Golden Ages of Croatian Experimental Film
Termiti
Regjisor/e
Milan Šamec
1963
Croatia
2 min
Black & White
Milan Šamec (1942-2007) was a representative of the conservative stream in the Cineclub Zagreb, the one that resisted “anti-film” and ridiculed it. Termites was made as a rebuttal to “anti-film”, as a demonstration ad absurdum that “anyone can make an experimental film”. He took a tape, exposed it unevenly to the developer, and entitled the resulting dance of visual spots created by this uneven development, ants – termites – because the spots reminded him of them. In order to parody the new music from the Music Biennale that our avant-garde artists looked up to, he created a soundtrack with rhythmical tapping and scraping the radiators. Ironically, the result was both visually and sound-wise very impressive that it won an award at the first festival of experimental film GEFF and served as evidence that parody is a kind of liberation, opening new areas of sensibility, despite the author’s original intentions.
Other films in Golden Ages of Croatian Experimental Film

A.D.A.M.

Daniil Ivanovič, Your Are Free

Encounter

Fluorescences

Focus

La Petite Mort

Monologue on Split

People (Passing) II

Scuza Signorina

Siesta

Site Selection

Straight Line (Stevens-Duke)

The Market

The Spectres of Veronica

The Split Watercolour

The Tiniest

Two Times in One Space

Write No Loneliness
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