Sat 11 | 6pm

Three Films by Daina Krumings

Think of New Jersey. Think of Man Ray and Jean Cocteau. Now think of Daina Krumins — the state’s homegrown surrealist filmmaker.

”The Divine Miracle,” ”Babobilicons,” (the title is a word she invented) and ”Summer Light” — will be shown today as a special feature.

Ms. Krumins spent nine years making ”Babobilicons,” which she finished in 1983, and 17 on ”Summer Light,” which she completed last year. For much of that time, computerized graphics were not available, and Ms. Krumin had to hand-paint frames and use other time-consuming ways to create special effects.

”My way of seeing the world or reassembling it in my mind is unconventional,” admitted Ms. Krumins, whose spotless kitchen and excellent apple crisp seemed at odds with the fact that she grew slime mold in her basement for ”Babobilicons.”

”You grow it on oatmeal, and you cover it, and then the stuff moves up the dish and on to the floor,” she said. ”It’s half animal, half plant. I had to play with it a lot until I figured out the condition that would make it move away.”

She added: ”I don’t find it disgusting. But I think the garbage man found it disgusting.”

Now her basement is filled with the detritus of her craft: deer antlers, fish bones, seashells and feathers, among other things.

Summer Light  2001, color/so, 17m

“Summer Light” come from my texture-driven, non-neurotypical way of finding delight and meaning. It’s not verbal meaning, All I say in words is that it does, in fact, have meaning. In a way, it is my world. Daina Krumins

Babobilicons 1982, 16mm, color/so, 16m

“Daina Krumins’s 1982 BABOBILICONS is a spectacular special-effects study of molds, mushrooms and similar vegetation.” – Richard Shephard, The New York Times

“Daina Krumins’s BABOBILICONS is a truly surrealist work in terms of both its process and product. Krumins takes time to make her films. It took her nine years to create this remarkable animated short, yet her method is in line with the surrealist affinity for chance operation. She cultivated slime molds on Quaker five-minute oats in her basement, planted hundreds of phallic stink-horn mushrooms, and put her mother behind the camera to film them growing. The results are sexual and bizarre. She combined ordinary objects – wall sockets, candles, and peeling paint – to get unnerving, dreamlike images. Porcelain fish jump through waves; mushroom erections rise and fall. Her Babobilicons – robotlike characters that resemble coffee pots with lobster claws – move through all this with mysterious determination. Anyone who orders 10,000 ladybugs from a pest control company to film them crawling over a model drawing room definitely possesses a sense of the surreal.” – Renee Shafransky, The Village Voice

The Divine Miracle 1973, 16mm, color/so, 5.5m (pictured)

“An intriguing composite of what looks like animation and pageant-like live action is THE DIVINE MIRACLE, which treads a delicate line between reverence and spoof as it briefly portrays the agony, death and ascension of Christ in the vividly colored and heavily outlined style of Catholic devotional postcards, while tiny angels (consisting only of heads and wings) circle like slow mosquitoes about the central figure.” – Edgar Daniels, Filmmakers’ Newsletter

sources: Margo Nash, New York Times, 2002   Canyon Cinema

Sat 11 | 6pm

Three Films by Daina Krumings

Think of New Jersey. Think of Man Ray and Jean Cocteau. Now think of Daina Krumins – the state’s homegrown surrealist filmmaker.

“The Divine Miracle,” “Babobilicons,” (the title is a word she invented) and “Summer Light” – will be shown today as a special feature.

Ms. Krumins spent nine years making “Babobilicons,” which she finished in 1983, and 17 on “Summer Light,” which she completed last year. For much of that time, computerized graphics were not available, and Ms. Krumin had to hand-paint frames and use other time-consuming ways to create special effects.

“My way of seeing the world or reassembling it in my mind is unconventional,” admitted Ms. Krumins, whose spotless kitchen and excellent apple crisp seemed at odds with the fact that she grew slime mold in her basement for “Babobilicons.”

“You grow it on oatmeal, and you cover it, and then the stuff moves up the dish and on to the floor,” she said. “It’s half animal, half plant. I had to play with it a lot until I figured out the condition that would make it move away.”

She added: “I don’t find it disgusting. But I think the garbage man found it disgusting.”

Now her basement is filled with the detritus of her craft: deer antlers, fish bones, seashells and feathers, among other things.

Summer Light  2001, color/so, 17m

“Summer Light” come from my texture-driven, non-neurotypical way of finding delight and meaning. It’s not verbal meaning, All I say in words is that it does, in fact, have meaning. In a way, it is my world. Daina Krumins

Babobilicons 1982, 16mm, color/so, 16m

“Daina Krumins’s 1982 BABOBILICONS is a spectacular special-effects study of molds, mushrooms and similar vegetation.” – Richard Shephard, The New York Times

“Daina Krumins’s BABOBILICONS is a truly surrealist work in terms of both its process and product. Krumins takes time to make her films. It took her nine years to create this remarkable animated short, yet her method is in line with the surrealist affinity for chance operation. She cultivated slime molds on Quaker five-minute oats in her basement, planted hundreds of phallic stink-horn mushrooms, and put her mother behind the camera to film them growing. The results are sexual and bizarre. She combined ordinary objects – wall sockets, candles, and peeling paint – to get unnerving, dreamlike images. Porcelain fish jump through waves; mushroom erections rise and fall. Her Babobilicons – robotlike characters that resemble coffee pots with lobster claws – move through all this with mysterious determination. Anyone who orders 10,000 ladybugs from a pest control company to film them crawling over a model drawing room definitely possesses a sense of the surreal.” – Renee Shafransky, The Village Voice

The Divine Miracle 1973, 16mm, color/so, 5.5m (pictured)

“An intriguing composite of what looks like animation and pageant-like live action is THE DIVINE MIRACLE, which treads a delicate line between reverence and spoof as it briefly portrays the agony, death and ascension of Christ in the vividly colored and heavily outlined style of Catholic devotional postcards, while tiny angels (consisting only of heads and wings) circle like slow mosquitoes about the central figure.” – Edgar Daniels, Filmmakers’ Newsletter

sources: Margo Nash, New York Times, 2002   Canyon Cinema

Sat 11 | 7:30pm

pictured: Soft by Simon Ellis

in attendance of Simon Ellis, presented by Kenton Turk


DL has a real treat this year in the person of Simon Ellis, who started making waves long before his short “Soft” won both the International Jury Prize at Sundance as well as the British Independent Film Award (not to mention some 35 more!). He has taken on offbeat terrain as a feature filmmaker and intrigued many with his own visual language and story-telling mode. Definitely one of the top young movers and shakers today in his preferred short film format. We will be showing two blocks spanning his broad range of experimentation and mastery, and he will be making the trip to Berlin to be on hand at [DL8] and illuminate the audience personally. Thirteen short films, selected by Simon himself –  with of course the unsettling “Soft” as part of the program.

pictured: Binaural Swimming (beach) by Simon Ellis

Telling Lies 4 min 20s
What About The Bodies 7 min
What The 7 min
Jam Today 15 min
Soft 15 min

48 min

Thousand  4 min 20s
Bass Invaders  5 min
A Storm And Some Snow 3 min
Dying Backwards 2 min
Subterranean Scene Filter 3 min
Where Is My Mind 4 min
Mining For Diamonds 4 min | World Premiere
Binaural Swimming (beach) 17 min | World Premiere

42 min

Sat 11 | 10pm

pictured: Portrait Serie – Jonas Mekas by Olivier Dekegel 

H.D. Motyl US  Nudes Descending a Staircase #2  4 min 53s   2010  | European Premiere in attendance

Nina Lassila FI  Günter und Mutti  3 min 17s 2011 

Nicolas Ramel  FR  A/V Sketch#5  40s  2011 | World Premiere

Stefan Adamski  PL  RE:   3 min 41s  2011 | German Premiere

Muriel Montini  FR  Hysterical Fantaisy  3 min 30s  2012 | World Premiere

Don Swaynos  US  Six Hundred and Forty-One Slates  1 min 46s  2011| World Premiere

John Woods  CA Victor #5   3 min 38s 2011 | World Premiere

André Chi Sing Yuen  DE  Beast Of Prey  5 min 42s  2011

Sandra Dollo and Ulrich Berthold /sansculotte  DE  Tweng  2 min 15s  2011

Keith Sanborn  US  Oh David, You Know What Colors I Like… 1 min 45s  2011

Ron Diorio  US  American Arabesque 1 min 05s  2011 | World Premiere

Kahori Kamiya  JP  G8 Conductor  3 min 3s  2011 | European Premiere

pictured: Haikus for Karaoke by Roberto Santaguida

Roberto Santaguida  CA / IT  Haikus for Karaoke 4 min 29s  2011

Georgi Krastev and Cvestan Krastev  BG  Water Clock 1 min  2010 | German Premiere

Ina Otzko  NO  P&P Bell set no.1   3 min 53s  2010

Alexander Miehle  DE  Pop-up Windows  2 min 40s  2011 | German Premiere

George Groshkov  BG  Breakfast: Always on time  1 min 30s  2011 | World Premiere

Edin Bajric and Judith Lomba  DE / BA  Every Day’s Rhythm  1 min 55s   2011

Lorenzo Karasz and Florian Kogler  AT Fassadendialog  3 min  2010 | German Premiere in attendance

Alexandra Staples  GB  Static Cardiac Rhythms  1 min 36s  2011 | World Premiere in attendance

Sylvia Schwenk  AU Sometimes Awful Things Have Their own Kind of Beauty  3 min 55s 2011 |  European Premiere

Clint Enns CA  Connecting With Nature  1 min 28s  2011 | European Premiere

Bruce Knox  DE  Alienated  2 min 32s  2011

Faith Holland  US   RIP Geocities  2 min 31s  2011 | World Premiere

Sandra Dollo and Ulrich Berthold / sansculotte  DE  9 times  4 min 22s 2011

Max Hattler  GB/DE   RE:AX aka Peace Starts With Me   1 min 30s  2011

pictured: Decapoda Shock by Javier Chillon

Javier  Chillon  ES   Decapoda Shock  9 min 15s  2011 |  German Premiere

Dagie Brundert  DE   2 Cowboys Smoking  1 min 26s  2011 | World Premiere

Olivier Dekegel  BE  Portrait Serie – Jonas Mekas  1 min 36s  2010

Kote Camacho  ES  La Gran Carrera 6 min 55s  2011

Jodie Mack  GB/US  The Future is Bright  4 min 45s  2011

Dagie Brundert  DE  I  See The Sea and The Sea Sees Me  1 min 45s  2011

Anna Potakova  RU Lebedi ca 3 min 2011

93 min