Spy in the House of Ludd
Award-winning shorts by Simon Tarr
Catalog No. MC-159
Shorts Compilation,
Mixed Genre
2003, 43 minutes running time
DVD,
Region: 0 (All)
TV System: NTSC
ISBN: ISBN 0-9700463-2-4
UPC: 880198015990
Label: Berserker Rage
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This DVD compilation of Simon Tarr’s award-winning short films
includes: Growing Up Luke, Vow, Joe’s Suspenders, Desert Tango, The
Cold Sun, Crescent Time, Burning Contour Matrix, Extremely Bright
Lights and the Sound of Explosions, and Sundog Verga Matrix.
All films in a printable format
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Growing Up Luke
directed by Simon Tarr
USA,
Comedy / Satire,
1996,
video,
Color,
Dolby Digital,
00:04:00
Don't be fooled, children of the 70's. The most important decision any
of us ever made came in 1977 when destiny was thrust upon us all, when we were called to decide which Star Wars character we liked best... more info
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Vow
directed by Simon Tarr
USA,
Experimental,
1996,
video,
Color,
Dolby Digital,
00:02:00
You are cordially invited to attend a video game. Not an elegant epic
you may find on CD-ROM, but a simple, brutal slugfest as made popular
by the immortal Atari 2600. Pixel vs. pixel, slinging hot death ... more info
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Joe's Suspenders
directed by Simon Tarr
USA,
Documentary,
1996,
video,
Color,
Dolby Digital,
00:07:00
Joe Kokoruda was a model of courage, never flinching in the face of
terminal cancer. He only wanted to spend his last days tasting good
food, keeping his pants up, and playing a mean game of chess with h... more info
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Desert Tango
directed by Simon Tarr
USA,
Experimental,
1997,
16mm, Super-8, 35mm,
Color,
Dolby Digital,
00:07:00
Avoiding drought, starvation, and tractor-trailers, a gecko searches
for food and fulfillment in the desert. Survival is only the beginning
in this sexy and romantic fusion of cel and computer animation. ... more info
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Cold Sun, The
directed by Simon Tarr
USA,
Science Fiction,
1999,
DV,
B&W,
Magnetic Stereo,
00:08:00
A nomad wanders across an apocalyptic desert world, facing an ancient megalith and its deadly shadow.... more info
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Crescent Time
directed by Simon Tarr
USA,
Experimental,
1999,
DV,
Color,
Optical Monaural,
00:03:00
Monologue becomes dialogue as image, text, and voice intersect and fold back upon one another through this hypnotic night in the desert.... more info
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Burning Contour Matrix
directed by Simon Tarr
USA,
Experimental,
1999,
jpegs,
Color,
Dolby Digital,
00:03:00
Burning Contour Matrix combines pure digital images traded over email with hand-painted film, animated together to make a powerful statement about information overload, and the all-encompassing anxiety bred b... more info
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Extremely Bright Lights and the Sound of Explosions
directed by Simon Tarr
USA,
Experimental,
2000,
Super-8,
B&W,
Dolby Digital,
00:04:00
This film delves into the anxious relationships between people and
technology. Centering on entertainment spectacle, the film draws
parallels to popular portrayals of warfare. The artist draws a very
de... more info
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Sundog Verga Matrix
directed by Simon Tarr
USA,
Experimental,
2002,
DV, satellite,
Color,
Dolby Digital,
00:04:00
Misusing 3D glasses in cruel new ways, this film is the synthesis of
simulacrum and Solar Max. Viva Las Vegas!! The use of Berserk-O-Matic
Trance Spectacles (red/blue 3D glasses) greatly enhances the
te... more info
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This DVD has never been screened
Reviews and Other Info:
2006-09-26 Educational Media Reviews Online By Mike Boedicker
This collection of shorts from 1996-2003 reveals Simon Tarr as an inventive video and film maker of great range. The nine pieces consist of two documentaries and seven experimental works, both live action and animation, most shot on analog and digital video but with some Super-8, 16, and 35mm film elements included.
Tarr’s droll, dry humor is most evident on the first two works. In Growing Up Luke, he uses Star Wars action figures to compare himself to Luke Skywalker -- the bland, dutiful boy so unlike Han Solo, that cool Babe Magnet whom Tarr wishes he could be. The second short, Vow, cleverly intercuts footage of Tarr’s wedding with screen shots from Atari’s classic video game Space Invaders. These two works and the third, a sensitive (though never maudlin) documentary titled Joe’s Suspenders - about the last days of Tarr’s terminally ill grandfather - are all shot on consumer analog video, giving them the appearance one associates with America’s Funniest Home Videos and the like. But that same quality also gives them an immediacy most effectively demonstrated in Joe’s Suspenders.
The selections shot on digital video and film exhibit much greater resolution, and several are visually arresting. The Cold Sun is a black and white experimental work in which a young man dressed like a Tibetan Monk (or is it Luke Skywalker making another appearance?) roams an alien desert world. The live actor is actually superimposed over an animated backdrop, and the result is stunningly bleak. “Desert Tango” is perhaps the most polished animated piece in the collection, although much of the animation actually imparts the simple qualities of a child’s coloring book.
Extremely Bright Lights and the Sound of Explosions is an unnerving juxtaposition of two disparate elements: grainy, slow-motion Super-8 footage of “professional” wrestlers battling in the ring, with the soundtrack of a computer-synthesized voice blandly reading instructions from the book Nuclear War Survival Skills. Microcinema.com says the film “draws parallels to popular portrayals of warfare,” but it also brilliantly parallels the ludicrousness of the wrestling with the equally ridiculous instructions on surviving a nuclear war - they’re both pure fantasy. Two experimental selections, Sundog Verga Matrix and Burning Contour Mix, employ 3-D glasses - officially “Berserk-O-Matic Trance Spectacles,” included with the DVD. The glasses are appropriately named, since the effect is really not 3-D. The glasses serve more to accentuate the shimmering, pulsating quality of the images, which are the most abstract of any in this collection.
A good sampling of Simon Tarr’s recent work, this is recommended for larger academic and public library collections, especially those collecting experimental cinema. Unfortunately the DVD comes with no booklet or notes, although synopses can be found at www.berserker-rage.com/ludd.html.
NOTE: The DVD would not play on my older (circa 2000) home DVD player, perhaps because the disc may have been recorded in the DVD-R or +R format. It played fine on the newer DVD player in my office, but libraries/schools with older players may want to contact the distributor about compatibility. |
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Exhibition:
Program MC-159 may be licensed for exhibition |
Purchasing for Home Use
This DVD is available from the Microcinema DVD Store |
Institutional Purchasing
This DVD is available from the Microcinema DVD Store |
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Region ALL: Includes two pair of "Berserk-o-Matic Trance Spectacles" |
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DVD Features "Context-o-Matic" filmmaker's commentary. |
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Wholesale Purchasing:
Program MC-159 is available for wholesale from Microcinema DVD. Contact info@microcinema.com or call at +1-415-447-9750 |
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Professional Downloads:
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