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Thursday 24 November 2016

Some Say Chance (1934/2016) screens at Barbican


From 7pm, November 24th at the Barbican Centre, as part of Irish Film Festival London.

"Over the past month or so I have been at Irish Film Institute (IFI) attempting to re-assemble and somewhat recut a partially lost silent film which was originally shot in the early 1930s by Irish novelist and filmmaker Michael Farrell. The film is called Some Say Chance, his only film. Now with surviving 16mm elements in the form of 2 x 400ft cans of edited materials and 7 cans of rushes, which were donated to the Irish Film Archive many years ago, we have attempted to rebuild fragments of the original narrative.

The film tells the story of a young girl who is sent to a boarding school in Wicklow, she believes that her mother is dead, a lie spun by her father who is away working in Australia. Unbeknownst to the girl, her mother is indeed alive and well trawling the London pubs as a heartbroken, penniless prostitute by the name of 'Irish Moll'. Moll's pimp discovers secret letters from her estranged husband and begins to scheme. In the end the mother actually dies, the father returns and kills the pimp, and finally reunites with his daughter, freeing her from the oppressive boarding school. Unfortunately none of this happy ending has survived, and so I took delectation in wallowing in the grim, frightened and naive fragments of the film that remained. Naturally.

'Irish Moll' is played by Rita FitzSimons, who in turn got parts for her daughters, marking Some Say Chance with the first onscreen appearance of Maureen FitzSimons (later O'Hara), who in 1938 went on to star in My Irish Molly. The most fascinating element of Some Say Chance was the filming locations. It was shot on sets built in Farrell's back garden in north Wicklow, while also featuring scenes near Kilmacanogue, Bray, Kilquade, and Greystones my home town and where I shot many films over the years. Nice to see that an extreme spirit of independent filmmaking was alive in Wicklow (around the corner from my house) in the '30s.

The production was very much an amateur event, but fascinating and wonderful nonetheless, and the rolls of 'edited' material (replete with abrupt re-takes) are more akin to 'reference edits' than a completed set of sequences. Through correspondences made by the filmmaker and associates found at the National Library, we can state that the film screened at a Dublin cinema in 1934, but not in its completed state. Some Say Chance went on to screen in small venues throughout the early 1940s, presumably in a completed form until it disappeared.

Though unfortunately not a restoration project (hopefully the missing elements of the film will be discovered one day) the film now stands as a new experience gleaned from surviving elements of the original plot, with scenes expanded and shaped using rushes and additional material. I was given the freedom to create a new cut, concentrating on the surviving narrative elements, which now runs at 39 minutes. A clean 2.3K overscan was performed at Haghefilm Digitaal, Netherlands, with the edit and online taking place at IFI.

The film will screen this evening at the Barbican alongside work by Mitchell & Kenyon, R.W Paul and others, all to a live score" 

- Dean Kavanagh


Full programme information




Monday 14 November 2016

EFS Presents “True Wholes” @ Filmbase

The Nautilus Shutter Experiments: Part 2; True Wholes
An audio visual performance by Anja Mahler in collaboration with Dean Kavanagh
Date Saturday 3rd December @ 3:00pm Tickets €7 Duration 70mins
Venue Filmbase, Curved Street, Temple Bar, Dublin 2


True Wholes situates itself directly in the path of light; part lens, lantern, and laboratory, it aims to function as a dialogue between the mechanism of cinema, light and its source. Simultaneously camera and theatre, the various apparatus are constructed into a dialogue charting lunar, solar and planetary explorations from the galactic to the topographic, all visions in a luminous flux.
The audio visual performance is focused around the use of two mechanical devices; an apparatus custom designed to trace the motion of light (as perceived from Earth); an opto-mechanical device used in the projection of motion pictures. The performance is a process of composing and decomposing images through the diffraction and refraction of light in a process that journeys from the microscopic to the telescopic. For the performance Dean Kavanagh creates a live soundscape, interrogating the apparatus and suspending the actions in a sonic space.
Structured as ten scenes in five acts, True Wholes is a science of light, sound and machine that explores potential drama in properties of light. The viewers are invited into a selectively lit space, akin to an operating theatre, where the performers (stage engineer and assistants) develop and execute each scene in chronology.
The title of the work is inspired by a quote from Arthur Zajonc[1] and by extension the writings of Fritjof Capra[2]. Both physicists address a historical understanding of light, by entwining science, society and the rise of culture. Newton’s corpuscular view of light also termed ‘Newtonian world-machine’ is a particular concern. The modern scientist’s views are criticised for excluding experience (colour, sound, taste and smell) from the realm of scientific discourse and favouring the methodology of reductionism in experimental research. While Capra argues that science needs to develop the concepts and insights of holism and systems theory by the latter half of the 21st century, Zajonc elaborates on how Romanticists and American transcendentalists of the 19th century, most famously Johann Wolfgang von Goethe, would revolt against modern scientific thought.
It would be a century before poets would turn on Newton and the despotism of his botanizing eye, they would then lament the dismembering of the world into parts, so that true wholes were never more seen again.’
True Wholes is the second part of The Nautilus Shutter Experiments, Anja Mahler’s on-going series of experimental engagements with an opto-mechanical device. The sole aim is to explore the perception of light through an apparatus that operates cinema.
Anja Mahler‘s practice is situated in the field of moving image, installation and performance. She is seeking to create a dramaturgy of light through the manipulation of time and the expressive use of moving image technology and the human body. From research to presentation, her work is a concise and calculated engagement with the science of light. anjamahler.net
Dean Kavanagh is an experimental filmmaker from Wicklow, Ireland. He became a member of the international filmmaking collective Experimental Film Society in 2008. Since then he has completed over 60 films of short and feature length, which have been screened worldwide. His work is intensely visual, creating detailed atmospheres that respond to the interaction between space, time and the human body. Rural and domestic themes diaphanously sheath a rigorously formalistic interplay between sound and image. deankavanagh.com
  • This is a seated performance.
  • Tickets are on sale at the door.
  • Warning: some mild flicker.
[1] Catching the Light: The Entwined History of Light and Mind,  Arthur Zajonc, 1995
[2] The Turning Point: Science, Society, and the Rising Culture, Fritjof Capra, 1982



Monday 7 November 2016

Rouzbeh Rashidi's TRAILERS @ 61st Cork Film Festival




The latest film by Rouzbeh Rashidi, Trailers, will be premiered on Sunday November 13th 2016, 20:15
at Triskel Christchurch Cinema  in Cork Film Festival. Book your ticket HERE




Thursday 3 November 2016

Film Panic presents EFS




A programme of EFS will play @ Maus Hábitos – Espaço de Intervenção Cultural, Porto on Wednesday 16th November 2016. These screenings have been programmed by FILM PANIC (Daniel Fawcett & Clara Pais) in association with Shortcutz Porto, all screenings will take place at Maus Hábitos in Porto, Portugal.
“The Experimental Film Society (EFS) is an independent, not-for-profit entity specializing in avant-garde, independent and no/low budget filmmaking. It was founded in 2000 in Tehran, Iran by Rouzbeh Rashidi and has been based in Dublin, Ireland since 2004. It unites works by a dozen filmmakers and associated artists scattered across the globe, whose films are distinguished by an uncompromising devotion to personal, experimental cinema. They have in common an exploratory approach to filmmaking and their films foreground mood, atmosphere, visual rhythms, the interplay of sound and picture, and the nature and subjectivity of the image and the gaze that engenders it, as well as the permeability of the borders between fiction and lyrical filmmaking. Although an international organization, EFS is notably at the centre of a new wave of Irish experimental filmmaking. This programme gives an overview of EFS concerns and aesthetics.”
  • 1_Pitpony (2014) By Jason Marsh / 3:30Minutes /  U.K
  • 2_Sumpf (2015) By Jann Clavadetscher  / 6Minutes /  Switzerland-Ireland
  • 3_Funnel Web Family (2013) By Michael Higgins / 13Minutes / Ireland
  • 4_Cut To The Chase (2015) By Dean Kavanagh / 11Minutes / Ireland
  • 5_Clandestine (2015) By Atoosa Pour Hosseini / 15Minutes / Estonia-Ireland
  • 6_Brine Twice Daily (2015) By Maximilian Le cain/Vicky Langan / 20Minutes / Ireland
Total Running Time: 69 Minutes



Wednesday 28 September 2016

The Moon Is Looking For Dead Things at IndieCork 2016



As part of the TANK event at IndieCork Festival (Friday, October 14th, 8pm) Mick O’Shea (sound art) and Solamh Kelly (percussion) will play live to The Moon Is Looking For Dead Things,  an exclusive presentation of a sequence from Maximilian Le Cain's section of the work-in-progress collaborative feature film Homo Sapiens Project 200

"Morbid and decadent, this dying movie just about manages to reach out towards one final sexual fantasy before the moon flies out of the skyStarring Dean Kavanagh and Salomé’s fevered ghost" - Maximilian Le Cain

Live sound for film performance.



Monday 12 September 2016

Behind the Scenes of Animal Kingdom

with Cillian Roche, Anja Mahler and Rouzbeh Rashidi

Photographs by John Curran and Anja Mahler

Official blog


Friday 2 September 2016

Experimental Film Society @ Glass Eye Cine Club



A programme of Experimental Film Society will play @ Glass Eye Cine Club on Friday 9thSeptember 2016 – 7pm / Suggested Donation £5 / BYO.
Glass Eye Cine Club, Belfast Barge, Lanyon Quay, Laganside, Belfast. (BT1)
The Experimental Film Society (EFS) is an independent, not-for-profit entity specializing in avant-garde, independent and no/low budget filmmaking. It was founded in 2000 in Tehran, Iran by Rouzbeh Rashidi and has been based in Dublin, Ireland since 2004. It unites works by a dozen filmmakers and associated artists scattered across the globe, whose films are distinguished by an uncompromising devotion to personal, experimental cinema. They have in common an exploratory approach to filmmaking and their films foreground mood, atmosphere, visual rhythms, the interplay of sound and picture, and the nature and subjectivity of the image and the gaze that engenders it, as well as the permeability of the borders between fiction and lyrical filmmaking. Although an international organization, EFS is notably at the centre of a new wave of Irish experimental filmmaking.
This programme gives an overview of EFS concerns and aesthetics.
1_Sumpf (2015) By Jann Clavadetscher  / 6Minutes / Switzerland-Ireland
2_Lung (2014) By Jason Marsh / 4Minutes / U.K
3_Heaven’s Hole (2016) By Michael Higgins / 6Minutes / Ireland
4_Clandestine (2015) By Atoosa Pour Hosseini / 15Minutes / Estonia-Ireland
5_The Curse of Johnny Kline (2D) (2015) By Dean Kavanagh / 12Minutes / Ireland
6_Homo Sapiens Project: Fragment (2015) By Rouzbeh Rashidi / 11Minutes / Ireland
7_Brine Twice Daily (2015) By Maximilian Le Cain/Vicky Langan / 20Minutes / Ireland
  • Total Running Time: 74mins
  • More Info HERE & HERE


Behind the scenes of Animal Kingdom


Principal photography of Animal Kingdom is underway



Behind the scenes
with Rouzbeh Rashidi & Jann Clavadetscher at Irish Film Institute, Dublin
Camera, kit and lenses: Film Equipment Hire
photographs by Jann Clavadetscher

Animal Kingdom was kindly funded by Arts Council of Ireland as part of the Film Project Award 2016. 



Thursday 18 August 2016

EFS @ BYOB Stockton-on-Tees


A special screening of Experimental Film Society work will be featured in a B.Y.O.B (Bring Your Own Beamer) event on August 19th at The Auxiliary, Stockton-on-Tees, UK.
The night will include EFS films:
Sumpf (2015) By By Jann Clavadetscher
Mirage (2015) By Atoosa Pour Hosseini
Cut To The Chase (2015) By Dean Kavanagh
Brine Twice Daily (2015) By Vicky Langan/Maximilian Le Cain
Incubus (2013) By Atoosa Pour Hosseini
Impulsive Film (2015) By Jann Clavadetscher
Also featured are artists Sorcha mcCole, Jared Pappas-Kelley, Paul Stewart, Omsk Social Club Feat. PUNK is DADA, Milos Trakilovic, Nathan Baxter, Pete Fleming, Thomas Tyler, Stephen Irving, Ryan David Butler and more TBA.
Garden Tunes by Spectacular Optical.
B.Y.O.B. is a series of one-night-exhibitions curated by different people around the world. The idea is simple: Find a place, invite many artists, ask them to bring their projectors.
More info HERE & HERE

Sunday 17 July 2016

Experimental Film Society VOD



New EFS website including over 40 titles to stream/download from EFS Video on Demand service.





Sunday 19 June 2016

Animal Kingdom in Pre-Production




Dean Kavanagh's Animal Kingdom enters into pre-production. Animal Kingdom will merge live action with animated elements for the creation of a feature film that melds character, object, landscape and the very tactile make-up of the film itself into one mutating, symphonic mass.

An explosive account of cinema as Witchcraft.
Animal Kingdom was kindly funded by Arts Council of Ireland as part of the Film Project Award 2016. The film will be produced by Easter Film Group and will be completed in 2017.








Monday 30 May 2016

Cloud of Skin at IFI, May 2016



The Dublin premiere of Cloud of Skin took place on May 25th, 6.30pm, Irish Film Institute as part of Irish Focus.
Seated for Q&A: Dean Kavanagh, Maximilian Le Cain, Karen Power.



Friday 27 May 2016

EFS @ Gardunha Fest, Portugal


A programme of Experimental Film Society will play at HISTÉRICO – ASSOCIAÇÃO DE ARTES as part of Gardunha Fest on Saturday 28th May 2016. This programme gives an overview of EFS concerns and aesthetics. 

1_ Nineveh (2015)By Émmsen Jafari/ Iran / 10mins
2_Sumpf (2015) By Jann Clavadetscher / Ireland / 6mins
3_Pitpony (2014) By Jason Marsh / UK / 4mins
4_Funnel Web Family (2013) By Michael Higgins / Ireland / 14mins
5_ Cut To The Chase (2015) By Dean Kavanagh / Ireland /10mins
6_Homo Sapiens Project (161-170) (2013) By Rouzbeh Rashidi / Ireland / 
7_HSP: Fragment (2015) By Rouzbeh Rashidi / Ireland / 8mins
8_Brine Twice Daily (2015) By Vicky Langan & Maximilian Le Cain / Ireland / 20mins

Total Running Time: 82mins

Address: A Moagem - Cidade do Engenho e das Artes Largo da Estação, 6230-000 Fundão - Portugal
More info HERE & HERE



Thursday 12 May 2016

Johnny Kline will return...on 70MM




Work has begun on an epic reimagining of Gone with the Wind.


More news soon.

Monday 9 May 2016

Touching the Void


Photographs by Rouzbeh Rashidi from the ongoing
Luminous Void exhibition in Triskel Art Space, Cork.

Shot on an ILFORD Delta 3200 Professional + Nikon EF