香港六合彩资料

September 18, 2024
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鈥楢 sensorial delight’: Cinema professor premieres new film at the Toronto International Film Festival

Tomonari Nishikawa presents 'Light, Noise, Smoke, and Light, Noise, Smoke' to the world on Sept. 9

A still from Nishikawa's latest film, A still from Nishikawa's latest film,
A still from Nishikawa's latest film, "Light, Noise, Smoke, and Light, Noise, Smoke." Image Credit: Tomonari Nishikawa.

Tomonari Nishikawa is not your average cinematographer. For starters, his work is 鈥 by his own admission 鈥 imperfect.

鈥淚f I made a mistake, a mistake should be part of that film. The way I work on a project is very different from commercial filmmakers; they will need to plan out everything that they are going to reveal,鈥 said Nishikawa, an associate professor of cinema at 香港六合彩资料. 鈥淲hen they make a mistake, they are going to reshoot the same scene again and again. But I don鈥檛 work in that way in most of my projects.鈥

Despite this difference, his works have found success with a dedicated audience.

Nishikawa鈥檚 films have been shown at film festivals across the world, including such locales as Hong Kong, London, New York and Singapore. His most recent film, Light, Noise, Smoke, and Light, Noise, Smoke, will have its world premiere later this week, debuting at the Toronto International Film Festival (TIFF). He鈥檚 shown series at reputed forums, like the Museum of Modern Art P.S.1 Contemporary Arts Center, and has been an artist-in-residence at a number of esteemed programs, such as the MacDowell Colony.

He鈥檚 also received a number of accolades for his works. One of his films received the grand prize at the Curtocircu铆to International Film Festival in 2015 and another won the 2017 Jury Award at Hong Kong International Film Festival.

In addition to his own personal works, Nishikawa has also been a curator since 2006. He has stewarded programs in Canada and Japan, and he鈥檚 served as a juror for several events, including the 2010 Ann Arbor Film Festival and the 2018 Milwaukee Underground Film Festival. He鈥檚 even co-founded two festivals of his own: the Kuala Lumpur Experimental Film, Video and Music Festival (KLEX), and Transient Visions: Festival of the Moving Image, the latter of which was first held at the Spool Contemporary Art Space in Johnson City in 2011.

Nishikawa received his master鈥檚 in cinema from the San Francisco Art Institute, but his early years of study in the United States began in Utica at Mohawk Valley Community College. Although he had heard that 鈥渆very college in the U.S. has a cinema major,鈥 Mohawk Valley did not.

He decided, instead, to focus on photography, which would go on to impact his film work.

鈥淎t the time I was there, from 1999 to 2001, they didn鈥檛 offer a course about digital photography, only analog,鈥 Nishikawa said. 鈥淚 learned not only how to take pictures, but also darkroom techniques. I could understand more about the medium and the format, and that may be the broad base of my artistic practice using a celluloid medium.鈥

These days, Nishikawa鈥檚 films are mostly in 8 mm or 16 mm film, and revolve around documenting not just content or subject, but the process it requires to use a specific medium or technique.

鈥淚鈥檓 more interested in the connection,鈥 Nishikawa said. 鈥淗ere鈥檚 a subject, and there are millions of different methods to show it. I want to choose the one that would work for this subject, but also the process and the concept.鈥

His films are often described as avant-garde because of their ambiguous messaging. Avant-garde, which Nishikawa describes as 鈥渁n attitude,鈥 is usually defined as new, experimental ideas. One way Nishikawa achieves this, for example, is by scratching his film physically to produce both visuals and sound and then projecting it using a 16 mm projector.

Light, Noise, Smoke, and Light, Noise, Smoke, Nishikawa鈥檚 newest film, uses a similar method to tell its story.

Filmed in Japan, this six-minute film is deceptively simple. Described on the TIFF website as 鈥渞hythmic and hypnotic,鈥 Light, Noise, Smoke, and Light, Noise, Smoke begins as a fireworks show captured during a summer festival on Super 16 mm film. Nishikawa鈥檚 twist focuses on the process of filming; through a splicing and editing process, the viewer hears 鈥渢he sonic imprints left by the same images on the optical soundtrack鈥 at a distinct, but delayed, rhythmic beat.

All the footage comes from two 100-foot 鈥渞olls鈥 of film, which Nishikawa alternated every 26 frames. This number, which translates to roughly a second, is normally the length that marks the distance between the projector鈥檚 gate and the position of the photocell that reads the visual information for sound on the physical film itself; this editorial process serves to remove the gap.

Jesse Cumming, who this year took on the position of associate curator of the Wavelengths program, which Nishikawa鈥檚 film is part of, said they were 鈥渢hrilled鈥 to add it, and remarked on Nishikawa鈥檚 method.

鈥淚t鈥檚 very simple in concept, but executed with the highest degree of skill,鈥 Cumming said. 鈥淪ome of it is layered in superposition, but most interesting is the complex play with sound that he uses, where the images bleed onto the optical track with the 16 mm. There鈥檚 this rhythmic interplay between these bursts of light but then also these bursts of sound at the same time. It鈥檚 purely a sensorial delight.鈥

Although the Wavelengths program contains a number of distinctive styles, not everyone is able to engage with the material. Cumming is adamant, however, that the works themselves are a boon to the festival and to the individuals who experience them.

鈥淭he best responses are [from] people who approach the work with curiosity and generosity and don鈥檛 have expectations, but are willing to be patient and to try something that they鈥檙e not expecting, appreciate artists who are trying to see the world differently and to give themselves the space to experience that as a spectator.鈥

Due to their complicated nature, too, analog movies are rarely projected on big screens. In fact, even at TIFF, the Wavelengths section is only presented once during the festival run, although both Nishikawa and Cumming expressed hope that the film is noticed by other curators and picked up to run in other venues.

Meanwhile, however, Cumming finds that the program is well-received for its unique style, describing it as a 鈥渟pecial moment鈥 in the digital landscape that TIFF is slowly evolving toward.

鈥淭hey鈥檙e always very popular screenings, which is very heartening. People are always clamoring to get into the door,鈥 Cumming said. 鈥淪ometimes you鈥檒l be in a cinema with 300 people and you could hear a pin drop 鈥 and you can tell that it鈥檚 because there鈥檚 just a tremendous amount of reverence for the work on screen.鈥

Light, Noise, Smoke, and Light, Noise, Smoke is part of Wavelengths 2: Sundown, a special program of the Toronto International Film Festival (TIFF), which premieres Sept. 9, 2023. This year, the program is described as probing 鈥渢he hallucinatory underpinnings of the world around us and its layered, incongruous temporalities.鈥