~ top ten lists ~

Galleries of noteworthy poetry films and videopoems assembled by filmmakers, poets, film festival organizers, scholars, critics and other knowledgeable fans of the genre.

Thomas Zandegiacomo Del Bel: Ten Favorite Funny Poetry Films

“Always look on the bright side of life” (Eric Idle). So here are ten funny poetry films which have participated in past editions of the ZEBRA Poetry Film Festival, a project of the Literaturwerkstatt Berlin in cooperation with interfilm Berlin. Enjoy!
 

Oedipus (poem by Nathan Filer)
Rong, 2005

 

The Art of Drowning (poem by Billy Collins)
Diego Maclean, 2009

 

Missed Aches (poem by Taylor Mali)
Joanna Priestley, 2009

https://vimeo.com/13830005

 

Der Conny ihr Pony (poem by Gabriel Vetter)
Robert Pohle and Martin Hentze, 2008

 

Financially strapped (poem by Katrin Bowen)
Katrin Bowen, 2008

 

Höpöhöpö Böks (poem by Eiríkur Örn Norðdahl)
Eiríkur Örn Norðdahl, 2008

 

Dialog über Österreich (poem by Gerhard Rühm)
Hubert Sielecki, 2012

 

Giraffe (poem by Annelyse Gelman)
by Annelyse Gelman and Auden Lincoln-Vogel, 2013

 

On Loop (poem by Christine Hooper and Victoria Manifold)
Christine Hooper, 2013

 

Carnivore Reflux (poem by Eddie White)
Eddie White, 2006

Nic S.: Ten Fabulous Videopoems

It turns out
Martha McCollough, 2012

Several things about Martha McCollough’s work delight me. Her voice and reading style for one. Voice, where it is used, is almost overridingly important for me, and if vocals are off, the whole film is off. Martha’s voice and reading style carry her work superbly. I also love her double- or triple- (or more) narration style, where you frequently have the voice carrying one narrative thread, the kinetic text carrying another, and the visuals a third. You feel that text is an actual character in her films. I also enjoy how she plays around with vocals, using repetition, chorus, and other vocal effects. She has a great sense of humor! Check out Mr Lucky’s Jackpot for a more straightforward combination of her different techniques.

 

The Polish Language
Alice Lyons and Orla Mc Hardy, 2009

At eight minutes, this is far longer than my usual optimum video poem length (ideally, less than two minutes, three approaches a stretch…), but is so finely and imaginatively made that one instantly forgives. Again, kinetic text as character and dynamic role-player/narrator, but presented here in a truly fantastic variety of form. Background vocals only (as a separate non-English narration track — nothing obviously duplicating the text) and a wonderful mix of individual/chorus vocals, intermittent sound effect, intermittent tuneful piano, and (most of all) intermittent silence. So beautiful and moving.

 

Rain
Maria Elena Doyle, 2011

All my favorite elements here: kinetic text that plays as a dynamic character in the overall audio-visual story, marvelous visuals that combine regular video footage with animation, and nice vocals towards the end. Based on the poem “Rain” by Maori poet Hone Tuwhare. Poem text here.

https://vimeo.com/25072181

 

Sonnet 44
Thomas Freundlich, Lumikinos Production & Art Slow, 2012

This short dance film is based on Shakespeare’s Sonnet 44. It’s an imaginative remix of a classic, and one that assumes audience familiarity with the original text. So rather than presenting the text in the usual linear, pedestrian format, the film-maker incorporates it in a dynamic, fragmentary fashion, so that it participates by inference, almost, and again, as a live character in the piece.

 

A Word Made Flesh
Eliza Fitzhugh, 2010

As Dave Bonta said at Moving Poems, this is “a fascinating linguistic deconstruction of the poet’s lines … The multiple accents should remind us that now more than ever, with the advent of the web, Dickinson’s poetry belongs to the world.” Poem text here. No particular visuals or film-making talent to admire in this one, but what pleases me is the word play, in every sense of the phrase, where both text and vocal versions of the word are presented and re-presented in shifting and re-shifting form. A sort of philological Greek chorus, moving the overall narrative forward with clever diversions and rest stops.

 

Tongue of the Hidden
David Alexander Anderson, 2007

Mysterious and beautiful, love poems of Hafez read in the original Persian, with illustration and animation based in Persian calligraphy. This is over five minutes in length, and as far as I can tell contains two poems, one that starts about 40 seconds in and a second that starts around the three-minute mark. I’m including the Persian version below. If you prefer to hear the same narrator read the poems in English, go here.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=PUhaF1JI5r8

 

Instructions to Hearing Persons Desiring a Deaf Man
Raymond Luczak, 2014

I find this video extraordinarily moving. Again, no film-making virtuosity to admire, just a very talented and convincing poem performance by Raymond Luczak. I frequently rant on about reading poetry aloud for an audience at Voice Alpha, and for me, what is transformative about that act — what makes a poem and your relationship to it qualitatively different — is the act of putting the poem into your body, the physicalization of the poem in preparation for presenting it to an audience. This video gets at the same idea from a different perspective altogether — just beautiful to watch. And if you have a minute, take a look at this video from Sarah Rushford. The subjects close their eyes and recite lines from memory, to intriguing and convincing effect. Once more, I see the transformative effect of putting a poem into the body.

 

The Woods
Kristian Pedersen, 2012

Over at Voice Alpha I am building a collection of readers I call ‘musical readers.’ People who, while they read poetry aloud for an audience, appear to hear an internal music which both guides and manifests itself in their reading. Cin Salach and Carl Sandburg are my favorite examples of this phenomenon. It manifests itself charmingly here in the voice of the Norwegian poet, Aina Villanger, who does the reading for this delightful videopoem. I love the spare imaginative use of simple abstract shapes and a minimal color palette to play out the action in the poem, marching perfectly along with the reading.

 

Karl
Scott Wenner (animation) and Motionpoems, 2011

I am not usually intrigued by or particularly drawn to Motionpoems‘ poetry films, as they generally tend, in my view, to be fairly literal visual interpretations of the text poem they engage. I also find their vocal tracks are often not quite ‘there.’ Not this one though — it’s pretty much perfect in every way. A dissonance that somehow really works between the text narrative by Dag Straumsåg and the visual narrative. That moth, that spider. The drum, the piano, the synthesizer. And that wonderful voice with its fabulous reading. Each element spare and solitary, but somehow they are all necessarily attached to each other. (Maybe the one thing I would have changed had I been in charge would have been to not snap the spider web at the very end…)

 

Montserrat
Fernando Lazzari, 2013

Kinetic text once more (this time in celebration of an actual specific typeface). I really like the reliance on text alone as the narrator and the fact that the film-maker does not feel the need to run duplicative vocal narration alongside the text presentation, as too often happens in kinetic text productions. Wonderful graphics. Very clever idea to present a city as the ‘stage’ for this segment of a Jorge Luis Borges poem, upon and across which the text ‘actor’ performs its dynamic role.

 

See five more poetry videos that didn’t quite make this list at Nic’s blog, Very Like a Whale. —Ed.

Alastair Cook: A Filmpoem Ten

Some poetry films in the spirit of Filmpoem, the Edinburgh-based, international poetry, film, festival and workshop project founded by Alastair Cook in 2010. As Alastair notes on their website, “The combination of film and poetry is an attractive one. For the poet, perhaps a hope that the filmmaker will bring something to the poem: a new audience, a visual attraction, the laying of way markers; for the filmmaker, a fixed parameter to respond to, the power of a text sparking the imagination with visual connections and metaphor.” —Ed.

 

The Royal Oak (poem by Benedict Newbery)
Sandra Salter, 2012

 

Commune Présence (poem by René Char)
Maxime Coton, 2013

 

OUTSIDE (“A fora”) (poem by Albert Balasch)
Marc Capdevila, 2012

 

Regarding Gardens (poem by Simon Barraclough)
Carolina Melis, 2012

 

repeaT (poem by Polarbear)
Joe Roberts, 2012

 

The Flight into Egypt (poem by John Glenday)
Marc Neys aka Swoon, 2014

http://vimeo.com/93125441

 

Naar Wat We Waren (poem by Eric Joris)
Lies Van Der Auwera, 2014

 

Beyond Words (poem by Else Beyer Knuth-Winterfeldt)
Helene-Moltke-Leth, 2014

 

Hare (poem by Carolyn Jess-Cooke)
Melissa Diem, 2014

 

Legion (poem by Allison Walker)
James W. Norton, 2013

http://vimeo.com/62030717

Alice Lyons: Ten Films to Look at When You Want to Think About Poetry and Film

I’m always looking for poetry films that mobilise what Hollis Frampton called ‘the counter-machine to the machine of language’, i.e., the visual. Frampton has been my guide to understanding how poetic language might be translated to cinema. I’ve written a forthcoming book on the subject called Perpetual Speech: Hollis Frampton’s Gloria! as Lyric Poem. So Gloria! has got to be in my list. It’s at the end.

Subterranean Homesick Blues (song by Bob Dylan)
D.A. Pennebaker, from the documentary Dont Look Back, 1967

 

The Grass is Greener (poem by Ivor Cutler)
Orla Mc Hardy, 2001

 

Anna Blume (poem by Kurt Schwitters)
Vessela Dantcheva (main animator Ebele Okoye), 2010

 

Höpöhöpö Böks
Eiríkur Örn Norðdahl, 2010

 

The Grammar Tables: The Great and The Dead (poem by Pat Boran)
Helen Horgan, 2013

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=BJd_jOw4x1o

 

American Haikus (poetry by Jack Kerouac)
Orla Mc Hardy, 2006

http://vimeo.com/10469119

 

Zorns Lemma
Hollis Frampton, 1970

 

Walden
Jonas Mekas, 1969

(see longer selection on UbuWeb)

 

Зеркало/The Mirror (poems by Arseny Tarkovsky)
Andrei Tarkovsky, 1975

https://vimeo.com/44315068

 

Gloria!
Hollis Frampton, 1979

Erica Goss: Ten Favorite Video Poems Made by Women

Here are ten current favorite video poems, all made by women. One of the things I like about video poetry is its cultural and gender diversity. Many more than these exist, of course, and my list is much longer than only ten, but enjoy these from the US, Canada, Pakistan, Egypt and Taiwan:

goodbye (poem by Kate Greenstreet)
Kate Greenstreet, 2010

 

I Said Yes (poem by Luisa Igloria)
Nic S., 2014

http://vimeo.com/107386171

 

The Dice Player (poem by Mahmoud Darwish)
Nissmah Roshdy, 2013

 

kindness (poem by Jana Irmert)
Jana Irmert, 2012

 

Whore in the Eddy (poem by Heather Haley)
Heather Haley, 2012

 

Self Portrait as Beast (poem by Justine Post)
Cecelia Post, 2014

 

Danatum Passu (poem by Shahid Akhtar)
Shehrbano Saiyid, 2014

 

At Freeman’s Farm (poem by Marilyn McCabe)
Marilyn McCabe, 2013

 

In the Circus of You (poem by Nicelle Davis)
Cheryl Gross, 2014

 

They Are There But I Am Not (poem by Ye Mimi)
Ye Mimi, 2009

Swoon: Top Ten Videopoems

Here’s a top 10 showcasing some of the possibilities in videopoetry. Things I like a lot over the last few years…yes there are many more.

Heimweg (poem by Peh)
Film and animation: Franziska Otto (2010)

 

Racing Time (poem by Chris Woods)
Adele Meyers & Ra Page (2012)

 

Delikatnie mnie odepchnąłeś całą (poem by Bozena Urszula Malinowska)
Marcin Konrad Malinowski (2012)

https://vimeo.com/35127990

 

You and Me (“May i feel said he” by e.e. cummings)
Kartsen Krause (2009)

 

Profile (poem by R.W. Perkins)
R.W. Perkins (2012)

 

The Forty Elephants (poem by Gérard Rudolf)
Alastair Cook (2011)

 

Silent Scene (poem by J.P. Sipilä)
J.P. Sipilä (2013)

 

Our Bodies (A Sinner’s Prayer) (poem by Matt Mullins)
Matt Mullins (2013)

 

Who’d have thought (poem by Melissa Diem)
Melissa Diem (2013)

 

What Remains (poem by Gareth Sion Jenkins)
Film by Jason Lam (2010)

Robert Peake: Ten of My Favourite Animated Videopoems

This is the first of a projected series of “top ten” lists from a variety of contributors, intended to help new or occasional visitors to Moving Poems discover the best videopoems and poetry films. —Ed.

In animation, as in poetry, anything is possible. Both media also have a similar range, sweeping up everything from the surreal to the hyper-real, comedic to sublime. In this, they are well suited to collaboration. Here are ten videopoems that work as closely together as a practiced tango duet.

Homage to the Mineral of Cabbage by Stephanie Dudley, poem by Erín Moure (2011)

Simply gorgeous stop-motion animation, as dark and mysterious as the heart of a cabbage.

“Balada Catalana” (with English subtitles) by Laen Sanches, poem by Vicente Balaguet (2010)

A musical and imaginative bacchanal, I had to remember to shut my jaw after I first saw this.

Old Astronauts by Motionpoems, poem by Tim Nolan (2009)

Image and text perfectly tempered to the poet’s delivery.

“Of Care” by Ruah Edelstein (2011)

A deceptively simple poem unfolds through repetition, music, and imagery, drawing out the archetypal wisdom of a fable.

“Why do you Stay Up So Late?” by Ernesto Lavandera, poem by Marvin Bell (2004)

(Interactive, click here to begin)

An experimental interactive piece that beautifully matches the mood and timbre of this fine poem.

“Streamschool” („Patakiskola”) by Péter Vácz (2012)

Fluidity, beauty, and grace are evoked through stop-motion animation from this traditional Hungarian rhyme.

“Square Pears, Rare Bears” by Sharon Keighley, poem by Ed Barton (2009)

Deliberately low production values and literal depiction of this fast-paced linguistic romp heighten the delight.

“About Bigmouse” by Constantin Arephyeff, poem by Ludmila Ulanova (2008)

In this piece, music plays a central character around which the words and images dance.

“Brother” by HBO Family, poem by Mary Ann Hoberman (2011)
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=GR3Rtmmi2lA

The story told through the animation gently enfolds and unfolds this simple poem. Read by Carrie Fisher.

“Four Years From Now Walking With My Daughter” by Liam Owen (2013)

A piece that bears re-viewing, as no attention to detail is spared, giving this touching poem a sense of familial care.