Serene Velocity

Summary

Serene Velocity is a 1970 American experimental short film directed by Ernie Gehr. Gehr filmed it in the basement hallway of a Binghamton University academic building, using a static camera position and changing only the focal length of the camera. It is recognized as a key work of structural filmmaking and has been inducted into the U.S. National Film Registry.

Serene Velocity
Directed byErnie Gehr
Release date
  • 1970 (1970)
Running time
23 minutes
CountryUnited States
LanguageSilent

Description edit

Serene Velocity lasts twenty-three minutes and is silent. To make the film, Gehr locked his camera down in the center of a hallway, shooting several individual frames at a time. After each set of exposures, he changed the focal length on the lens, zooming in and then out in increasing increments.[1] What begins as a small difference in apparent distance several frames at a time expands to extreme closeups and wide shots jumping back and forth. By the end of the film, the zoom into the end of the hallway reveals a set of double doors with daylight filtering through.[2]

Production edit

 
Director Ernie Gehr in 2017

In early 1970 Gehr was at SUNY Binghamton while Larry Gottheim was beginning to form a film department.[3][4] Gottheim was impressed with Gehr's earlier short films Morning and Wait, and the two became acquainted when Gottheim replaced a damaged print of one of Gehr's works.[4] With the encouragement of Gottheim and Ken Jacobs, Gehr taught two courses there during the summer session.[3][5] He had been interested in making a film that explored "the intervals between frames–activating the screen plane from frame to frame more dynamically".[3] One day during the session, Gehr was on his way to the film department's editing rooms in a basement and thought of the hallway as an ideal place to film. A long, plain area appealed to him as a good space to "maximize the tension between representation and abstraction".[6]

Gehr began shooting test footage in the basement hallway. He tested mid-range and extreme focal lengths in "bars" of 1, 2, 4, 6, and 8 frames. He decided to use bars of 4 frames, projected at 16 frames per second. This would have been roughly equivalent to 6 frames at 24 frames per second, but Gehr chose a lower frame rate so that each frame would remain on screen longer, accentuating the optical effects.[1] He was surprised by the physical effect of watching the footage and felt nauseated afterward.[7]

The footage for Serene Velocity was shot over the course of one night. Gehr began filming once it was dark outside, planning to take a break for several hours and finish filming during sunrise.[8] He started by alternating between focal lengths of 50 mm and 55 mm. After roughly 60 feet (18 m) of film, he moved each of the lengths apart by 5 mm, to 45 mm and 60 mm, then 40 mm and 65 mm, and so on.[1][9] He marked off lengths in intervals of 5 mm on a piece of tape and gradually moved the lengths farther apart throughout filming. He manually recorded each frame, and without the use of a cable release his fingers became swollen from holding the shutter button. The process took longer than he had expected; he took only one break to use a restroom and held his head under water to keep awake.[10]

Analysis and interpretations edit

 
Serene Velocity shows a one-point perspective view of the hallway that divides it into the ceiling, walls, floor, and doors.

Watching Serene Velocity produces the appearance of motion and other optical effects, positioning it as a cinematic version of op art. Gehr has noted that the effects of watching the film vary significantly based on which part of the screen the viewer focuses on.[11] The composition of the screen is divided into five sections: the ceiling's fluorescent lights and exit signs; the doors, water fountains, and ashtrays on the left and right walls; the reflections on the floor; and the doors in the center of the frame. The perspective lines point to the center of the frame, which would normally be the center of interest, but the motion along the margins of the frame draws attention away.[12] Viewing the images as flat, two-dimensional spaces transforms the work into an abstract, flashing sign. Focusing on individual features of the successive images produces the illusion of motion.[2] The illusion of depth perception can transform the image into an upright pyramid pointing into or out of the screen.[13] Ken Jacobs emphasized this sense of thrusting and described Serene Velocity as a "sexual metaphor, or sex-become cinema",[11] and J. Hoberman described it as a "piston-powered mandala".[14]

Critics have often evaluated Serene Velocity as a metacinematic work. Noël Carroll pointed to the simplified procedure with which it was photographed as an example of minimalist cinema. Carroll wrote that the film, with its lack of movement, is an argument for "the impression of movement" as the essential characteristic of cinema.[15] Critics have drawn parallels with Andy Warhol's 1964 film Empire, an extended, continuous shot of the Empire State Building. Both films advance a philosophical argument with a lack of movement and an emphasis on the recording process.[15][16]

Gilberto Perez characterized the building's design as a descendant of Bauhaus architecture, calling it "barren and dehumanizing". He interpreted Serene Velocity as "neither a celebration–nor exactly a condemnation" of Bauhaus minimalism.[17]

Legacy edit

Serene Velocity received a positive reaction from many of Gehr's contemporaries, including Ken Jacobs, Michael Snow, Hollis Frampton, Richard Foreman, Steve Reich, and Andrew Noren. However, the film received little coverage from the press upon its 1970 release, save for a mention by Jonas Mekas.[18] In 1972, Bob Cowan wrote in his column for Take One that Serene Velocity was "one of the few really unique films I have seen during the last few years…It is rare that a film, which on the surface seems to be only a technical tour-de-force, can lift one to such emotional heights as it develops from surprise to surprise."[13] Serene Velocity cemented Gehr's reputation as a structural filmmaker. He demurred to the term, stating "I don't know what that word really means–[Labels] stop people from actually seeing, actually experiencing the work."[1]

Serene Velocity is part of Anthology Film Archives' Essential Cinema Repertory collection.[19] In 2001, the United States Library of Congress named the film "culturally significant" and entered it into the National Film Registry.[20] The film was preserved in 2006 by The Museum of Modern Art, which enlarged the original 16 mm print to 35 mm.[21][22]

Director Laura Poitras began making films while taking a course that Gehr taught at the San Francisco Art Institute. The first film Gehr screened was Serene Velocity, and Poitras has identified it as an influence on her work.[23] For their 2008 short film Lossless #4, Rebecca Baron and Douglas Goodwin used a digital reproduction of Serene Velocity as source material. They fed it through a motion estimation algorithm to create a vector representation of the apparent motion in the film.[24] In the 2012 Sight & Sound Poll of the Greatest Films of All Time, Noël Carroll listed Serene Velocity in his submission.[25]

See also edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ a b c d Mekas, Jonas (1972). "Ernie Gehr Interviewed by Jonas Mekas, March 24, 1971". Film Culture (53–55): 25–36.
  2. ^ a b MacDonald, Scott (1990). "Ernie Gehr: Camera Obscura/Lens/Filmstrip". Film Quarterly. 43 (4): 13. doi:10.2307/1212718. JSTOR 1212718.
  3. ^ a b c MacDonald 2005, p. 374.
  4. ^ a b MacDonald 2015, p. 40.
  5. ^ MacDonald 2015, p. 235.
  6. ^ MacDonald 2005, pp. 374–375.
  7. ^ MacDonald 2005, p. 375.
  8. ^ MacDonald 2005, pp. 375–377.
  9. ^ Feldman, Ellen (1976). "1970-1972". A History of the American Avant-Garde Cinema. American Federation of Arts. p. 147.
  10. ^ MacDonald 2005, p. 377.
  11. ^ a b MacDonald 2015, p. 236.
  12. ^ Perez, Gilberto (October 1999). "Film in Review". The Yale Review. 87 (4): 179.
  13. ^ a b Cowan, Bob (1972). "Letter from New York". Take One. Vol. 4, no. 1. pp. 36–37.
  14. ^ Hoberman, J. (1995). "Ernie Gehr: A Walker in the City". Ernie Gehr: The 1995 Adaline Kent Award Exhibition. p. 12.
  15. ^ a b Carroll, Noël (2006). "Philosophizing Through the Moving Image: The Case of Serene Velocity". The Journal of Aesthetics and Art Criticism. 64 (1): 173–185. doi:10.1111/j.0021-8529.2006.00239.x.
  16. ^ Faucher 2008, p. 195.
  17. ^ Perez 2006, pp. 284–285.
  18. ^ MacDonald 2005, pp. 378–379.
  19. ^ "Essential Cinema". Anthology Film Archives. Retrieved June 1, 2022.
  20. ^ "Complete National Film Registry Listing". Library of Congress. Retrieved September 10, 2017.
  21. ^ "Ernie Gehr. Serene Velocity. 1970". Museum of Modern Art. Retrieved September 10, 2017.
  22. ^ "Ernie Gehr's Marvelous Cinema". Harvard Film Archive. Retrieved September 10, 2017.
  23. ^ MacDonald 2015, pp. 237–238.
  24. ^ Baron and Goodwin, pp. 72–74.
  25. ^ "Noel Carroll". British Film Institute. 2012. Archived from the original on May 12, 2016. Retrieved September 10, 2017.

References edit

  • Baron, Rebecca; Goodwin, Douglas (2015). "The Rest Is Noise". In Guerin, Frances (ed.). On Not Looking: The Paradox of Contemporary Visual Culture. Routledge. ISBN 978-1-317-58740-8.
  • Faucher, Luc (2008). "Empathie, imagination et cinéma". In Tremblay, Pierre; Poissant, Louise (eds.). Proliferation of Screens (in French). Presses de l'Université du Québec. ISBN 978-2-7605-2196-4.
  • MacDonald, Scott (2005). A Critical Cinema 5: Interviews with Independent Filmmakers. University of California Press. ISBN 978-0-520-93908-0.
  • MacDonald, Scott (2015). Binghamton Babylon: Voices from the Cinema Department, 1967–1977. State University of New York Press. ISBN 978-1-4384-5889-2.
  • Perez, Gilberto (2006). "Gehr's Still". In Perry, Ted (ed.). Masterpieces of Modernist Cinema. Indiana University Press. ISBN 978-0-253-34771-8.

External links edit

  • Ernie Gehr links page
  • Serene Velocity at IMDb