Trouble in the Image

Optical printing pioneer Pat O’Neill uses “his skills in special effects production to extrapolate metaphysical meaning from the ordinariness of industrialized culture” (Scott Stark). In O’Neill’s playful film, “trouble in the image” may take the form of a disturbing moment in a narrative, how-to instructions for creating an image, or pictures that break apart and lose their literal meaning. O'Neill: “The film [is] made up of dozens of performances dislodged from other contexts. These are often relocated into contemporary industrial landscapes, or interrupted by the chopping, shredding, or flattening of special-effects technology turned against itself. The reward is to be found in immersion within a space of complex and intricate formal relationships”. Preserved by the Academy Film Archive in 2016.

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Color Fragments

1948

Technicolor for Industrial Films

Technicolor for Industrial Films

1940

My Little Baby

My Little Baby

1986

Venusville

Venusville

1973

Hand Held Day

Hand Held Day

1975

Bump City

Bump City

1964

Boc Ging

1970

Anselmo

1967

The Tenth Legion

The Tenth Legion

1967

Rude Awakening

Rude Awakening

1976

Honor and Obey

Honor and Obey

1988

Friendly Witness

Friendly Witness

1989

Fighting the Fire Bomb

1941

Study No. 6

Study No. 6

1930

Picture Without Sound

1976

Landscape

Landscape

1969

Documentary Footage

1968

Come Closer

Come Closer

1953

Hunting Keys

Hunting Keys

1959

The Story Of Koula

1951