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Qatsi Trilogy to be Completed 219

Karl_Hungus writes "Koyaanisqatsi and Powaqqatsi, the first two installments of Reggio and Glass' trilogy are to be joined by Naqoyqatsi, due out next month. Naqoy.com has some stills, and some fascinating Flash. A brief discussion of the technical side includes the figure of 3.5 terabytes of images collected in the making of the film."
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Qatsi Trilogy to be Completed

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  • by Anonymous Coward
    I always wanted a D26 to generate random names.
  • Uhhh (Score:5, Funny)

    by angst7 ( 62954 ) on Thursday September 26, 2002 @11:47PM (#4341969) Homepage
    I'd like to buy a vowel...
  • ...they'll have anything of the Twin Towers in the film?
  • Huh? (Score:3, Insightful)

    by cascino ( 454769 ) on Thursday September 26, 2002 @11:50PM (#4341982) Homepage
    Is anyone else very confused?
    • Re:Huh? (Score:5, Funny)

      by Matthaeus ( 156071 ) on Friday September 27, 2002 @12:23AM (#4342106) Homepage
      Knock knock.
      Who's there?
      Knock knock.
      Who's there?
      Knock knock.
      Who's there, dammit?
      Knock knock.
      Who the hell is it?

      Philip Glass.
      • Every time I hear something about Philip Glass, in my mind I hear this parody bit that someone did. If I recall correctly, it's in the middle of a song, and the piano gets very repetitive and staccato, and the singer suddenly starts crying in a kinda drunk dumbass voice something along the lines of: "Hey! Hey! I'm Einstein! Lookit me! I'm Einstein! And I'm on a beach!".


        Anybody know where that's from? It may not be as great as I recall it, but it's been bugging me for a long time trying to recall where I heard it. And yeah - I like classical music, baroque mostly. I even like a chunk of modern classical. I don't particularly go in for Philip Glass, however.


        --

        Evan (no SF reference)

        • Philip Glass did Einstein on the Beach, Emo Philips did (in a show I saw on TV but I think it was a "live" video of his stage show) Einstein AT the Beach. It doesn't (to my recollection) contain that line you wanted, but I haven't watched it in at least ten years so it's possible ...
        • i believe it was king missile ... the "detachable penis" guys
        • oops ... left off a " ... here's the link [glasspages.org]
          • That's it - I own the album, too. I'll have to dig it up (and it's a durn shame that they are so well known for Detachable Penis when they've done so much other good fun stuff).

            Okay - I don't have to look it up - that person has the entire song up there in MP3. Of course, it's only a 23 second song...

            --
            Evan (who needs to watch that PDQ Bach video that a friend has)

    • Re: Huh? (Score:2, Funny)

      by Black Parrot ( 19622 )


      > Is anyone else very confused?

      Yeah, probably the FBI agents assigned to monitor Slashdot. I can see them frantically flipping through their printous of the Jargon File even as we speak.

    • Count me in. :-)

      Qa... wha?
  • by mosch ( 204 ) on Thursday September 26, 2002 @11:50PM (#4341983) Homepage
    Don't tell the editors but the qatsi trilogy isn't a sci-fi series, nor does it have anything to do with anime. Clearly they don't realize that Koyaanisqatsi is a gorgeous artsy movie about the balance of life in nature and society, best enjoyed with illicit substances running through your veins. Or that Powaqatsi explores the effect of modernization on third world nations, and it's not neccessarily all tea and roses.

    That being said, it's not traditional geek material, but it's fascinating and wonderful

    • Personally, I prefer the Church of the SubGenius' epic movie Arise for that. Or, if I'm in a serious mood, I like latter half of End of Evangelion. For a more traditional imagery fest, I'll also go for Apocolypse Now and The Wall. (Toss in Clockwork Orange and the Blues Brothers, and you're starting to flesh out my favorite movie list).

      Incidently, if you ever get a chance to see Flaming Ears, a german lesbian impressionist film, go for it. Vast, heaping amounts of raw Bulldadaistic bliss. Very yummie, indeed.

      --
      Evan (no references)

    • by Anonymous Coward
      Dude. It's a bunch of photos and film and music with no plot. It's pontless. Go watch a sunrise or eat a twinkie. It'll be more productive and have more depth.

      I hate people who pretend to like something because it looks "artsy". And other people think they're supposed to like it because it looks "artsy". And the only reason a thing becomes popular is because everyone in the world is convinced they're supposed to like it to be hip - like a junior high student suffering through the bitter taste of beer to impress his highschool friends.
      • If you did not understand the message of the first movies, I strongly suggest seeing them again but with illicit substances [hofmann.org] in your head. That will make it easier for your mind to see that which is already sitting in front of you.

        Films are not good because they're artsy, however they're not bad because they're art house flicks either.

        I can see where somebody who doesn't enjoy absorbing images and sounds, wouldn't enjoy the qatsi series. It doesn't tell you what conclusions you should be drawing. It doesn't tell you why you should care what you're going to see next. Nothing blows up, and there are no witty retorts.

        It simply presents the collaborative work of a visual and a musical artist, and as with any art, some people might enjoy it, others might not. The fact that you did not enjoy it does not mean that it's without value.

    • No kidding! I had just started dating my wife, about eight years ago, when I saw Koyaanisqatsi for the first time, with her.

      She did not understand or enjoyed the movie, and as a matter of fact she almost killed me after, but I just loved every single scene. The final sequence for some reason gave me a sad feeling, something on the lines of "and we have done all this wonderful things but still we're doomed, there's no hope in the path we chose". Makes me think sometimes.

      Oh, and yeah: you can guess from my nick that I *really* enjoyed it ;)
    • Or rather, it's interesting for about 10 minutes, and then it's repetitious, and then it's tedious, and then it's just pedantic.

      It's a SPECIAL EFFECT. It's a whole movie about ONE SPECIAL EFFECT.

      Don't get me wrong, when it was made the imagery was fairly ground-breaking, so it's got artistic significance. On the other hand, you can see the same thing in beer commercials now.

      It's like the musical Tomfoolery: any given five minutes of it would be fine, but sitting through all of it becomes very tedious. (IMHO the book Too Many Songs by Tom Lehrer is a perfect example of something that has its true name.) Why? Because it's just more and more of the same, and it GETS OLD. There is no plot or characterization to carry the movie along.

      So, if you want to watch it, watch it on TV sometime, maybe it'll crop up on the Independant Film Channel or something.

      Jon Acheson
  • Koy, Pow, Naq. (Score:3, Informative)

    by ryth ( 129183 ) on Thursday September 26, 2002 @11:52PM (#4341990)
    I made a post, no matter how sophmoric on my SITE [blogspot.com] about this film. The originals in the trilogy are absolutely stunning and breathtaking. With the inclusion of digital technology and even simple "conventional" improvments in film technology, this part definately shapes up to be the best.

    If you haven't seen these movies before go see them at your rep theatre. Simply the most brilliant use of image and film I've ever seen. Esp, Koyaanisqatsi.

    Umm, and apparently they are really good if you smoke green stuff. Not that I'd know anything about that :).

    Btw, Incase you haven't heard Philip Glass [philipglass.com] is preforming in a town near you. Doing either live accompaniment to the Trilogy or new work to shorts by Godfrey Reggio (the director) and Atom Egoyan.

    Go see it.
  • by RoguePsion ( 558561 ) on Thursday September 26, 2002 @11:52PM (#4341991)
    I don't know how many of you have actually seen any of these films, but in my opinion, the first film Koyaanisqatsi is one of the finest films ever made. It has no plot, no dialogue, simply 90 minutes of footage set to a brilliant score by Philip Glass. They finally released the first two films in the series on DVD September th 29th, and you'd better believe I had them preordered weeks in advance. I highly reccomend that anyone who has not already seen them do so, but be sure you have time to devote to REALLY watching them, trust me, it is worth it.
    • Right on. And if you've watched any tech-related commercials in the past 10 years, you've seen the influence of these movies. If you know who Philip Glass is, or who Brian Eno is, or what time lapse photography is, etc, etc, then you are probably an idiot for not knowing about these films already. It's not like they're not in any decent video store.

      Smoke a bowl, or whatever you do to get in your observant/reflective mood, and watch it.

      And while they were making this film I made them a tasty orange fish and mint juleps and they liked it very much.

    • last I heard, the films were going through some sort of legal wranglings over ownership and money, that meant that dvds of the first two might never be released.

      They are two of the greatest films in the history of cinema, IMHO, and the news of the release of a new film, and the dvds, has made my day.

      Hurray for CowboyNeal.
    • Whoops, meant to say the DVDs were released on the 17th of September.
    • It has no plot

      Egad! Please tell me you didn't mean to say that!

      and you'd better believe I had them preordered weeks in advance

      Awwwww, if you were a true Koy obsessive compulsive like me, you would have spent the $180 to get the limited edition DVD signed by Godfrey Reggio a couple years ago! (Sadly Godfrey didn't sign the disc, just the plain white envelope it came in)

      Of course I also bought Koy on LaserDisc for a mere $150 about 5 years ago.

      And I have a shrinkwrapped VHS of it...

      I highly reccomend that anyone who has not already seen them do so, but be sure you have time to devote to REALLY watching them, trust me, it is worth it.

      I fully agree with this comment. If you are watching Koy for the first time, you must set aside an hour and a half that will be free from disruptions and watch the film. Otherwise you might miss the plot!
      • Well, I have it on tape, paid too much for Koy and Pow on DVD on Amazon ($25, incl shipping. Costco had it for $19 grr) and I've seen the Philip Glass Ensamble perform Koyaanisqatsi live. Is that obsessive enough. I got the discs in yesterday and watched the interview, but I was too busy to go through the films, which I may do tonight. The series is great, and I can't wait for Naq next month, as well as seeing the shorts performance, for which I have to go get tickets.
    • Does it really work on a small screen? I watched the films many times in the Arts Cinema in Cambridge (UK) and once on TV and I really missed the big screen and surround sound.

      There was always something of a reunion atmosphere when they showed these films in Cambridge. They used to show it at 2pm and 11pm on a Tuesday and again the following Thursday about twice a year, and I used to try to get to both the 11pm showings. As far as I could see, so did most of the rest of audience, you always saw the same faces coming out both nights. I think about half of them also went to the 2pm performances, but sadly, I had work to do.
  • Ok..maybe I'm not as big of a geek as I thought - but what the hell is this item talking about? Quatsiwhatsi? What is this? What's going on?
    • Re:Excuse me? (Score:1, Informative)

      by piznut ( 553799 )
      Qatsi = Life

      ko-yaa-nis-qa-tsi (from the Hopi Indian language) n. 1. crazy life. 2. life in turmoil. 3. life out of balance. 4. life disintegrating. 5. a state of life that calls for another way of living. Life out of balance.

      po-waq-qa-tsi (from the Hopi language, powaq sorcerer + qatsi life)

      Translations of the Hopi Prophecies sung in Koyaanisqatsi:

      "If we dig precious things from the land, we will invite disaster."

      Here is some more info [camworld.com] about the first 2 movies. They offer a little more insight to the concept than the imdb link.

    • Re:Excuse me? (Score:3, Insightful)

      by Fat Casper ( 260409 )
      Yes, geeks like things that aren't sci-fi or anime. Like most social commentary, you can't put Koyaanisqatsi et al into a nutshell. Their scope is too big and there aren't any good lines.

      Yes, you are responsible for this information. Yes, you'll be better off for having seen them. Take an evening, or a weekend day. Don't shoehorn it into a hectic schedule. Actual reflection is always better than drug induced reflection.

  • Pfui (Score:1, Flamebait)

    Here is director Godfrey Reggio's commentary on Naqoyqatsi:
    "So forget science fiction. We now live the fiction of science. We are now, not in some remote future, cyborgs. We are at one with our environment - we are technology. In this wonderland, freedom becomes the pursuit of our technological happiness. Our standard of living is predicated on commodity consumption, as the shibboleth of the new religion is 'pray for more'."
    I find this more than a little patronizing and offensive. The style of the *quatsi films is to contrast long, lovingly photographed, breathtaking footage of natural landscapes and phenomena with speeded-up and otherwise *tweaked* footage (complete with silly-sounding background music) so as to somehow illustrate the ALIENATION of TECHNOLOGICAL MAN or some such nonsense.

    It is clear from his comments and style of filmmaking that Reggio is not the least bit interested in exploring why people might find technology FASCINATING. Nor does he pay the scantest attention to how many people are selflessly working to use technology to PRESERVE the environment he so clearly reveres, and HELP the indigenous humyns he empathizes with.

    Instead, Reggio uses his considerable talents, budget, and technology to develop one-sided propaganda that belittles ordinary consumers (so inferior to big important filmmakers and composers!) and preaches to the choir.
    • Re:Pfui (Score:1, Funny)

      by Anonymous Coward
      dude, time to loosen your white knuckle grip that narrow little world you live in..

      just a little bit.
    • by cei ( 107343 )
      "one-sided propaganda". Not to be sided with propaganda that gives an equal voice to differing viewpoints. Oh wait, that woudn't be propaganda any more, now, would it?

      Reggio is a documentarian. The images he chooses to cut together may have a spin that tells his story, but the nature of his work is, by definition, allowing the images to speak for themselves.

      Don't like his ideals? Don't see his movie. Not like box-office is a big driving force in his work to begin with.
    • by peacefinder ( 469349 ) <[alan.dewitt] [at] [gmail.com]> on Friday September 27, 2002 @01:38AM (#4342304) Journal
      "one-sided propaganda"? What, as opposed to "fair and balanced propaganda"? [chuckle]

      He has a point of view, and he expresses it. This isn't journalism, where balance is a virtue. It's art, where depth of feeling is a virtue. They are very moving works; it's unlikely a viewer will walk away indifferent to the experience. Angry perhaps, but not indifferent.

      If you don't like his message about the dangers of technology, perhaps you should see a movie where technology is heroic? How about The Matrix? Oh... wait, no, that's not going to work. Terminator? No, that's no better... Dr. Strangelove? Missed again. Logan's Run? Tron? Gattaca? Minority Report? 2001? Blade Runner? Akira?

      Perhaps Mr. Reggio isn't alone in his view?
      • If you don't like his message about the dangers of technology, perhaps you should see a movie where technology is heroic? How about The Matrix? Oh... wait, no, that's not going to work. Terminator? No, that's no better... Dr. Strangelove? Missed again. Logan's Run? Tron? Gattaca? Minority Report? 2001? Blade Runner? Akira?

        For really pro-technology movies one probably has to go back to the cheesy monster-attacks-the-Earth flicks of the '50's. The ones where the white-coated scientist and his plucky prone-to-screaming female sidekick defeat the alien menace by utilizing clever inventions with glowing coils and giant computers with lots of blinky lights. Those were the days!
    • Re:Pfui (Score:5, Insightful)

      by funkapus ( 80229 ) on Friday September 27, 2002 @01:47AM (#4342328) Homepage
      The interesting thing about Koyaanisqatsi, though, is that it doesn't really preach anything, as it doesn't have any words. Well, there's a little bit at the end, I suppose, but the point is that you're shown a bunch of images from which you can draw your own conclusions.

      Certainly those images that are chosen are there to make you think about particular things, but it's not like Reggio's got Tom Cruise up on the screen yelling "won't someone please, please think about the environment!?!"

      Also, while it may be propaganda, I would argue that no one had really showed things from that perspective before Koyaanisqatsi, or at least, they hadn't done so nearly as effectively. And while it may be one-sided against consumerism and technology (which is a debatable point), it's only an 87 minute movie. I'm sure I probably see 87 minutes of Dell commercials in any given month. I don't see them giving equal time to folks like Reggio.

      Personally, I think Koyaanisqatsi is more than just propaganda on one side of some issue, for the simple reason that if you asked a dozen people what Koyaanisqatsi is about, they'd all give you different answers. When I watch it, there are certain technological aspects that I find quite beautiful and natural (the shots of clouds reflecting off glass-and-steel buildings, the speeded-up shots of city traffic at night that look a lot like a circulatory system).

      It makes you think, is all, and shows you the world in a way you probably haven't seen it before. The reaction you have to those images probably tells you more about yourself than it does about the movie.
      • It makes you think, is all, and shows you the world in a way you probably haven't seen it before. The reaction you have to those images probably tells you more about yourself than it does about the movie.

        Actually, I've heard the things it is preaching many times. Although presented very well and with impressive visuals, the ideas were not new, even then.

        And that "tells you more about yourself" stuff is pretty meaningless. It's a cherry-picked sequence of images, and I'm smart enough to tell what the message is. If you agree with the message, then stand behind it and take responsibility for it, don't just say "it means whatever you see in it".

        • Actually, I've heard the things it is preaching many times.
          You may have heard or read the things that you perceive it to be preaching many times. That's not what I'm talking about. Prior to 1983, I don't think anyone had seen the world from quite that perspective. It may not seem like an important distinction, but it is. When a concept is conveyed via written language or speech, it is not nearly as open to interpretation as when it is conveyed using purely visual means. Moreover, if I sit down to write an essay, but I have no message, it won't make any sense. If I take a photograph of something without intending the picture to convey meaning, it still will convey meaning. Alternately, if I take a photograph of something, with the intention of conveying a particular message, my audience may end up getting a completely different message.

          And that "tells you more about yourself" stuff is pretty meaningless. It's a cherry-picked sequence of images, and I'm smart enough to tell what the message is.
          I think that comment is very interesting. Apparently you're way smarter than I am. Please tell me what the universally-understood message of Koyaanisqatsi is, in 250,000 words or less. Make sure not to leave anything out. Then you can post it on Slashdot and I'm sure everyone will agree that you got it exactly right.

          • I think that comment is very interesting. Apparently you're way smarter than I am. Please tell me what the universally-understood message of Koyaanisqatsi is, in 250,000 words or less. Make sure not to leave anything out. Then you can post it on Slashdot and I'm sure everyone will agree that you got it exactly right.

            So which is it? It uses powerful visuals to convey a message, or it doesn't have a clear message?

            Being incoherent doesn't make something deep. But is it awfully convenient, because if you're ever challenged on your message, you can retreat and say "I have no message; it is only what you make of it".

            Prior to 1983, I don't think anyone had seen the world from quite that perspective.

            Maybe not, I don't remember. Certainly not so visually. But in 1982, you could hear part of that perspective in Subdivisions, by the band Rush. But, hey, they only had 5:33, so they only covered the "modernity alienation" part. And it's just a pop song, not a deep, deep, film. Oh well.

            Wait a minute, memory coming back. They had a video, with that kind of urban traffic imagery. Was that made before or after the movie was released, I wonder?

            • So which is it? It uses powerful visuals to convey a message, or it doesn't have a clear message?

              That's what my point has been all along, that there is no one distinct message in the film. It shows you the world from an interesting perspective, but a perspective is different from a message. Whatever meaning you get from the movie comes from your interpretation of the images.

              The original poster was apparently quite annoyed by the "patronizing message" of the film. I don't agree that the message is patronizing, because I don't think there's one particular message that the film expresses. Hey, if anyone doesn't agree, all they have to do is tell me what that message is. If they're right, I won't be able to disagree with them.

              Being incoherent doesn't make something deep.

              No, but I don't think Koyaanisqatsi is incoherent. But for the sake of argument, if Koyaanisqatsi is incoherent...how could it be patronizingly incoherent?

              Certainly not so visually. But in 1982, you could hear part of that perspective in Subdivisions, by the band Rush.

              Again, my point is that this was a new perspective from which to look at the world. Imagery is by its very nature more open to interpretation than verbal or written language, thus a film with no words carries more potential meanings than a book, or a lyrical pop song.

              I'm not saying film is a "deeper" or "better" medium than pop music. I'm just saying this particular kind of film is more open to interpretation, and I think that makes it extremely interesting. Comparing film to pop music is like comparing the proverbial apples and oranges. Not better, just different.

              It's not like this sort of thing is unique to Koyaanisqatsi, either. The message of any number of works of art is debatable. Hamlet, for example--the message is what, that if your dad gets killed, it'll make you sad? What's the message of the Mona Lisa? Beethoven's Ninth? All these things require interpretation to derive meaning from them, and no two people are going to interpret a work of art the same way.

              You could even make the argument that there's a loose correlation between simplicity of message and crappy art. I'd like to cite "Ice Ice Baby," by the renowned composer Vanilla Ice, in which the message seems to be basically that he's rollin, in his 5.0, with the ragtop down so his hair can blow.

    • 's not the point, is it? Or at least, that's what it sounds like to me. It just revels in what's there, doesn't make many statements...just accept some zen into your life, man.
  • News for Hippies? (Score:2, Insightful)

    by Galvatron ( 115029 )
    Stuff to enjoy while high?


    Seriously, I generally try not to complain about the topics they post on, but what the fuck is this crap?

    • Nonono, it took 3.5 terabytes of storage to make the movie. Remember: If the word "terabyte" can be used in conjunction with a story, it must be news for nerds.

      But seriously, I'd like to see more new for hippies on slashdot...

      • Nonono, it took 3.5 terabytes of storage to make the movie. Remember: If the word "terabyte" can be used in conjunction with a story, it must be news for nerds.

        LOLOLOLOL!

        But seriously, I'd like to see more new for hippies on slashdot...

        agreed. but there's always smokedot:
        http://smokedot.org/

  • With imagery like that (which looks more like a crazy montage of everything at deviantart.com), they ought to have Aphex Twin or Autechre do the music. If it's just Philip Glass alone with his orchestra, that will seem out of place..
    • Re:scifi-ish.. (Score:2, Informative)

      by cei ( 107343 )
      "alone with his orchestra" seems like a bit of an oxymoron...

      Glass's ensembles can do some pretty top-notch stuff, though rumor is one of the trumpet players on Koyaanisqatsi had to be gotten really drunk before he'd record his part.

      I just hope the pipe organ is back. Those low D's really shake a theatre.
  • Looks like somebody learned how to run a negative image filter on war footage, IT'S ART!
  • by Avumede ( 111087 ) on Friday September 27, 2002 @12:39AM (#4342145) Homepage
    In my opinion, everyone should watch this movie once a year. It really puts things in perspective. And besides that, the visual and audio artistry are incredible, although Philip Glass isn't everyone's cup of tea.

    Koyaanisqatsi is partly about the modern lifestyle, but in the more general sense, it is about humanity itself. It takes the us out of our routine life, up into a wider viewpoint, where individuality loses its meaning and we can see our lives as closer to what they are. Individual movements blend grossly to show the patterns of life. We are not unique. We follow the same routine. We swarm.

    There are great visual ironies to the film. After showing clips of people rushing around like mad, it shows a person playing Robotron like mad. After showing a bird's eye view of a city, it shows a circuit board.

    Some say that this movie is an environmentalist, or leftist in some way. I think the movie trancends political viewpoints. Watch it once a year to get back your sense of scale. We are statistics.

    • > although Philip Glass isn't everyone's cup of tea.

      Yeah, some pundit once described modern composer John Cage as "a Philip Glass with brains". I think that's way too harsh, though admittedly my response to Glass varies from piece to piece. Some don't interest me, and some are tasty but don't wear too well, but a few are f*king incredible.

      To wit, IMO one of the best legal highs you can get is to listen to Glass's Akhnaten while lying on the floor in a pitch black room with the speakers suitably arranged.

      YMMV, of course. If you're fond of boy bands, this definitely won't be for you. It's an opera, but not of the "fat lady" type your local classical station plays on Saturday afternoons. The lead role is, in fact, sung by a male soprano. The structure, orchestration, and vocals are austere by traditional operatic standards, more like the Who's Tommy than something by Mozart or Rossini. Most of the libretto is taken from ancient Egyptian texts, though one song is in Hebrew - presumably a nod to Freud's famous theory. (I rather suspect that there are several subtexts to this piece.)

      If anyone does decide to give this a try, get the CBS Masterworks edition [glasspages.org], use a changer (yuck) so you won't have to get up just when you get into the groove, and set the volume so that the opening bars are rather quiet, so you won't blow your eardrums together later.

      It's not perfect; in fact I would probably have cut out one scene both for the length and the redundancy, but for most Slashdotters it is probably unlike anything you've ever heard, and the atmosphere is so rich you can get lost in it.

    • In my opinion, everyone should watch this movie once a year. It really puts things in perspective.

      Like...Wow, you don't have to have talent to score a movie? That kind of perspective?

      Granted, I think Glass is an idiot generally, mainly because he practices "Emperor's Clothes" minimalism, where "you know, if I make some pretty sounds and repeat them endlessly rather than actually working to craft something and claim it's part of an intellectual tradition instead of Backstreet Boys for yuppies, Profit!!!!" Steve Reich also took an experiment that should have remained a grad school exercize to influence later, real music to ridiculous extremes--but he's far less pretentious and actually has talent. (Good minimalism is practiced by John Adams.)

      Case in point: there's a big sweep up a cliff that then breaks out over the water of a lake. Now basic timing of music to movie isn't hard (I've done it by hand, and accuracy within a 3rd of a second is pretty easy), and Glass's mind-numbing 1-5-1 theme keeps repeating as you sweep up this cliff. It's SUPPOSED to burst into a moment of actual chords when you break out over the water. And it does--about two seconds previous. It doesn't sound like much, but I was watching and thinking "uh, ok, what am I supposed to see?" Then two beats later, the water appeared. It wasn't an error of tracking the two together, it was Glass's error.

      The images are nicely done in a technical sense, but the "irony" they project is not even close to new, either in technique or style. It was kind of hackneyed five minutes after Metropolis [imdb.com] was released.

      Someone else mentioned this movie was best enjoyed with chemical alteration of your bloodstream. I couldn't agree more. In another context, though, it's called "beer-goggling [theferrett.com]."
      • Well, you don't like Glass, and that's fine. Say what you will, his music is beautiful to some (including me).

        However, I don't believe you can call the timing of some of his scoring "an error". Perhaps Glass made the decision conciously, perhaps because perfect alignment would be predictable, and putting the music earlier creates some tension because there is no visuals to go along with it. We don't know what he though. But we can't assume it was a simple error, because assuming music changes have to align with scene changes is very simplistic.
      • Like...Wow, you don't have to have talent to score a movie? That kind of perspective?

        As another poster mentioned, the director rearranged the shots after Glass had written the music. Specifically, Glass got edited footage for the movie, split it into (IIRC) ~5 minute chunks and wrote the music for each chunk, matching the music to the events onscreen. Reggio then rearranged the shots, attempting to fit the the events to the mood of the music rather than its structure.

        I think that the movie succeeded. I recently watched it, coming to it with absolutely no idea was it was, and I quite liked it. It has been described as a "stoner film", and, while I have no doubt that it would be entertaining while stoned, I thought it quite good while sober.



        --Phil (Now to get around to watching the sequels.)
    • Knock-knock
      Who's there?
      Knock-knock
      Who's there?
      Knock-knock
      Who's there?
      Knock-knock
      Who's there?
      Philip Glass

      Glass-bashing aside, yes, these are some of the most beautiful movies ever made. With the "mute" on :)
  • Baraka? (Score:4, Interesting)

    by majestynine ( 605494 ) on Friday September 27, 2002 @12:45AM (#4342156)
    His idea was to grab images from real life - emotional, raw, honest images - and present them in a non-verbal, non-linear fashion, forging a kind of concert cinema.

    From just this sentence, it sounds a lot like Baraka (1992) [imdb.com], another 'movie'/feature/whatever, that was basically just a bunch of beautiful and mesmerising pieces of footage placed together. No real story, just footage of beautiful places around the world. I would recommend renting the Baraka DVD if you're ever bored one night.

    Baraka also had a wonderful score/sound production. I'd be sure that the Qatsi Trilogy will too.

  • The Naqoyqatsi concept almost beat my utterly amazing imaginary data transfer [cyberian.org] wireless data transfer method ;) -a groundbreaking innovation. It consists of maxicode encoding data and displaying them as a stream on your display and to be captured by a digital camera to achieve a amazing bitrate of 32000 bps. The results after watching the maxicode show is probably very close to what you get by watching this movie.
  • I linked to the forum [naqoy.com] to check out the flash.

    I decided to create a profile, and was surprised that it requires you to print out a 2 page legal waiver {PDF ALERT} [naqoy.com] and fax it to them before you can participate in the forum.

    Since the film is being released by Miramax, the release gives them permission to own in perpetuity throughout the universe anything that you contribute.

    Now that I have posted...I will check out that flash...
  • "A great movie. It was incredibly brought about with the scenic views and such an interesting plot. It was a long 87 minutes. It was very waffling and it got me standing up in my seats. I am a very heavy man and I love to watch movies. Of the many movies I've seen this ranks among the top ten. A wonderful story, rent it and enjoy."

    Apparently this film is very waffling, especially among very heavy men who like to watch movies.

  • I remember when Philip Glass and his Minimilism
    was the rage. Frank Zappa stepped forward and called it what it was: music for and by academia wankers. Glass' overrated sound track was amusing for K-tki but was absolute boring terror for P-tki. I haven't checked the site, but hopefully Telepopmusic or Fatboy Slim, Gus Gus even, or Beck, hell I'll even take N'Sync and Brittany Spears, just please don't bring back Philip Glass.

  • Grrr... (Score:5, Informative)

    by possible ( 123857 ) on Friday September 27, 2002 @01:37AM (#4342302)
    I submitted this story about a month ago and of course it got rejected. Now it gets accepted and it lacks all of the *good* information, such as the fact that a Quicktime trailer [apple.com] has been out for over a month now for Naqoyqatsi.

    The first two (Koyanisqatsi and Powaqatsi) have just been mass released on DVD [amazon.com], in advance of the upcoming theater release of Naqoyqatsi (these words are roughly taken from the Hopi language).

    Godfrey Reggio is an interesting chap -- he grew up in a monastery and when he left, he turned to film. Probably the best thing he ever did was to find Ron Fricke, who is the directory of photography for all 3 qatsi movies. Ron Fricke put out his own film, Baraka [amazon.com] -- the quality of the photography in Baraka is WAY better than in the qatsi movies (because it was filmed 70mm camera rigs of Fricke's own design instead of the 35mm that was available for the qatsi movies), and Baraka takes a less moralizing approach to the imagery. Not to mention Baraka's music is better -- Philip Glass is OK, but the qatsi movies aren't his best work. :) If you buy the Baraka DVD, try to find the original DVD edition [amazon.com] (not the special collector's edition), I've heard lots of complaints that the film->DVD transfer is better in the original DVD.

    And to the slashdot editors -- I know this might get modded down as offtopic, but do a better job. Why not look back through your old rejected stories when you're about to post a "new" (shitty) one?
  • Cheesh,

    Finally an interesting post on Slashdot, first in a long time, and this is what happens...

    I know you all want your dose of M$ did this today, they are bad boo hooo... but come on, this little website here is supposed to open doors to new things to al of you jaded hax00rs (and overload servers while it's at it), now that something comes up, all of you are acting like little kids, making fun of the new kid in school because you don't know him (or her your choise). I understand that some of you don't go for this 'artsy fartsy' stuff, but some slashdotters do.

    Just because in your head your're thinking Nago... naqo.. what a funny name... doesn't mean you have to post. Please, there's enough garbage in this world, I expect slashdot to be a little better.

    That's it for my rant, mod me to hell.
    • Yeah, it's the kind of item that if I had moderator points right now I'd want to give them to the submitter, or maybe to the guy who submitted three weeks ago, or even to Cowboy Neal for letting it through. Hey maybe I should just vote for him in more polls.

      Not needing chemicals to get into trouble, my heaviest dose of K & P came at the end of a long winter's day outside municipal polling booths ... fortunately given how history turned a not quite successful day ... I watched K & P back to back in a local art/nostalgia theatre, since sadly departed.

      Right now I have a problem with my P CD which unfortunately diappeared into an unnoticed slit between my car CD player and a defunct tape player when I was trying to put it in the CD slot during a recent interstate drive, but that isn't stopping me listening to it on iTunes as I type.
  • Total coincidence: I was listening to Powaqqatsi as I read the slashdot story, in the middle of an XSLT/XML debugging session. Not only is this an excellent record, but it is very well suited to software development work!

    BTW I never saw the movie...
  • Any suggestion on where to buy the K/P 2-DVD set for
    region 2? I've checked amazon, but only the US one
    carries it, and it's region 1. (For Baraka you can find the region 2 on the french site).

    Thanks in advance guys!
    • Buy a region-free player.
      OR
      Modify / flash your player.
      OR
      Use a software player that ignores regions.

      Regions suck, but are not too difficult to circumvent.... I bought the 2 DVD's and I'm enjoying them here in Europe ...

  • I watched Powaqatsi a while back, completely straight. It had a big impact on me, I have no idea what the film was trying to potray and don't care, what struck me was the contrast betwean first and third world (especialy being in the eighties). It ledt me with the feeling that modernization/industrialization or whatever drives it is like a parasite on our subconcious.

    I feel like a crack whore wokring in technology - love it, can't get out. OK, maybe just a karma whore :

  • by reflector ( 62643 ) on Friday September 27, 2002 @04:53AM (#4342724)
    i'm going to be seeing koyaanisqatsi oct 13 in san francisco with the philip glass ensemble orchestra playing the score of the film live. apparently they're doing a tour, coming to about a dozen cities in america in october in conjunction with the release of the 3rd of the trilogy. tour dates/locations can be found here:

    http://www.koyaanisqatsi.org/events/events.php

    there's other info on koyaanisqatsi.org, as well.

    • I saw this in Cleveland last October, and it was truly worth the while going out there from Pittsburgh. They are coming to Pittsburgh this year, and I'm planning on going to the 'shorts' show.
    • Next year, January 11th or so. Find information (and book tickets) at the Barbican Centre. It's being performed in the Barbican Hall and Philip Glass will be there.

      Tickets are £20 for the best seats, £10 for the.. 'worst'.
  • by fleeb_fantastique ( 208912 ) <(moc.beelf) (ta) (beelf)> on Friday September 27, 2002 @05:01AM (#4342730) Homepage

    Long ago, when studying film scoring as part of my degree towards music, our final project for the course was to write music for a portion of Koyaanisqatsi.

    I had to write music for the very end, when the rocket goes into the air, and explodes, falling, before an image of a native American work of art fades into view (then the credits).

    Thinking about the film's point, I thought I'd write some of the most contrived music I could imagine for the rocket scene. To that end, I serialized the '90210' zip code (in not-so-fond memory of the soap-opera bearing that name) into musical notes, using that sequence to guide everything, from the rhythms, harmonies, and melodies of the poor score. It had precisely the effect I wanted. A work of music utterly devoid of soul.

    It's amusing to me, now, to learn that Philip Glass rejected serialism [philipglass.com] when he was only 19 years old. I knew what I was doing to the movie was dirty, but I had no idea of the full depths I had sunk.

    • <sigh>

      Flamebait?

      The comment happened exactly as I described. I studied music at UNC-Asheville for four years, working towards a major in Music with an emphasis on composition. Having the opportunity to take the film scoring course delighted me to no end, as it gave me skills and understanding I might never have otherwise gained.

      Maybe some people like 90210 (I guess), but I would have thought I had expressed reverence for Koyannisqatsi, not irreverence. For those who like the soap-opera, my apologies; I am not a fan of television programming in general, and could easily have chosen anything, but selected 90210 because it was a sequence of numbers.
  • Reading this info about Naqoyqatsi, it seems like it's like DJ Shadow. The filmmakers have taken 'samples' of other videos and remixed them into something new and cool.

    The first two films were not like this, but I look forward to this one anyway.
    • well.....in all actuality, the first 2 films ARE like this, just the technology has changed......found sound and sampling of imagry go back much further then Dj Shadow! Check out PlUnDeRpHoNiCs, Evolution Control Committee, negativland, and Orchid Spangiofora just to name a few in music.....then there's always the cut up arwork of Keith Harring, Warhol [obviously] and others........I believe Glass was one of the innovators in the film medium to do this, but then there's always Firesign Theater's "J-Men"!
  • Several Hundred Years Ago (OK, a little over 20) when I was host of a "New Music" radio show in New York, I had Philip Glass as a guest. He was working on Akhenaten at the time, second in his trilogy of operas which included Einstein on the Beach and Satyagraha (all three hold up terrifically to this day, IMO). Art and Muse aside for one moment, I wish to point out that he was among the nicest and least pretentious people -- let alone composer/conductors -- that I have ever met.

    As busy as he was then, he has stayed among the most prolific composers of his generation. He has produced rock albums (mmmm, "Polygon" I think the group was, short-lived early 80's "math-rock" new wave-ish), as well as scores from operas and operettas (he did a wild and disturbing version of Poe's "Tell Tale Heart" which does not seem to get produced much for some reason) down to solo piano pieces. I have seen him on tour, even, at local small colleges, playing some of his piano stuff. The general public tendency is not to think of composers as "working their asses off," but Glass does, still to this day.

    All that said, his score for Powaqaatsi was dreadful IMO, but the Kowyaanasqatsi CD has travelled with me from work, car, home since it was first released. It is brilliant, in every sense of the word.

    If any of this has made you think twice (or even for the first time) about checking Glass' stuff out, and you're looking for an accessible place to start, I can heartily recommend The Photographer [slashdot.org], a "music-theater" piece he did about the life of Edward Muybridge, the photographer whose pictures of horses in motion first clued us in that there are times when the beasts' feet aren't all on the ground (Glass has a knack for selecting bizarre and -- dare I say it? -- geeky topics).

    If you're looking for early and "seminal," and/or want to get out of the lease on your apartment, go with "North Star."

  • at our annual non-denominational pan-conreatational winter solstice festival on December 22nd! As long as it doesn't have any specific references to the symbols/ideas of any one religion...

    [basso rumble]"Happy happy happy...everyone is happy"...
  • is awesome. You have to check it out. http://www.apple.com/trailers/miramax/naqoyqatsi/ [apple.com].

    You won't find these at your usual video store. I've only seen the first one. It is an "experience", but not your traditional "movie".
  • I was just over at Netflix last month, to see whether they had Koyaanisqatsi for rent. Their little recommendation thing said:

    "If you like Koyaanisqatsi, we think you may also enjoy: LA Lakers: NBA Finals 2000."

    (When I told my girlfriend this story, expecting a perfunctory chuckle, she said "Wow, they have the 2000 Lakers DVD? Dude! I'm totally renting that!")

    Can any Reggio/Shaq fans enlighten me as to a possible connection?

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