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Su Friedrich Lynn Bell is in the masters journalism program at the University of Western Ontario and has written an undergraduate thesis on Su Friedrich's films. Michael Zryd teaches film studies at the University of Western Ontario and writes on avant-garde/experimental and documentary film. |
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| Su Friedrich's films achieve a unique synthesis of formal structures
and human experience that solidifies her position as one of the most important
contemporary experimental filmmakers in America. Her body of work articulates
a complex feminist and lesbian analysis of social and cultural discourses,
rituals, institutions, and power structures. Friedrich's films probe these
concerns through intimate perspectives of emotional experience: dreams (Gently
Down the Stream [1981]), sexuality and religion (Damned If You Don't
[1987]), marriage (First Comes Love [1991]), break-ups (Rules
of the Road [1993]), adolescence (Hide and Seek [1996]), relationships
to parents and family (The Ties That Bind [1984] and Sink or Swim
[1990]), and, in her most recent work, health and illness (The Odds of
Recovery [2002]). From her beginnings in the American feminist movement of the late 1970s, Friedrich has articulated the slogan the personal is political with innovative language and narrative forms. Intense and specific personal experiences sound out striking resonances with larger social, political, and sexual structures. As Friedrich puts it, You get to something universal by being very specific [...] I think you have to start at home. But while the emotional textures of Friedrich's work are personal, they are also highly mediated, influenced by the modernist legacy of the structural filmmakers of the 1970s. (1) Her work is innovative and accessibleand beautiful (she is renowned for her expertise in black and white cinematography and optical printing). Friedrich's ability to synthesize the stylistic and conceptual legacy of avant-garde film practice with an analytical sense of human experience makes her exemplary of the evolution of American experimental film practice from the 1980s to the present. In this era film artists freed themselves from the often doctrinaire politics of 1970s avant-garde film practice to pursue new directions of both formal and social invention. Friedrich first attended the University of Chicago before graduating Phi Beta Kappa from Oberlin College in 1974 with a background in Art and Art History. From the mid-'70s to the early-'80s, Friedrich worked in still photography and supported herself as a graphic artist in New York while doing volunteer activist organizing in feminist organizations, programming screenings, and writing for Downtown Review and Heresies: a Feminist Journal on Art and Politics. She credits courses at Millennium Film Workshop, an important (and affordable) experimental film production and exhibition institution, for facilitating her entry into filmmaking.
Gently Down the Stream shifts to what Friedrich calls the messy logic of dreams. (5) The genesis of the film involved Friedrich's revisiting her dream journals, recorded over eight years, which uncovered a wealth of rich personal imagery, much of it negotiating conflicts between the repressions demanded by her Catholic upbringing and lesbian sexual desire. She condensed 96 dreams down to 40 in a rough cut of the film, and then down to the 14 dreams of the completed film. (These function like chapters; Friedrich also released a small press printed version of the film.) Meanwhile, she condensed image and word by scratching letters directly onto celluloid, letter by letter or word by word, making language a dynamic graphic element, and actively engaging the viewer in the process of creating syntax. The silence of the film ensures that, as Friedrich says, the viewer will hear any voice but that of a recorded narrator; the intense pull of the words' trajectory, combined with the careful control of movement in the frame achieved through Friedrich's optical printing, creates a remarkable rhythm seeming to float atop the water imagery which permeates the film and is echoed in the song from which the film's title is derived (Row, row, row your boat / Gently down the stream / Merrily, merrily, merrily / Life is but a dream). Although hardly linear, the film gradually progresses from darkness to light, and from anger and guilt to release. The first dream starts the film indoors (Wander through large quiet rooms) as ghostly images of the Madonna flicker through the gate; the film concludes with hummingbirds humming on my tongue in a playful, anarchic, and joyful dance of words and letters scratched directly into the images of water and sparkling light. By concentrating on her most intensely personal conflicts (I chose to work with dreams that were the most troubling to me, that expressed my deepest fears, anxieties or longings) she also worked through recognizably social and political concerns with sexuality, feminism, and religion, using images both disquieting (I make a second vagina / beside my first one / I look in surprise / Which / is the original?) and slyly ironic (Building a model house for / some man / Do it / without getting paid / Do it / wrong). The importance to Friedrich's practice of working through the personal with mediating formal structures is reflected in two other (less successful) films from this period. Before making Gently Down the Stream, Friedrich made I Suggest Mine (1980, not in distribution), in which she tried to do something very personal, entirely about me. I failed miserably. As she notes, she needed some sort of distance from such personal material (6). But No One (1982), the film that Friedrich made after Gently Down the Stream, echoes its technique and foundation of dream imagery, but loosens the condensation so crucial to the earlier film. But No One uses a single dream, one that disturbed me because of its seeming amorality and passivity, and illustrates it with straight-forward, vernacular images from Friedrich's neighborhood: fish being sorted at the fishmonger, construction workers and prostitutes working on the street. As Friedrich's program notes indicate, the dream is dominated by guilt and resists the libratory working through of Gently Down the Stream: In the dream, I was unable to act according to my good conscience. When I woke up, the prostitutes were outside my window, still hard at work. On a walk, I saw men building up and tearing down the city. Meanwhile, fish were being slaughtered for my evening meal. While hardly a failure, the film lacks the thoughtful urgency that would propel Friedrich's filmmaking into the more complex and longer film projects that form the core of her oeuvre.
A poignant testimony to the limits of agency, The Ties That Bind considers the genocidal atrocities of World War II from Friedrich's non-Jewish German mother's perspective. In text scratched directly onto the film stock, Friedrich ponders, And after I blame the Germans OR WISH THAT MY MOTHER COULD HAVE DONE SOME THING ANY THING I ask myself what I would have done. The film then cuts to a shot of a letter: My dear Friend; I need your help in combating a new wave of anti-Semitism that is sweeping Europe. The words I got this in the mail last week follow in scratched text. Here, Friedrich establishes a connection with her contemporary political situation, and at once establishes the persistence of racism (specifically anti-Semitism) in our culture, and provides examples of action that can be taken to mitigate its pervasiveness. Earlier in the film, the narrator says in August 1983, and in text, one word at a time, I went to an army depot in rural New Yorkimages of riot officerswith 2500 other womenimages of protestors being dragged awayto oppose yet againmore images of protestorsyet again anotherimages of protestorswar. Friedrich, then, answers the very question that she poses to herself, suggests that there are alternatives for positive action, does not suggest that she can answer this question definitively for her mother, nor speak with authority about the possibilities of resistance that may or may not have existed in her mother's time.
Sink Or Swim, Friedrich's poignant autobiographical film about her father, is perhaps her most celebrated work, synthesizing her recurrent emotional, analytical, and formal concerns. Friedrich tells the story of her relationship to her father through 26 chapters, each corresponding to a letter of the alphabet. Notably, this structure of development is presented backwards from Z to A, suggesting the rebellious nature of Friedrich's project: to 'unlearn' her upbringing, and attempt to exorcise some of the founding traumas of a childhood stamped by a sometimes abusive, but mostly absent father. Referencing his career as a linguist, Friedrich literally turns language back upon itself and moves through the alphabet from end to beginning. Friedrich also invokes the myths of Zeus and Aphroditeanother Z to A trajectory. If myths were created a posteriori to explain the afflictions of human existence, so Friedrich uses film to reconstruct the events of her own life in order to understand how these influences have coloured her perspective. Friedrich reflects upon the assumptions inherent in accepting the more monolithic structures of our culture as centres of originary meaning by producing a version of history that, while it appears to chart a normalized progression, actually teases out meaning through juxtaposition and reflection rather than direct experience (notably, a self-reflection of which her father seems incapable). The social institutions that pose as centres of meaning are themselves endowed with shifting cultural valences. The reflective capacity of the film ensures, as well, that Sink or Swim does not simply demonize the father; rather there remains a tie that bindsbut now characterized by the ambivalence of both interpolation and loss. On the one hand, Friedrich captures the complexity of her personal loss and yearning to communicate with her father in the section entitled Ghosts. It opens with an image, in ghostly negative, of a typewritten text: The sound of the typewriter keys accompanies the text but fades to silence over the conflict between memory and the present, suggesting its ephemerality and poignancy. In spite of her desire to have him understand, the gap that has been created in their relationship as a result of her father's departure remains unbreachable, even in the girl's imagination; all that remains is the precarious and careful dance between ecstasy and tragic despair. On the other hand, Friedrich's adult sensibility gains a perspective which can contextualize and understand her father's subjectivity. In an interview with Scott MacDonald entitled Daddy Dearest, Friedrich comments that abuse is more likely because of the inhuman situations that are intrinsic to a society that divides roles along gender lines. (7) By linking her personal story to a pervasive cultural ethos at the level of myth, Friedrich reveals the problematics of patriarchal assumptions of authority. While she refuses to excuse her father's abusive behaviour, Friedrich recuperates positive results from her childhood experience. Judith Mayne has observed that:
In 1993, Friedrich released her only videotape, The Lesbian Avengers Eat Fire Too, an hour long documentary on the political action group The Lesbian Avengers, of which Friedrich was a member. Composed of footage documenting the group's actions, the tape is a collaboration with Janet Baus, and is, as Friedrich herself notes, an anomaly in her work, more agit-prop than art, and motivated by different intentions:
Friedrich's films, as a whole, centralize images of women's bodies and unreservedly exhibits the aesthetic seductiveness of female flesh and movement. Close-ups of body parts, even as they offer fragmented glimpses of women, are associated with moving bodies engaged in dancing, clapping, rowing, playing cards or swimming, to name but a few examples. The effects of this aesthetic treatment of women's bodies is not to [turn] the represented figure into a fetish so that it becomes reassuring rather than dangerous, (12) but simply to appreciate the beauty and strength of these women and their movements. Friedrich discusses her commitment to the creation of cinematic pleasure in her interview with Scott MacDonald: There was a period when I thought it was important to deny myself everything, including all kinds of film pleasure, in order to be politically correct and save the world, but I think if you do that, you deplete yourself and then have nothing to offer the rest of the world. (13) A valuable element of Friedrich's reappropriation of pleasure for women derives from her reappropriation of mainstream productions that seemingly deny the existence of lesbian desire. One interview subject in Hide and Seek talks about how she was able to 'play' with conventional media images as a child in order to make the scenarios conform to her own same-sex fantasies. While they watched the television show The Monkees, the woman played out the scene with her girlfriend. They pretended that one of them was Davy Jones and the other was a woman he was kissing. The two girls would then enact romantic encounters by packing suitcases and imagining that they were going to a hotel together, and then cuddling, naked, on the bed. By overlaying the dialogue with images from the television show, the film simultaneously emphasizes the tremendous power of media depictions of heterosexuality and attests to the even greater flexibility of human imagination. Repeatedly in her films, Friedrich's ability to balance affective and intellectual responses dramatizes the decidedly mixed reactions that marginalized spectators can have to productions that are at once appealing and alienating. Friedrich reveals, not only how political structures have the potential to oppress, but how they can be, however provisionally, overcome. Friedrich is not content to offer conclusive or facile answers. She balances mitigating circumstances, conflicted intentions, and self-reflexive hypotheses to open up the diverse and multifaceted possibilities of interpretation and growth. The agency with which it is possible to redirect one's life is not depicted by Friedrich as capable of overcoming all obstacles; rather, small accomplishments that lead along a path of emancipation are recognized and celebrated. She does not pretend that it is not a painful process, but she encourages the indulgence of pleasuresincluding cinematic pleasuresthat bolster and sustain well-being. © Lynn Bell and Michael Zryd, December 2002 Endnotes:
Filmography Hot Water (1978) 12 mins, super-8, b&w, soundCool Hands, Warm Heart (1979) 16 mins, 16mm, b&w, silent Scar Tissue (1979) 6 mins, 16mm, b&w, silent I Suggest Mine (1980) 6 mins, 16mm, b&w, silent Gently Down the Stream (1981) 14 mins, 16mm, b&w, silent, 18fps But No One (1982) 9 mins, 16mm, b&w, silent The Ties That Bind (1984) 55 mins, 16mm, b&w, sound Damned If You Don't (1987) 42 mins, 16mm, b&w, sound Sink or Swim (1990) 48 mins, 16mm, b&w, sound First Comes Love (1991) 22 mins, 16mm, b&w, sound Rules of the Road (1993) 31 mins, 16mm, color, sound Lesbian Avengers Eat Fire (1994) 60 mins, video, color, sound Hide and Seek (1996) 65 mins, 16mm, b&w, sound The Odds of Recovery (2002) 65 mins., 16mm, color, sound OTHER CREDITS Festival Awards Hide and Seek: SPECIAL JURY PRIZE, 1997 New York Gay & Lesbian Film Festival OUTSTANDING DOCUMENTARY FEATURE AWARD, 1997 OutFest, Los Angeles BEST NARRATIVE AWARD, 1997 Athens Film Festival JUROR'S CHOICE AWARD, 1997 Charlotte Film Festival HONORABLE MENTION, 1997 Atlanta Film Festival Rules of the Road: DIRECTOR'S CHOICE AWARD, 1994 Black Maria Film Festival HONORABLE MENTION, 1994 Univ. of Oregon Queer Film Festival SPECIAL COMMENDATION, Kino Awards, 1993 Melbourne Film Festival CERTIFICATE OF MERIT, 1993 Cork International Film Festival Sink or Swim: GOLD JURORS CHOICE AWARD, 1993 Charlotte Film and Video Festival GRAND PRIX, Kino Awards, 1991 Melbourne Film Festival GOLDEN GATE AWARD, Best of "New Visions" Category, 1991 San Francisco Film Fest SPECIAL JURY AWARD, 1991 Atlanta Film Festival BEST EXPERIMENTAL FILM, 1991 USA Short Film and Video Festival JUROR'S CITATION AWARD, 1991 Black Maria Film Festival Damned If You Don't: BEST EXPERIMENTAL FILM AWARD, 1990 Athens Film Festival BEST EXPERIMENTAL NARRATIVE FILM AWARD, 1988 Atlanta Film Festival Cool Hands, Warm Heart: SPECIAL MERIT AWARD, 1983 Athens Film Festival Select Bibliography Stephanie Beroes, "Interviews With
New York Filmmakers", Cinematograph # 2, 1986, pp. 68-71 Articles in Senses of Cinema Sink
or Swim by Michael Zryd Web Resources Compiled by Albert Fung
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