midst
70 minutes 16mm silent 1997
"In midst,
Barbara Sternberg has made a lyrical film about attachment, integration,
belonging. Many of the familiar elements of Sternberg's work are
here: speed, pulsing rhythms, explosions of colour, light and shape,
images of nature and the built environment. But the conflicted situations
and turmoil of earlier major films like Through and Through and
Beating are gone. Instead, midst focuses dramatically on an understanding
of the world through art, specifically painting, especially abstraction,
here translated into filmic terms. Abstraction becomes the vehicle
for taking on complexity, putting it all together in heightened
moments of intense vision characteristic of ‘seeing into’
or ‘being at one’ with nature.”
"A
strong analogy is drawn between the physical world - our habitat
or medium, as it were—and film as a particular kind of medium for
representing that world. Like Sternberg's iconic lone swimmer, afloat
and moving purposefully in the enveloping water, life and art co-exist
in a mix where one belongs to and is part of the other. In midst,
the film itself builds sequences and moments of equilibrium where
all that moves is held in precarious balance." (Rae
Davis)
Barbara Sternberg's
new film is a beautiful collection of light and colour and shape
which flows effortlessly from the screen to the soul. It is full
of iconic images which refuse to be icons. With scenes captured
on beaches through the lounging filmmaker's feet, the film creates
a new set of metaphors while utilizing familiar imagery. Sternberg
uses the camera to study the most intimate part of our body: our
hands. These are the extensions of us which we use to express ourselves
in so many ways, many as silent as this film. While they age and
wither, they are increasingly important in the creation of beauty.
midst is a part
of the environment rather than, as with many of Sternberg's other
films, an agitated outsider. I feel I must speculate that this film
marks an ideological change for Sternberg in which she seems to
have come to peace with the world around her. Much of the film is
shot outdoors, utilizing a large range of landscapes. This is familiar
territory for Sternberg and she is in top form. The soft images
and haunting colours recall the Group of Seven as the camera grabs
sketches from the living air. Furthermore, like looking at painted
canvases in a gallery, the images stand on their own without audio
accompaniment. Regarding this, Sternberg explains that she had music
composed for the film, but that the images were never enhanced by
the combination. Her film is a poem of light, speaking loudly with
its silence.” (Gerald Saul)
midst credits
Producer/Director/Writer: Barbara Sternberg
Length: 70 minutes
Year of Production: 1997
Music: silent
Country of Production: Canada
Exhibition format: 16mm
Preview format: vhs
Available from:
Canadian Filmmakers' Distribution Centre
telephone: 416-588-0725, e-mail: bookings@cfmdc.org
web: www.cfmdc.org
Lightcone
telephone: 331-46590153 e-mail: lightcone@lightcone.org
web: www.lightcone.org
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