Phoenix Cinema: Meeting with Alexander Kluge
Admission starts at $5
June 15, 2024, 3pm
Brooklyn, NY 11205
USA
Join us at e-flux Screening Room on Saturday, June 15 at 3pm and 5pm for The Dragonfly’s Eye, Parts II and III of Phoenix Cinema: Meeting with Alexander Kluge, a special series featuring works by and discussions with the filmmaker and author.
The Dragonfly’s Eye comprises two screenings showcasing Kluge’s exploration of new moving-image technologies, particularly his use of artificial-intelligence, in films described by Kluge as shot by “virtual camera.” In these works, Kluge engages with music, opera, philosophy, and critical theory, most particularly the ideas of the Frankfurt School, synthesizing Marxist thought and psychoanalysis in order to address the socio-political structures that shape modern life. These interdisciplinary themes are woven into his short films, creating a space for discussion with the audience that will be facilitated by Kluge’s Kluge’s pre-recorded commentary and participation via video call.
According to Kluge, “something like a VIRTUAL CAMERA has existed in our heads the entire time (as well as in our skin’s sense of foreboding and other subtle, mole-like tunnels of perception). Long before technical devices such as the ‘magic lantern’ and, later, the classic film camera were invented. The ‘camera in our head,’ though not the same as the film cameras that came later, does something similar. Most importantly, it doesn’t just capture photographic documents. It registers, processes, and responds in feeling, it ‘sets things in motion.‘” This perspective underscores Kluge’s innovative approach to filmmaking, emphasizing the continuity between human perception and technological advancements in capturing and interpreting reality.
The two-part afternoon includes pre-recorded commentary by and a live conversation with Alexander Kluge.
Films
3pm: Part I
With live Q&A with Alexander Kluge
Grotesque Cinema
Seven Faces of Baron von Munchausen (54’)
The Elephant as a Club (1:26’)
Munchausen with a Bear as a Club (1:25’)
Ghost Story – 1000 Years of War in the Middle East (5:54’)
At the End of the Trunk the Gear (4:24’)
Gone With the Wind
American Civil War (1861-1865) (5:56’)
Assassination of Abraham Lincoln at the Theatre (1:34’)
On War
Mondrian Machine No. 7 (2:43’)
The Astonishment of the Animals (2:34’)
Ballad of the Sunken Rocket Cruiser (2:26’)
The Weather Tames the War (5:36’)
Napoleon and Fate as a Cat (4’)
Episode from Napoleon’s Winter Campaign of 1812 in Russia (2:01’)
Goya
Napoleon Loses His Empire in Spain (1:56’)
Digital Transpositions of Two Images of Francisco Goya: Los Desastres de la Guerra / El Caballo Raptor 1810-1820 (6:43’)
Saturn (Chronos) Devours His Children (3:03’)
5pm: Part II
With pre-recorded commentary by Alexander Kluge
From Cinema to Opera
The Night Battle of Guadalcanal (2:34’)
Troja Burning (2:48’), There Was a Young Lady of Troy (2:45’)
Adventures of Odysseus with the Sirens Commentary to Dialectic of Enlightenment (6:33’)
Dialectic of Enlightenment / The Frankfurt School
Reason is a Balancing Animal (2:41’)
We Philosophers from Eve’s Rib with Pictures of Adele Röder (2:22’)
Max Horkheimer – Philosopher and Sociologist (2:06’)
The Mammoth’s Homecoming, a Composition of Th. W. Adorno in the Year 1941 (1:31’) / Adorno is not just a theorist and philosopher, he was also a composer and student of Alban Berg in Vienna. The text of the short song goes: “What’s driving there, on a cart and stretches out his long trunk?/ It is a mammoth! It is a mammoth! It is a mammoth which wants to go home.”
Attack on a Thick Glass Door (1:52’)
The Revolution is a Creature Full of Surprises (6:10’)
An Opera That Sparked a Revolution / With pictures by James Ensor and Alexander Kluge (7:37’) / The opera The Mute Girl of Portici tells the story of a young mute woman in Naples who is seduced by a prince. The prince abandons her and marries a princess. The mute woman has to watch and cannot protest. This opera by Auber is the only one in which no soprano sings. At its premiere in Brussels in 1831, the audience was so outraged by the girl who suffers and cannot express it, that they marched to the Palace of Justice and triggered the Belgian Revolution—one of the few liberal revolutions.
Enlightenment
Electric Spark in the Time of Enlightenment (6:51’)
There Was a Young Lady of Bright (2:56 min)
The Age of Enlightenment Responds to the Destruction of Lisbon 1755 (5:06’)
Pursuit of Happiness / Mother Brings Food (3:05’)
Rules for Crying (3:44’)
Twilight of the Gods in Vienna (3:34’)
The Temple of the Scapegoat. The Opera
Love and Intrigue… / Triptych Film Based on Verdi’s Opera Luisa Miller(2:39’)
The Deadly Triangle / Triptych (0:52’)
The Deadly Triangle No. 2 / AI (1:58’), All Souls of Russia Point with Their Roots in the Direction to Heaven with Georg Baselitz and Sergej Eisenstein (3:03’)
The Violin Aria From Medea In Corinto by Giovanni Simone Mayr (3:13’)
Katharina Grosse and Alexander Kluge, The Sound of the Planet Uranus and the Song of the Gorillas (9:13’)
Phoenix Cinema: Meeting with Alexander Kluge unfolds in four parts taking place at e-flux Screening Room on June 13, 15, and 18, 2024, and in a six-part online screening on e-flux Film, with new films streaming each week from June 6–July 17, 2024. Read more about the series here. Watch the online screenings here.
For more information, contact program [at] e-flux.com.
Accessibility
– Two flights of stairs lead up to the building’s front entrance at 172 Classon Avenue.
– For elevator access, please RSVP to program@e-flux.com. The building has a freight elevator which leads into the e-flux office space. Entrance to the elevator is nearest to 180 Classon Ave (a garage door). We have a ramp for the steps within the space.
– e-flux has an ADA-compliant bathroom. There are no steps between the Screening Room and this bathroom.