Dirty Dinky by Theodore Roethke

Poet: | Nationality: | Filmmaker:

I do believe Michael John Muller found the perfect text for this fun little experiment: the title poem for Roethke’s collection of poems for children.

Currie by Dorothy Baird

Poet: | Nationality: , | Filmmaker: ,

This new collaboration for the This Collection project features Anna Dickie, who also contributed a poem to the project (see “Same Place, Different View“), in charge of camera and editing, joined by Stefanie Tan for the sound editing. As Stefanie explains on Vimeo,

With the help of the local butcher, traffic lady and sporting residents, Dorothy Baird and Anna Dickie bring to life the portrait of Edinburgh’s unassuming suburb, Currie.

The bus 44 links Anna’s stomping ground, Haddington to Dorothy’s neighbourhood, Currie and this intimate collaboration adds to the magical mysterious connections the poems from thiscollection continues to unearth.

Anna used only photographic stills to piece together the concept for the film.

For more on Dorothy Baird, here’s a bio and interview.

Purple Lipstick by Heather Haley

Poet: | Nationality: | Filmmaker:

A poem about domestic violence, on YouTube courtesy of a magazine called Shattered Thought which appears to be no longer online. Heather Haley, however, is very much still online — in fact, the annual videopoetry festival she organizes in Vancouver, Visible Verse, will be celebrating its 10th anniversary on November 19-20. This is the premiere videopoetry event in North America. Go if you can.

The Videopoems page of her personal website says about this film, in part:

Heather’s videopoem Purple Lipstick still garners kudos having been an official selection at the VideoBardo 2nd International VideoPoetry Festival in Buenos Aires, Argentina, the 3rd Zebra International Poetry Film Festival in Berlin, Germany and the Women in Film Festival in Vancouver where she was a guest speaker. Purple Lipstick also screened at Commfest, Wildsound, Female Eye in Toronto, Northwest Projections and Reel to Real in Seattle.

Purple is the colour of a fresh bruise and domestic violence the single greatest cause of injury to women in Canada. Purple Lipstick confronts its insidious nature through compelling juxtapositions. A disembodied female voice employs vivid language, absurdist against a backdrop of banality, images of *normal* family life. Numb in her isolation and still in her nurse’s uniform, a wife and mother prepares dinner. The inherent terror of her home life is invoked with excruciating tension. Its brutality can only be alluded to.

Shot on Bowen Island near Vancouver, Purple Lipstick features actors Bazil Graham, Ripley Ferguson, Cairo Ferguson and slam poetry star Alexandra Oliver-Basekic.

The Ramble by James Brush

Poet: | Nationality: | Filmmaker:

James’ first video haiku — see his blog post about it.

Immigrants by Ren Powell

Poet: | Nationality: | Filmmaker:

I’ve posted a number of Ren Powell’s other animations, but for some reason I skipped this one. As always, see her site Anima Poetics for a much sharper, Flash version.

Tickets to Your Morning in the Mirror by Tyler Flynn Dorholt

Poet: | Nationality: | Filmmaker:

Dorholt’s poems on the page are long, difficult and packed with arresting images, so it’s perhaps unsurprising that his videopoems would be the same. The text of this one originally appeared in Slope.

For links to all Dorholt’s films, see his blog.

Kleine Reise (Little Trip) by Claire Walka

Poet: | Nationality: | Filmmaker:

Outstanding poet-made videopoem. Claire Walka says in a note on Vimeo:

Doing shopping in the supermarket can become an expedition into a new world… A poem made of brand-names.

I’m grateful she took the time to add English subtitles so those of us with no German can appreciate this ingenious little film.

Sveta by Sergey Timofeyev

Poet: | Nationality: , | Filmmaker: ,

Diana Palijchuk is the animator, and Arthur Punte did the montage. I found a Facebook page for the author, and he is indeed Latvian — the first to be included on Moving Poems — though, I presume, an ethnic Russian (his poems are in Russian).

The Black Hole by Zachary Schomburg

Poet: | Nationality: | Filmmaker:

Another “poem film” by Zachary Schomburg in support of his collection Scary, No Scary.

Wanting Sumptuous Heavens by Robert Bly

Poet: | Nationality: | Filmmaker:

Another MotionPoems production, designed and animated by Angella Kassube with a reading by the poet.