What’s New

a Brakhage filmography (in progress)

Just a quick note to say that after debating making it public or not while it’s still VERY MUCH in progress, I decided to go ahead and make my Stan Brakhage filmography-in-progress public. It is here.

I’ve been working as the archivist on Brakhage’s (and numerous other artists’) films since 2004, so this filmography will be based more than anything on the precise firsthand data and other anecdotal info I’ve accumulated since 2004 inspecting every single one of his films (meaning his camera originals, not just prints!), and also restoring and printing many many dozens of them. But because the data I have planned to include here is substantial, and the filmography is massive and complicated, this will take a while. So please be aware it’s not nearly complete, but there’s already a lot of data here that may be of interest, especially if you’re a hardcore experimental film nerd like me!

Aihara shows (+ zine!)

Thanks to everyone who came to our pair of Nobuhiro Aihara shows last night – we had an amazing time, and it seemed like everyone else did too. It was the culmination of a bunch of work – this was a Lightstruck show we put more time and work into than any other thus far, and was really meaningful for us! One of the projects we worked on for this show was a 24-page zine containing a previously untranslated interview with Aihara and a complete filmography. We are immensely thankful to filmmaker Tetsuya Maruyama for doing the translation work, and Hirofumi Sakamoto for supplying the original Japanese interview as well as compiling and caring for Aihara’s filmography through Postwar Japan Moving Image Archive.

We still have copies of the Aihara zine left, so please get in touch if you’d like one! We’re selling them at cost ($5) plus shipping.

end of year whatnot

Thanks to everyone who came to our screenings this past Fall, it was a really fun first season for us and we were thrilled so many folks attended screenings! Our next season (4 shows, January-April) is all set and listed at 2220’s site (with ticket links), as well as here, of course. And we’re already formulating programs for beyond that, after we take a month off in May!

I’ve continued to work on this site in little ways as a reference resource. I haven’t added or posted a ton more actual public data, but behind the scenes I’ve been gradually getting some complicated filmmaker filmographies put together to eventually host here. In particular, the Stan Brakhage filmography is a big undertaking, because I’m not only making sure it’s hyper-accurate, but I’m also adding anecdotal and technical data about each film wherever possible, which is taking a LONG time. (I’ve gotten as far as 1965 as of this writing!) But once posted, I’m confident it will represent the most accurate Brakhage filmography available, with a good amount of additional info about many of the films.

Also, in considering the possible research value of the Ephemera section of the site, I’ve made some plans to do some research digging into a few long-gone Los Angeles based experimental film exhibition entities, with the ideal aim of documenting all of their exhibition activities here. Stay tuned, if you’re into that kind of thing! (-Mark)

Estonian Animation


We were thrilled by the sold-out turnout for our most recent program, Estonian Animation: Radical Liberation! Thanks so much to everyone who came, it was really extraordinarily moving to hear the audience so responsive to the films – laughing, whistling, engaging – the energy conjured in the space that evening was wonderful.

For some years I’ve been wanting to do a periodic series that focuses each time on a different country or region’s experimental animation output, and the unexpectedly big success of this show told us we’re not the only ones who would be into that idea, so we’re going to try it again with a program of Hungarian animation on April 18, 2024! Hope to see you there!

Big thanks to the Estonian Film Institute and especially Triinu Keedus there for her immeasurable help in making this program happen!

roll end punches and other miscellaneous stuff


I just added a ‘Miscellany‘ subsection of the film stocks area of the site, because there are lots of loose ends and random tidbits of information that I imagine could be fun or useful, but don’t have an obvious spot on the site they belong. So hopefully this section will eventually be a wildly eclectic and entertaining/informative area of the site for curious browsing about film materials and process. I began by adding info on roll end punches and camera signatures/camera identification marks. Some of this stuff comes up particularly with regard to experimental film practices and materials, as well as archival inspection, and it seemed a nice way to collect some of this info for people to learn about or refer to if needed.

Lawrence Jordan pgm

Zena and I had a wonderful time last night presenting the incredible and eclectic work of Lawrence Jordan, who is still making remarkable films to this day. We didn’t know how many people would already be familiar with or curious about Jordan’s work, and were thrilled that over 90 people got tickets for the show last night! Zena made giveaway buttons from film stills and also a beautiful program handout:


All the films were shown in 16mm (some of them Kodachrome prints, even!), with one digital exception, Pink Swine!, which ironically is the only film that had tech problems due to a memory cache popup warning that kept interfering with the film! Ironic that 16mm was the more dependable technology for the evening…

2 shows down

Last night was our second Lightstruck screening, and we had a great time. Zena and I were talking afterwards about how Zorns Lemma really feels like a work by someone who was making a defiant statement of, “dammit, film can SAY something, and it can be something supremely important!” at a time when, despite the decades of experimental and artist-made film history that preceded it, film was still not taken seriously in the same way that other art forms were. Frampton’s generation actively engaged in a sort of redefinition and repositioning of film as a serious medium for erudite thought, criticism, experimentation, analysis, poetry, and personal expression in a way that lands very differently now, partly because despite its ongoing marginalization, there’s a lot of acceptance of the medium that we taken for granted. Part of why work from the 1960s and 1970s still resonates so meaningfully for people now is that it really was an era in which artists worked vehemently to assert an exciting new approach to the commitment to and appreciation of independent film which took itself seriously in a radical and urgent way, and which sought to define its own language and context.

Even twenty years later in 1990, when Su Friedrich made Sink or Swim, there was a much more established idiom of what a personal experimental film could be, how the medium could be used, how adventurously one could communicate through it, not to mention an engaged community and even organizational infrastructure in existence to support it in a way that was really different in 1970. It had coalesced into a certain recognizable culture, I think. Sink or Swim is a major work which still exudes so much intelligence and emotional power, and its ambition and innovation (to its credit) can be found more on its own terms and in its own established language and form, whereas Zorns Lemma feels like some kind of ambitious and grand dramatic statement of intent and purpose for film as a thoughtful and meaningful art form in general, outside of itself. I felt very aware of that last night! And I was really happy with the fruitful and empathetic way the films seemed to communicate with each other, making for a rich and thought-provoking show for us. Thanks to everyone who came! Our goal with this series is in part to put on screenings that create some fun and exciting dialogue afterwards, and we hope that’s the case for those of you who come.

In other news, I slowed down a little recently on adding some artist filmographies, partly because the Fall semester has started, so we’ve gotten busier, but also because one of the artists whose filmography I was organizing – Al Jarnow – is a tough one to wrangle all the data for! He made about 10-15 specifically personal independent films, but over a hundred works for Children’s Television Workshop, which I don’t think I’ll remotely be able to fully document. But I’m giving it a partial shot, anyway. More to come! -Mark

post-show update

We had our first Lightstruck show on August 25 (16mm West Coast Psych), and we’re thrilled it went so well – thanks to everyone who helped and attended! Hope to see you at our next show on September 14: Alchemy of the Alphabet: Zorns Lemma + Sink or Swim!

And speaking of psychedelia, I also just added a filmography for B.Y.M. Productions/Peter D. Spoecker, which/who had a very short filmmaking career, but produced some really fascinating (largely animated) psychedelic work. I’m also working on finalizing the filmography of Ben Van Meter, one of San Francisco’s premiere light show performers (North American Ibis Alchemical Company) and psychedelic filmmakers, who made influential (but these days somewhat neglected) work from 1963 to the mid-1970s. If there’s a filmmaker (particularly on the list I have currently here) that you’d like me to prioritize posting, feel free to let me know!

and a few more…

Added filmographies for Curt McDowell, Fred Worden, Dean Snider, Robert Todd, and Barbara Hammer. A few of these are quite huge bodies of work, and I’m confident these are the most complete and accurate filmographies for these artists available, though of course I’ll always keep correcting/finetuning as any further info comes up.

a few more filmographies

Added filmographies for Will Hindle, Michele (Shellie) Fleming, Peter Hutton, Robert Russett, Phil Solomon, and Chris Langdon. (Please note that Chris Langdon is the artist’s former name, under which she made all of her films 1972-76. She preferred that we use her former name when attributing these works.)

As filmographies get posted to this site, I can promise that they are as accurate, complete, and definitive as possible at the time of posting, although it’s of course possible that other information may emerge that could unexpectedly contradict some data or result in a few more works being added to a filmmaker’s filmography. But none of the data posted has any guess factor or uncertainty to it at the time of posting, other than adding a “ca.” to a year or running time on occasion when a detail can’t quite be verified.