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d e a f e n i n g
s i l e n c e a film by holly fisher NTSC TRT 118 mins DVD available for preview only
(c)2012 Otherwise Pictures llc all rights reserved
for release
spring 2012 upcoming THE ENVIRONMENTAL FILM FESTIVAL IN THE NATION'S CAPITAL March
20, 2012 - 7PM
National Museum of Women in the Arts 1250 New York Avenue, NW Washington,
DC
synopsis d e a f e n i n g s i l e n c e is a fusion of beauty and terror, observation and
anger, roving visuals and intimate stories either funny, contemplative, or horrific – a subjective, layered depiction
of Burma under brutal military dictatorship. My first trip was legal, shooting video as fake tour guide doing research;
the next was on foot, under-cover with ethnic Karen guerrillas, to film internal exiles surviving a free-fire jungle war
zone. Colonial archives and
clips from You-Tube are cut within this tapestry of fragments, often in ironic counterpoint, and always to pierce the chokehold
of censorship. This is a living history of a country arrested in time, a hybrid documentary focusing on ethnic genocide,
but with constant poetic resonance and a rich multiplicity of references to history and popular culture. |
Below are comments to the filmmaker following several screenings
held during the final stages of completing this work: – from filmmaker & teacher
Bill Brand, April 4, 2011 Hi
Holly, ... It is an amazing accomplishment...hard for me to even imagine mustering the fortitude to go back
to that material and spend the time and effort to make this new - and for me at least - truer film with it... thoroughly
interwoven, slow to reveal its development and structure, insistently visual first, deeply complex in its political and
moral questions and responses, and ultimately very satisfying as a viewing experience. It will be hard as hell to get
to an audience. – from Lian Uk, ethnic Chin exile from Burma, now living near Washington DC,
April 15, 2011 Dear Ms. Holy Fisher ...There were there in the film Moe Thee Zun, May Oo, Zarni and Vumson whom we know
them personally as the staring actors and actress. ... a very good historical document to remind us the intolerable life
we led in the country in which Than Shwe could say now he is in victory to be able to oppress us the people to overcome
all our fight against him in succeeding to complete his repressive seven road map by forming his tricky military regime as
a civil government like a fox covering with a sheep skin...He and his followers twist and turn things like a magician who plays sleight of hands...play the trick to make him
still the supreme power holder as a senior General...by creating all these deceptive civilian feature government and parliament
and President...we are to keep on fighting against his deceptive
constitution with which he performs all these tricks... This film you create will do serve us as one of our weapons to destroy
his tricky and deceptive constitution in restoring the real normal democracy and federalism in the country.
–
from Peter Kinoy, written Oct 8, 2010 Hey Holly,
I meant every word, and the following days I was talking with different people about what an
interesting and successful combination of experimental art film and political activist film Deafening Silence is. ...you
have created a memorable film that challenges the audience, and does not let them become complacent. Each time that
you start people down a cinematic path, just as we, as the viewer, are getting comfortable and relaxing into a scene you
switch it up on us, exactly like in the turmoil of real life. But
what keeps us ultimately tied to the phantasmagorical deluge of imagery is your deep humanity, your compassion for the people
and place, and your outrage against the murderous regime. ...now you have to begin
to penetrate the art world with this piece. You are in a unique position to light a fire under a lot of people who
will come to this film as a brilliant personal artistic statement, and walk away with an increased desire to do something
... This is the hardest part, since Deafening Silence is not your typical agiprop piece (Thank god!) but there-in lies its
strength. a question of sunlight with jose' urbach a film by holly fisher NTSC TRT
93 minutes DVD available for preview only
(c)2012
Otherwise Pictures LLC All rights reserved.
for release spring
2012 synopsis This latest film by Holly Fisher is framed within a series of intimate and free-ranging discussions between
the filmmaker and fellow witness to the attacks on The World Trade Center, visual artist Jose' Urbach. Recorded in
the shadow of the Trade Towers only months after the collapse, this film links 9/11 with the holocaust, via 'the telling
of memories' by Urbach who was witness to both. And by under-scoring frequent and often slippery (!) references to
iconic films and photos, this new work expands Fisher's on-going play especially with layering, or ways of weaving together
image and idea to crack open new modes of perception. Jose' was a Polish
child born into the holocaust; as he watched the first plane smash into The World Trade Center from his kitchen window in lower Manhattan, he had a radical flashback to
his earliest childhood memories. From a child's eye view he recalls former times, other windows...like the bombing
of the Polish airport that triggered the start of World War II. The uncanny irony here is that Jose' was in his mother's
belly that day, not born for another four months! And so stories told in the wake of 9/11 cut
through multiple veils of memory – his own, those internalized from his mother's telling, some in the collective
psyche, and some from films he consumed voraciously from the time the war ended. Unique
to Jose's telling is his desire to 'actualize' his memories, to make them present, timely. His
stories take on a special urgency as his memories are increasingly colored by the growing drumbeat of a US attack on Iraq.
Fisher magnifies this unsettling vacuum between past and future by lacing what at first seem to be random
images within Jose's narrative, culled from her on-going video diary. Imagery ranges from curtains flying out Paris
windows; a Yoshiko Chuma dance piece; "Shock & Awe" on Amsterdam Airport TV; East German film clip directed
by Joris Ivens; to the 'Towers of Light' projected annually at the site of The World Trade Center – for resonance
or even just a breath of air.... The format here is deceptively simple – talking head/jumpcuts/spare
imagery/minimal sounds – but as the film plays out over time the viewer is drawn into Fisher's intricate weave
of seen and/or imagined stories in a psychic co-existance of past and present, sandwiched within the
prospect of yet another pending war...

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please note: WATERMEN, a documentary film by Holly Fisher & Romas V Slezas - 63 mins, 1965 screened
at The Environmenal Film Festival in The Nation's Capital, March 23, 2011 co-Director Holly Fisher introduced this
film that documents the lives of three generations of Chesapeake Bay oyster fishermen who work
the last fleet of sailing workboats in North America. Carnegie Institution for Science Elihu Root Auditorium 1530 P Street, NW, Washington, DC
CONTACT:
(for purchase, questions, or other info)
hollyfisher62@gmail.com (this website is a work-in-progress!)
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e v e r y w h
e r e a t o n c e
with
jeanne moreau directed by holly fisher & peter lindbergh text by kimiko hahn music by lois v vierk TRT: 73 mins (c) 2010 by Peter Lindbergh blog by patty zimmerman: FLEFF - OPEN SPACES Friday,
November 13, 2009  Posted by Patricia Zimmermann at 4:14PM |
Everywhere
at Once, a film by Holly Fisher "It's more about a kind of structuring, where the viewer
is at the center of the piece," offered experimental filmmaker and editor Holly Fisher. She described
her improvisational process in dealing with images and editing strategies: "It's a weave."
I am sitting in the art deco Alabama Theater in Houston, Texas,
at a workshop on Experimental Cinema and the Visual Arts on day two of the newly launched Houston
Cinema Arts Festival, curated by Richard Herskowitz. Holly Fisher and Jennifer Reeves
are discussing their films and their digital arts practices. They jettison narrative for layers of psychic and
emotional immersion, for a sense of liveness and tactility that transcends the image as representational.
They conjure the image as a threshold into sensual and psychic experience. Last night, Fisher, an influential figure in American experimental and documentary
cinema (she was the editor of the landmark documentary Who Killed Vincent Chin? in 1989 and
is the director of Bullets for Breakfast made in 1995), screened her new work Everywhere
at Once. It's what I would call a cinematic portrait of how women are visualized and idealized
in what the festival program says is a "sumptuous" film reflecting on
love, beauty and mortality. It felt like one of those only-in-Texas-bigger-than-life-screenings:
a difficult and demanding experimental work in a multiplex theater in downtown Houston, with
an image as big as the Texas sky, with great sound to boot. In this context, the film had an
epic quality few experimental films can sustain (so epic and operatic for the audience that none of us knew until
after the screening that the digital video had been mistakenly screening in 4 x 5 format rather than
the more horizontal 16 x9). All of the audience stayed for the discussion, utterly entranced.
Repurposing and conjuring the photographs of arts and movie stars by sophisticated
fashion photographer Peter Lindbergh, Everywhere at Once features an evocative
voiceoiver written by poet Kimiko Hahn. The voice over is read by Jeanne Moreau, a major iconic figure of the
French New Wave. Her gravely voice contrasts with the sleek modernist fashion images. The film
is an opera of the everyday and the psychic labyrinths women inhabit. It's a film about
dreams, about feelings abandoned, inaccessible and lost. The first image of the film provides
a clue into its visual strategies: a woman is photographed from above in a fetal positon,
a spiral into the self where leg and hand and back transform into a spiral. In the
stunning Everywhere at Once, the interiority of the mind scrapes against the balanced
compositions of the photographs of women posed for glamor shots, modeling fashions, selling
films. A close up of Moreau's craggy, aging face repeats throughout. Is this a biography
of Moreau's psychic landscapes over time? Is this a fiction about aging, about the small moments
of life like hotel rooms and the textures of fabric on skin? Is it a film about memories floating down
the rivers of the mind and then bubbling out in the small details of life?
The film functions as a series of transformations and layers: photographs are spun and
lit with shadows, clips for Moreau's films waft like apparitions, post minimalist music comes
and goes. It's exquisite. As Fisher shared in the post-screening discussion, the film
dances on the "edges between biography and fiction." After seeing Lindbergh's
photos (who shares a codirector credit with Fisher on Everywhere at Once), she told
him she wanted to rip the coffee table books apart--- the images where too pretty. With
a skilled animator, she played with light and shadows over the images in the studio, and plotted complex
moves across the photos that exorcise the images. It couldn't be further from Ken Burns, whose style treats
images like holy relics. Fisher's oeuvre hovers between
rigorous structure and improvisational plays. Resonating with her other works,
Everywhere at Once is composed of layers: music, poetry, photographs, archival images, movie
clips, and the everyday. It's a film that takes large iconic images ladened with cultural associations
(images of Isabella Rossellini, the model Verushka, Moreau) and scrapes them down and washes
away their overderterminations. In the question and answer
period, Fisher shared that when Jeanne Moreau saw Everywhere at Once in Paris, she turned
to the director and said, "You are a witch." Indeed, Fisher brews up the most complex yet evocative
order. She creates palimpsests, those scrolls where words and images are scraped and reused and
layered. Fisher is a sorceress of the palimpsest, that space that is comprised of many
spaces, many feelings, many journeys, many voices, many dislocations.
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biography Holly Fisher
has been active since the mid-sixties as an independent filmmaker, teacher, and editor of feature documentaries - including
the 1989 Academy Award Nominee “Who Killed Vincent Chin?” Since the early 1970's she has made numerous personal, experimental
films around issues of narrative, memory, and perception. Her films are
often a fusion of linear narrative with non-linear and increasingly layered and cyclic structures, as a way to position the viewer at the subject/center
of the work as it unfolds – in pursuit of presence. Her silent film
“Rushlight” was included in the 1982 Whitney Biennial, and won Best Film at The Black Maria Film Festival. Fisher's
films were the subject of a retrospective at The Museum of Modern Art in 1995. "Bullets for Breakfast" – a visual mosaic of story-telling woven within
a visually rich and repetitive form – premiered at the 1992 Berlin International Film Festival, and won “Best Experimental Film Award" at the Anne Arbor Film Festival in 2001. Her next work was an experimental essay about
tourism, media, and human rights in Burma – “Kalama Sutta: seeing is believing" – which also premiered in The Forum of The Berlin Film Festival. Both feature works toured the international festival circuit to
considerable acclaim. Fisher’s recent
e v e r y w h e r e a t o n c e – "an entrancing, poetic meditation
on aging, memory and female psychic landscapes"(Patty Zimmerman - BLOG above) – was made in collaboration with
photographer Peter Lindbergh, narrated by actress Jeanne Moreau, and had its world premier at the 2008 Tribeca Film Festival (filmed in hi-def, blown up to 35mm for distribution). This is a layered and shifting weave of Lindbergh's still photos re-imagined by
the filmmaker and
laced with clips from Moreau's performance in Tony Richardson's 1966 film "Madmoiselle." The project is driven
by a unique interplay of text by Japanese-American poet Kimiko Hahn and original music by avant-garde composer Lois V Vierk. As a film made almost entirely from what began as a large box of Lindbergh's still photographs, this
work pushes boundaries
between biography and fiction, while raising intriguing questions around issues of authorship. The project had an avant-premiere
screening at The Cannes Film Festival in 2007, a year before premiering in Tribeca; was featured at the Cinema Arts Festival
Houston, 2009; and Le Festival International du Film sur L'Art (FIFA) in Montreal, 2010. General release in DVD,
35mm, & book version of this work is pending. d e a f e n i
n g s i l e n c e (120 mins, video, 2011) is Fisher's new and second
project about Burma. Here is a subjective and poetic living
history that weaves together images of daily life in a frontier war zone – with issues of human rights, media, memory,
and other traces of 'the human condition' in the early 21st century. Her earlier film "Kalama Sutta" was template
for this fresh work framed within the filmmaker's
return trip to Burma. Traveling with ethnic rights
advocate Naw May Oo and pro-democracy advocate Maung Zarni, now protagonists in both works, Fisher went this time through ‘the back door’ of Thailand – by boat, on foot, and under escort
of ethnic Karen guerrilla soldiers. Especially with the completion
of this latest project, one can see that through both her professional editing work and her personal films, Fisher has for decades explored a play
with linear narrative as counter-point within her ever-expanding cyclical and multi-layered ways of structuring. Here is what the filmmaker hopes to be a rigorous yet playful, complex, and highly
visual mix of rhythm and story-telling; and yes, beauty. Holly Fisher
has taught film production at Massachusetts College of Art and at Sarah Lawrence College. Her films are in the collections of The Donell Film Library,
The Museum of Modern Art, and Parabola Arts Foundation. Her work is distributed by The Museum of Modern Art, NYC; Lightcone,Paris;
Freunde der Deutschen Kinemathek,Berlin; and Women Make Movies, NYC; by herself. She is currently
creating large digital prints for gallery exhibition, from images pulled from her earlier optically-printed films; and from
video images culled from her new video work, filmed in the war zone of Burma’s eastern frontier. Fisher is also working on a
new project for video installation, concerning links between 911 and the Holocaust. This work-in-progress will center in reflections of
her artist friend and neighbor in lower Manhattan, Jose' Urbach, who is witness and survivor of both.

filmography (selected, 1966 –
2011) note: most titles are in the
collections and/or circulating film libraries of The
Museum of Modern Art; The Donnell Film Library of The New York Public Library; Lightcone,Paris; Freunde der Deutschen Kinemathek,Berlin; and Women Make Movies, NYC. Does not include Holly Fisher's editor-only
titles. d e a f e n i n
g s i l e n c e, video & mixed media, 120 minutes. directed, filmed, edited by holly
fisher. With Saw Mg Hla, Naw May Oo, Zarni, Ka Hsaw Wa, others. In Burmese and English, with English subtitles, for release spring, 2011, (c)
2011 by Otherwise Pictures llc.
everywhere at once ©2010 by Peter Lindbergh - 73 minutes directed by Holly Fisher & Peter Lindbergh - for hi-def or 35 mm projection, French & English
versions - experimental flm essay made in collaboration with photographer Peter Lindbergh, with and narrated by Jeanne
Moreau. Text by Kimiko Hahn, Music by Lois V Vierk. Originally premiered at TriBeCa Film Festival 2008, re-released
2010 & screened Houston International Film Festival and FIFA, Montreal. Will be released for DVD and book distribution,
2011. kalamasutta: seeing is believing, 2001, video, 90 minutes. World Premier, The Forum, Berlin International
Film Festival. (see info below!)
Screened at Flaherty International Film Seminar. BULLETS FOR BREAKFAST, 1992, 16mm, 77 minutes. "Best
Experimental Film" Ann Arbor Film Festival. Screened at Flaherty
International Film Seminar; Whitney Biennial,
1993 S O F T S H O E, 1987, 16mm, 21 minutes. Award, Sinking Creek Experimental Film Festival. RUSHLIGHT, 1984, 16mm, 18fps,
silent, 40 minutes. Award, Black Maria Film Festival; Whitney Biennial, 1985. GHOST DANCE, 1980, 16mm,
18 fps, 25 minutes. For duel projection, side-by-side & projected out of phase, as performance by filmmaker. THIS IS MONTAGE, 1978, 7
minutes, silent, 18 fps.
CHICKENSTEW, 1978, 16mm, 10 minutes. FROM THE LADIES, 1977, 16mm, 25 minutes. GLASS SHADOWS, 1976, 16mm,
12 minutes. APPLE SUMMER, 1974 , 16mm, 25 minutes. Premiered at the Flaherty International Film Seminar. OFFSEASON, 1972, 16mm, 10
minutes. SUBWAY, 1970, 16mm, 5 minutes, with Benjamin Melnick. PSSSHT, 1968, 16mm, 5
minutes, color, sound, co-made with Romas V.Slezas (c) 2011 by Fisher-Slezas Films Inc. Award, Ann Arbor Film Festival. WATERMAN, 1968, 16mm, 16mm, color,
63 minutes, co-made with Romas V. Stezas. (c) 2011 Fisher-Slezas Films Inc. Bronze Medal, Atlanta International Film Festival. Screened 2009 & 2010 on Maryland Public Television; screened at 2011 Environmental
Film Festival, Washington, DV. PROGRESS.
PORK-BARREL, and PHEASANT FEATHERS, 1966, 16mm, b&w, 28
minutes, co-made with Romas V.Slezas. Blue Ribbon, American Film Festival, 1966. Distributed by
Leo Dratfield, Contemporary Films. & McGraw Hill, (c)2011 by Fisher-Slezas Films Inc.
| kalamasutta: seeing is believing (c) 2001 |
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Synopsis KALAMA SUTTA: Seeing is Believing is a 90 minute video documentary in which a trip to Burma is transformed
into a meditation on human rights and media. Burma (renamed by the military junta in 1990 to „Union of Myanmar“)
is ruled by a military dictatorship with one of the world‘s worst records on human rights. Hence, the restoration
of democracy and peace as well as the protection of human rights are fundamental issues in this pristine country that
had been isolated from outside influence for nearly four decades. Where hilltribes fetch water with hollow bamboo as the
junta seeks business on the internet, Burma shows through startling contrasts how globalization impacts land and people.
Our focus is on Burma. Yet, Burma also acts as a conduit to explore the impact of militarism, ethnic struggles, (neo-) colonialism,
violence, and our common vulnerability in a globalized world. As living history, KALAMA SUTTA explores
the gap between the Burma recently opened for tourist consumption and the other, hidden Burma off-limits to the visitor.
In a country whose citizens can get long prison terms for possessing a fax or a computer modem, the reality one perceives
as a traveler must be a distorted one. Three weeks traveling inside Burma confirmed that the only access to what was really
going on was through secondary sources like conversations with refugees and exiles in the West; the internet; and assorted
media. Never has so much information been available, at a time when it is equally possible for a tourist to savor The Golden
Land without ever knowing about the “trouble in paradise“. On that background this poetic documentary looks
into human rights issues, yet, in the case of Burma, it necessarily becomes an investigation into the truth of appearances. Under the guise of video-toting tour operators, Holly Fisher and Katherine Pieratos traveled to Burma soon
after its government launched an ambitious tourist campaign. The stunning footage gathered on the trip is both backdrop
and smokescreen for a film that probes appearances and investigates harsher, hidden realities. Testimonies
from Burmese exiles leading the struggle for democracy and indigenous rights and from others carry this living history of
Burma forward. Woven throughout lyrical, often playful footage shot inside Burma; internet and undercover footage; colonial
home movies; and archival material, compelling characters talk about the forced labor and torture, ethnic cleansing, land
abuse and their struggle for survival concealed behind the veneer of the „Visit Myanmar“ campaign. Visual juxtapositions,
elements of Burmese popculture and personal narratives invite the audience to discover the resilience, wit, and courage
within the horrific Burma story. The Kalama Sutta has been described as „the Buddha‘s Charter
on Free Inquiry“. This discourse, evoked at the beginning of the film by Burma‘s Foreign Minister, is about
encouraging one to doubt appearance, blind faith and entrenched tradition. The foreign minister uses the charter to underscore
his invitation for tourism and foreign investment to the Burma he describes as serene. „Come and see for yourself“,
he says. „Seeing is believing“. While the official may not be accurate about the reality in his country, he
precisely catches the spirit of this work. His words „seeing is believing“ run as a critical leitmotiv throughout
the film. Credits KALAMA SUTTA: Seeing
is Believing??Director: Holly Fisher Producers: Holly Fisher and Katherine Pieratos Editor: Holly Fisher Camera: Holly Fisher Sound: Holly Fisher Additional camera: Katherine Pieratos Length:
90 min. Color Original Language: English; several Burmese languages Subtitles: English Characters:
May Oo, Moe Thee Zun, Zarni, Min Zin, Ka Hsa Wa Contact: Holly Fisher tel/fax: 001-212-349.5445 hollyfisher62@gmail.com © 2001 by Holly Fisher All Rights Reserved. |
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