Arabic Numeral Series 9

Arabic Numeral Series 9

Release date : January 18, 1981
Runtime : 12m
Countries of origin :
Original Language :
Director : Stan Brakhage /
Writers :
Production companies :
January 18, 1981 12m More
10
User Score

Overview

“With some exceptions, the Arabics take the idea of the void as their ground. That is, the light we do see almost always seems to be set against darkness, or occasionally against white, these momentary flickers that materialize tenuously out of emptiness. But the darkness is not ‘night,’ or even simply some more abstract absence of light, but a more profound vacuum: it represents a world stripped of all the coordinates of the known, an unmeasurable absence. […] These lushly sensual, pleasurable-to-view films are also terrifying: their unpredictability, continually enacting new dramas of surprise, alternatively swamps the viewer in light and leaves him adrift in darkness.”
More »

Top Billed Cast

More

Images

View All Images

Recommendations

More
Private House of the SS
Drama War History Horror
Search
Science Fiction Mystery
One Way Out
Crime Drama Mystery
Pollinator
Science Fiction Thriller Drama
Fights Break Sphere 3
Adventure Action Fantasy
  • title:Arabic Numeral Series 9
  • status:Released
  • Release date: 1981
  • Runtime:12m
  • Genres:
  • Countries of origin:
  • Original Language:
  • Director: Stan Brakhage /
  • Writers:
  • Production companies:
  • Overview:“With some exceptions, the Arabics take the idea of the void as their ground. That is, the light we do see almost always seems to be set against darkness, or occasionally against white, these momentary flickers that materialize tenuously out of emptiness. But the darkness is not ‘night,’ or even simply some more abstract absence of light, but a more profound vacuum: it represents a world stripped of all the coordinates of the known, an unmeasurable absence. […] These lushly sensual, pleasurable-to-view films are also terrifying: their unpredictability, continually enacting new dramas of surprise, alternatively swamps the viewer in light and leaves him adrift in darkness.”
Search history
delete
Popular search