Your email was sent successfully. Check your inbox.

An error occurred while sending the email. Please try again.

Proceed reservation?

Export
Filter
Type of Medium
Language
Region
Library
Years
1
UID:
kobvindex_ZLB15192240
Format: 1 DVD-Video (86 Min. + Bonus) , Tonformat: DD/2.0 , Bildformat: 16:9 anamorphic widescreen
Edition: 1
Note: Ländercode: 0 , Orig.: Neuseeland, 1984 , Engl.
Language: English
Library Location Call Number Volume/Issue/Year Availability
BibTip Others were also interested in ...
Associated Volumes
  • 2
    UID:
    kobvindex_ZLB15226495
    Format: (ca. 50 Min.)
    Content: Malfred Signal leaves her life of stifling gentility, (as an art teacher in a South Island private girls school), and decides to live out her dream Ń painting alone in the remote North. One terrifying night, beset by a prowler, but confronting only her own image at every step, she relives her past. A State of Siege articulates a tense and strange poetry of life, in a social and spiritual backwater. Where the apparent uniformity and calm holds unfamiliar experience and unknown dangers. (Vincent Ward films)
    Note: Orig.: Neuseeland, 1978
    In: Vigil : [DVD-Video], [S.l.], [ca. 2009], (2009)
    Language: English
    Library Location Call Number Volume/Issue/Year Availability
    BibTip Others were also interested in ...
  • 3
    UID:
    kobvindex_ZLB15251819
    Format: 45 Min.
    Content: His new film is a documentary, In Spring One Plants Alone, which was filmed over 18 months and catalogues an elderly Maori woman's efforts to look after her sick middleaged son, the two of them living in very poor conditions in the country. What excites me about this film is the way the audience is made to work, to participate, to come to terms with what the film is 'saying'; for there is very little dialogue and, more importantly, no voice-over narration. This absence of narration distinguishes Ward's film to its advantage, from the more traditional (and potentially, boring) type of standard N.Z. Documentary (exemplified by product from the N.F.U.) The only indication that the time-span does in fact cover 18 months is the occasional change in weather (in one shot we become aware that it is raining heavily; is it winter now?). The film's 'story' as such is conveyed through a series of short scenes, composed of selected images beautifully photographed by Alun Bollinger and Leon Narbey. The camera will often concentrate on particular details in an individual scene - flexing hands, faces, feet emerging from the doorway, the everyday objects of the mother and son's life. There is a purely aesthetic quality to the images which gives the film a pictorial strength - take, for example, the magical shot near the beginning of the film of two white horses emerging from the mist. Such effects are obtained throughout the film. The minimal dialogue provides a sound-track which is extremely sensitive to the mood of the house. Significant noises are on a couple of occasions highlighted by the camera's observation of the cats' reactions to them. Jack Body's music fits perfectly the mood of the film. There are several individual scenes which are a pure delight in their warmth of feeling, such as the scene in the barber shop, or when the mother unwraps an ice-block for her son. An even more touching scene is when she stands outside her house and talks directly to the camera about her fears regarding her son's outbursts of violence. The final shot conveys wonderfully the mood the film ends in and also demonstrates Ward's ability to use cinema effectively: the camera, in close-up on the old lady cutting wood outside, pulls back to reveal her son standing with his back to his mother (and to the camera) and staring at the trees behind; the camera then shifts slightly to the right and the credits come up. This is a N.Z. film which in no way needs to be treated condescendingly, to be apologised for, which can easily be judged on world standards and recognised as a superb and very moving film. I cannot think of enough superlatives to express the total enthusiasm in my reaction to this film. If the chance arises, make sure you see this film. - Ian Johnston, Craccum, 1980. (Film Society, Wellington)
    Note: Orig.. Neuseeland, 1980 , The true, moving story of how a 84 year old Maori woman struggles to care for her handicapped 40 year old son.
    In: Vigil : [DVD-Video], [S.l.], [ca. 2009], (2009)
    Keywords: Maori ; Mutter / Sohn ; Behinderter Mensch ; Pflegebedürftiger ; Erlebnisbericht ; DVD-Video ; Erlebnisbericht ; DVD-Video ; Erlebnisbericht
    Library Location Call Number Volume/Issue/Year Availability
    BibTip Others were also interested in ...
Close ⊗
This website uses cookies and the analysis tool Matomo. Further information can be found on the KOBV privacy pages