Jon Behrens

Filmmaker, photographer, sound artist

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Jon Behrens 6 Films vol 1 : Limited Edition Blu-ray available now

Posted on February 18, 2017 by Jon Behrens

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Jon Behrens : 6 Films Vol 1 Limited Edition of 300 Blu-ray

I am Happy to announce the long awaited Blu-ray release of 6 of my short films. This is a limited addition of 300 numbered and signed discs. Brand new HD scans of all the films taken from the original film negatives .There are also 6 different inside cover variations each one representing each of the 6 films included on the disc. This is the first vol of films future volumes will follow.

Jon Behrens is a Seattle based filmmaker, film programmer, photographer, sound designer and teacher. His films have been screened through out the world and has been active in the Experimental and avant garde film movement since the early 1980’s.

Films included on this this release are:

 

A BEGINNING A MIDDLE AND AN END (2013)

This film was made from reconstituted found footage and it is a hand painted and optically printed wonder with a beginning a middle and an end.

DESERT ABSTRACTIONS
This is a film that I had wanted to make for many years. It was not until the summer of 1996 that I actually got it together and shot it. Again with the help of Steve Creson we packed up all our equipment and loaded on to a plane and flew to Arizona were we rented a car and drove around the desert for week and filmed everything that we thought looked interesting. This film is similar to the films in my urban landscapes series, only this film was shot in eye popping full color and there are no man made elements in this film at all. Lots of rock formations, colors, and shapes only things made my mother nature. This film also has a film score by Rubato.
ANOMALIES OF THE UNCONSCIOUS
This is the second film of the Anomalies Cycle. It is a hand Painted and manipulated film. I also used the technique of bleaching and batiking of the film emulsion. The footage was then step printed on a J-K Optical Printer. Although similar in style to The Flickering of the Minds Eye I began to experiment more with other colors and different textures such as dried leaves and flowers, hair, insect parts, and a variety of different

THE MOVEMENT OF LIGHT AT NIGHT
This was the first film that I collaborated with fellow filmmaker and friend Steve Creson. We each shot a 100ft roll of film and we did not know what each other were shooting. The only thing that our footage had in common was the fact that it was all shot in color and at night. At the time that we did this we were each experimenting with new techniques of our own. This took place on a nice summer evening in July of 1996. Film score by Rubato.

THE PRODUCTION AND DECAY OF STRANGE PARTICLES
In this film I began to experiment more with creating mats with liquid latex directly on the film emulsion then bleaching of all the excess image around the latex and using the clear bleached sections of film as a canvas to paint my film poem I used special inks that were custom made just for me called Kenville Dyes I then to re-photographed it all on my beloved JK optical printer. I also created this films sound design

SIX ARMS – HOMAGE TO MEKAS
I was asked to participate in a film program were filmmakers were asked to each shoot a 100ft roll of film in the style of legendary filmmaker Jonas Mekas. This short burst cinematic film diary was shot on a nice Saturday Afternoon at my favorite Pub The Six Arms, I documented my afternoon as it happened. Their was no editing at all on this film it was all done in Camera. I liked the film so much that I decided to add a sound track and released it.

THIS IS A LIMITED ADDITON OF 300 NUMBERED AND SIGNED DISCS

RUNNING TIME 43 1/2 MINUTES ~ NTSC

$25 post paid anywhere in the world





                                                                                                                       

Filed Under: Films Tagged With: Blu-ray releases

Movie of the Week : Space Men (1960)

Posted on January 28, 2017 by Jon Behrens

Space-Menimage1 (a.k.a. Assignment: Outer Space) is a 1960 Italian science fiction film directed by Antonio Margheriti. The film stars Rik Van Nutter and co-stars Gabriella Farinon, David Montresor, Archie Savage, and Alain Dijon.

Space-Men’s storyline recounts a mission in the 22nd century aboard a space station. The mission involves a risky effort by its crew to redirect a malfunctioning spaceship that threatens to destroy the Earth.

In 2116 Interplanetary Chronicle of New York reporter Ray Peterson (Rik Van Nutter), launched in Bravo Zulu 88, joins the crew of an orbiting space station. Peterson is assigned to write a story about the infra-radiation flux in Galaxy M12. While on the space station, tension mounts between Peterson and the station commander (David Montresor). The commander believes the reporter is in the way, calling him a “leech”, but has orders to leave him alone. A complication arises when Lucy (Gabriella Farinon), the station botanist and navigator, is attracted to both the commanding officer and Peterson.

When errant spaceship Spaceship Alpha Two enters the solar system, as it approaches closer to the Earth, its photon generators radiate enough heat to destroy the planet. In efforts to intercept Alpha Two, Sullivan (Franco Fantasia), a crew member, sacrifices himself in a futile attempt, and space station pilot Al (Archie Savage) also fails in an aborted attempt to shoot the spaceship with a missile.

With the two crew members dying in their attempt to destroy Alpha Two, Peterson decides to use Space Taxi B91 to fly to the spaceship. His goal is to enter the spaceship and disarm the generators. When inside, he is directed to disable the computers that run the spaceship and shut down all power sources, but finds that he is trapped inside when the emergency hatch is also disabled.

Despite orders from the “High Command”, not to intervene, The commander and his assistant undertake a dangerous mission to intercept the out-of-control spaceship and rescue Peterson. Reaching the reporter as he is slumps to the floor, the rescuers bring back him back to the space station. With the stricken spaceship redirected away from the Earth, Peterson wins Lucy’s affection and the commander’s respect.

Director Antonio Margheriti had read science fiction comic books since a young age, and when he was offered to direct a science fiction film, he immediately seized the opportunity. Space-Men was his first full directoral effort, with Margheriti going on to direct 55 films.

Space-Men was made from a script written by Margheriti and Ennio De Concini. The film was shot at the same time director Mario Bava was filming Black Sunday on a sound stage the next door.[6] Margheriti took over the studio work with miniatures that were featured in the outer space segments. ~ From Wikipedia

Filed Under: Films Tagged With: movie of the week

Movie of the Week : Queen of Blood (1966)

Posted on January 14, 2017 by Jon Behrens


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The first time I saw Queen of Blood was in the late seventies when I was a teenager on a double bill with Night Tide another great Curtis Harrington classic at the Neptune Theatre in Seattle Wa. I loved the way Roger Corman would buy obscure Polish and Russian Science Fiction  films and make a new film around them. This was very inspiring to me, I also loved the sets, costumes, colors and lighting in this film. I always loved the atmospheric tone in Harrington’s work. You will see a young Dennis Hopper before his slide into drug crazed madness. So if you have some time to kill go grab a beer and sit back and enjoy a film made in a time when filmmakers would edit their films on upright Moviolas – enjoy

 

Queen of Blood is a 1966 color science fiction-horror film based on the screenplay for an earlier, Soviet film called Mechte Navstrechu. It was produced by George Edwards and Samuel Z. Arkoff, directed by Curtis Harrington, and starring John Saxon, Basil Rathbone, Dennis Hopper, and Judi Meredith. The film was released by American International Pictures as part of a double bill with the AIP feature Blood Bath. Director Harrington crafted this B-movie using footage from the Soviet feature films Mechte Navstrechu and Nebo Zovyot.

The year is 1990, and space travel is well-established since humans first landed on the Moon twenty years earlier. At the International Institute of Space Technology, communications expert and astronaut Laura James monitors strange signals being received from outer space. Laura’s superior, Dr. Farraday, translates the signal and discovers that it is from an alien race, who are sending an ambassador to Earth. Soon after, however, Laura receives a video log showing that the aliens’ spaceship has crashed-landed on Mars.

The Institute launches a rescue mission aboard the spaceship Oceano, which includes Laura and astronauts Anders Brockman and Paul Grant. Oceano travels through a sunburst, suffering some damage, before completing the journey to Mars and locating the downed alien craft. Anders and Paul investigate and discover a single dead alien aboard. Faraday deduces that the surviving crew may have been rescued, so an observation satellite will be needed to locate the alien rescue ship. Laura’s fiancé Allan and fellow astronaut Tony volunteer. They travel on the spaceship Meteor to Phobos, one of the two moons of Mars, where they launch the observation satellite. Tony finds an alien spaceship on Phobos. He and Allan are able to enter, finding an unconscious but still-living female alien. As their rescue ship holds only two, one of them must stay behind, so they toss a coin and Tony stays.

Allan and the female alien arrive on Oceano, joining Laura, Paul and Anders. The alien regains consciousness and smiles at the three men, but not Laura. The alien refuses to eat all food offered and will not let Anders take a blood sample. That night, as Paul is guarding the alien, she attacks and kills him, draining his blood after first hypnotizing him. The surviving astronauts decide to keep her alive by feeding her blood from the ship’s plasma supply. When this supply runs out, she kills Anders and feeds on him, leaving Laura and Allan the only humans aboard.

The alien then attacks Allan, but Laura interrupts her before she can kill again. Laura scratches her in the struggle, and the alien screams in terror, quickly bleeding to death. Laura and Allen then find alien eggs hidden aboard. Allan hypothesizes that she was royalty, likely a queen (assuming human-like inbreeding among royalty, hence her hemophilia), and was being sent to Earth in order to breed. Their spaceship lands safely, but Earth authorities decide to study the alien eggs rather than destroying them outright, as Allan has urged.

Harrington had made his name with the feature Night Tide, which impressed Roger Corman enough to offer the director a film project. “Of course, I would like to do a more individual film than Queen of Blood”, said Harrington at the time, “but I can’t get the financing. However, the film is entertaining, and I feel I was able to say something within the context of the genre.” Queen of Blood was made using special effects from the Soviet film A Dream Come True, but director Harrington estimated that 90% of the film was his.

Czech actor Florence Marly was a personal friend of director Harrington. He later said that he had to fight with Roger Corman in order to hire her “because she was an older woman. I’m sure he had some bimbo in mind, you know? So I fought for Marley because I felt she had the required exotic quality that would work in the role.” Harrington also said Dennis Hopper “was like a part of my little team by then,” so he agreed to also appear.

John Saxon later claimed that Gene Corman had more to do with Queen of Blood than Roger. Saxon estimated that his scenes were shot in seven to eight days and that Dennis Hopper “was trying very hard to keep a straight face throughout” during the making of the film.

“Basil Rathbone had one day (on the set),” added Saxon. “I think it was the last appearance he ever made in a film. He came on and he was a very, very distinguished gentleman. He did his scene. But he got annoyed, because they didn’t get the sound right on his first take, and they asked him to come back. He dressed down the director.”

Basil Rathbone was paid $1,500 to act for a day and a half on Queen of Blood, and $1,500 for half a day on Voyage to the Prehistoric Planet (1965), another film that incorporated Russian film footage. Rathbone ended up working overtime and missed a meal. The Screen Actors Guild demanded overtime pay, plus a fine for the meal violation, but producer George Edwards produced footage that showed the delay was because Rathbone had not memorized all his lines and insisted on skipping lunch.

According to one account, the budget for this and Voyage to the Prehistoric Planet came to $33,052 Another said the film cost $65,000.

~From Wikipedia,

Filed Under: Films Tagged With: movie of the week

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