set to a jam session.

Review by Kierston Drier

Watch the Audience FEEDBACK Video of the Short Film:

WHAT GOES AROUND COMES AROUND, 6min., USA, Experimental/Music Video
Directed by Mike CelonaAn experimental abstract piece cultivated from three different live production sessions in which synthesized video images produced with Paracosm’s Lumen software were transferred to VHS tape, remixed through a circuit-bent Tachyons+ analog video processor and then subsequently reremixed back into a computer using Arkaos GrandVJ software.

CLICK HERE – and see full info and more pics of the film!

Film Review: JOY! BLUE MOON, (USA, Animation/Music)

This bright, happy musical number is full of starlight and technology. Literally. When the city goes to sleep, the technology that monitors the heavens comes to life. This three minute animated comedy is joyful romp through music and memory. Coming to us from the USA, the piece follows observatories, satellite dishes and radio towers all joining in harmony to the song “Blue Moon.” All bookkended by some very confused evening crew monitoring the event at their seats in the station.

There are many charming things about JOY BLUE MOON. One is that is uses a dated song and blends it with moderns technology, creating a lovely blend of old-and-new to create something lively and entertaining. Another, is that the animation somehow manages to capture a feeling a joy within the context of the technological pieces it uses as actors. The “actors”, the observatory, the satellite dishes, don’t have mouths, or even animate in a human-like way, yet they use what moveable parts they do have to give the impression that they are not only singing, but engaging in a chorus all their own. Away from humanity they sing to each other and for each other- a secret world of music under the stars.

Fun, fantastical and full of light hearted musical effervescence, JOY BLUE MOON is not to miss.

Review by Kierston Drier

Watch the Audience FEEDBACK Video of the Short Film:

JOY! BLUE MOON, 3min., USA, Animation/Music 
Directed by John VollmerMusic and images intertwine for a joyful experience.

CLICK HERE – and see full info and more pics of the film!

DOCUMENTARY FILM FESTIVAL – Thursday May 31, 2018 – 7PM

documentaryfestival's avatarDocumentary Film Festival. Los Angeles & Toronto

The FEEDBACK Monthly Film Festival is back for 2018.. Our home is The Carlton Cinemas, located in the heart of downtown Toronto at 20 Carlton Street. The event runs from 7pm to 9:10pm.

Continuing to showcase the best of short films from around the world, while maintaining our audience feedback format moderated by Kierston Drier. Showcasing a festival twice a month in Toronto in 2018!

Tickets for 2018 are PAY WHAT YOU LIKE. Purchase your tickets online via Paypal or Credit Card. Tickets are first come first serve.

If you like to obtain seats in advance and pick them up on the day of the event (come for FREE, or make a donation), please email us at  festivalevent@wildsoundfestival.com and we’ll reserve seats for you.

You can pick up the tickets on the day of the event at the cinema. Tickets are first come, first…

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HIGHLIGHTS & VIDEOS: Experimental/Music Video Festival – April 16, 2018

Film Review: ORNAMENT OF BEAUTY, (USA, Thriller/Fantasy)

This short and stunningly beautiful film comes to us from the USA. Set squarely in the realm of fantasy and inspired by Shakespeare’s’ Sonnets, ORNAMENT OF BEAUTY follows a beautiful maiden running through a graveyard, forced to face the voices that plague her and the visions that haunt her.

 

The film boasts sumptuous cinematography, gorgeous editing and brilliant casting. All the elements are delightful but what really shines if the aesthetic design. The Production design and production value make this work a cinematic joy to behold. The costumes, set and scene are meticulous and there is clearly painstaking detail taken in every aspect. The hard work pays off, and  ORNAMENT OF BEAUTY is a gorgeous film, inside and out.

Review by Kierston Drier

Watch the Audience FEEDBACK Video of the Short Film:

ORNAMENT OF BEAUTY, USA, Thriller/Fantasy
Directed by Andy Fortenbacher

A beautiful maiden is forced to confront the slanderous voices that torment her from the shadows.

CLICK HERE – and see full info and more pics of the film!

Film Review: WINE AND EGGS, (Turkey, Drama)

WINE AND EGGS, a five minute Turkish film is equal parts mysterious and thrilling. It leaves us constantly guessing as to the hidden story that is never revealed. A slightly disheveled and exhausted husband comes home from the rainy weather to greet his innocent and beautiful wife, who has been waiting for him at the window. She convinces him to go across the street for eggs to make dinner- and he finally relents. When he leaves however she is pours herself  glass of wine and watches (without a trace of surprise) as he is hit by a car.

 

We never know what has happened between them- but how accurately that mimics real life. After all, do any of us really ever know what goes on inside the relationship of our closest friends or net door neighbours? Behind closed doors, what secrets do we all keep? Whatever secrets lied between these two lead to a dark and sinister end.

 

Beautifully casted and with a subtle, smoldering sensuality, there’s something irresistible about this film- it pulls at you seductively, begging you to sit and ponder what details to you may have missed to undercover our heroines motives. To make a guess yourself, you’ll have to watch WINE AND EGGS.

Review by Kierston Drier

Watch the Audience FEEDBACK Video of the Short Film:

WINE AND EGGS, 5min., Turkey, Drama
Directed by Sertac Bozkurt

A woman watches out the window of in the house. The excitement that she had when her husband’s knock the door shows us that days end would be different than other days.

CLICK HERE – and see full info and more pics of the film!