VHS: Sunday Afternoon Cartoon
Pingpongs (2006) by George Gendi
Pingpongs (2006) by George Gendi
Quod Libet (1977) by Gerrit Van Dijk
Spol frem til Donald Olsen for karameller i kleinskapen.
via CrapTube
Mach 85 (2001) av Kazuna Iida
Umeboshi er en essensiell ingrediens i enhver japaners matboks eller, som de sier i filmen, Japans sjel om du vil. De eldre herrene kapper om å nå Umeboshi-helligdommen for å få med noen tilbake til kioskdamen som er tom, men de kommer utfor en lei tornado om natten!
Umeboshi er forresten en type syltet plomme.





Godspeed You! Black Emperor (1976) by Mitsuo Yanagimachi
UPDATE: Seems like the whole documentary is available online here! The subtitles are horrible in this version though.
Surreal, partly autobiographical film by Fernando Arrabal about a boy whose communist father has been imprisoned by fascists after the boy’s mother turned him in. We get to see the horrors of the boy’s subconsciousness (though through annoying colour filters) as he tries to imagine what happened to his father. Antifascist film with peculiar soundtrack (pay attention to the robot voice!) and strong visuals.
The tortured mindscape of the boy is visualized in the opening credits drawn by Roland Topor , heavily contrasted by the cute, Danish children’s song Ekkoleg sung by Grethe Agatz:
Clearly inspired by dutch horror master Hieronymus Bosch.
Undeniably, both of the above must have had a strong influence on Martin Skauen, whose drawings have been all over the place recently. Skauen also use guided video-tours around his drawings in a style simmilar to Topor’s shown above.
My suggestion to recover from all these horrible drawings is to download and listen to Ekkoleg, wich can be found for free here: Surfin Dead.