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Take it from me — I’ve made lots of ‘em, been to lots of short film festivals and waded through a seemingly endless number of cringe-inducing shorts as a screener for the LA Film Festival — and unfortunately, most shorts kinda suck. I’d say the ratio of suckage to good stuff is much worse in the shorts arena than in features, partly because it just takes so much more momentum, time and moolah to make a feature — and when you’re about to plunk down your credit card for $50,000 worth of gear, it tends to bring a script’s problem areas sharply into focus — and partly because shorts aren’t like features; they are as short stories are to novels. A different form entirely, which tends to run most effectively on a single idea, rather than a whole cast of characters getting in and out of trouble.
Amazingly, and despite the punishing digital compression which all YouTube videos are subjected to, some great shorts end up on the internet. As part of my ongoing and unofficial effort to fill in for the YouTube Hunter while he’s on extended shore leave, and because so many good shorts get lost in the overwhelming tide of bad ones and are just never seen, I’m bringing some of my favorites to mental_floss. Let the viewing begin!
Over Time
Strange, elegiac and unexpectedly tear-jerking, Over Time is a gorgeously-rendered animated short about an army of sad, silent Kermits mourning the passing of their creator — never named, but obviously Jim Henson.
The Delicious
Here’s a short which trades on a single, wacky idea: a man becomes obsessed with dressing up in a red women’s leisure suit and making funny noises in front of his mirror — and it’s destroying his marriage. (This is part I. If you like it, you can find part II here.)
Are You the Favorite Person of Anybody?
I found this in the DVD magazine Wholphin, which is like Dave Eggers’ word magazine McSweeneys, but for short films. It’s a simple tale written by Miranda July (Me, You and Everyone We Know), directed by Miguel Arteta (The Good Girl) and starring John C. Reilly, Mike White and some other folks. A simple question elicits surprising answers.
Timing
A very early film school effort directed by my buddy Shyam Balse, and shot by me. There’s no dialogue, it’s in black and white and we shot with a 16mm film camera designed to be dropped out of planes in WWII; all mandated restrictions at the time. It’s done pretty well at festivals, and for the most part, despite being five minutes of on-purpose dreamy weirdness, I think it still stands up.
I’m lucky enough to have three very good independent theaters in the smallish city that I live in. The largest of them has a showing of several, if not all of the Oscar nominated short films every year. I saw there a film called 7:35 de la Manana a few years ago. It’s available on YouTube with subtitles if you don’t speak Spanish. It consists mainly of a song performance, which you will probably be disturbed to find sweet and catchy once you watch the whole thing. It also has one of the most mcaabre uses of confetti I’ve ever seen.
posted by Jack on 10-18-2007 at 9:12 am
Wow. You are right – they don’t suck. Over time – the kermies were like little children trying make things the same again just by doing normal things. So sad. And Timing, excellent. Very Deja Vu. And Favorite person – perception is everyhting, eh? Keep ‘em coming and thanks!
posted by JaneM on 10-18-2007 at 7:32 pm
I don’t get to see many shorts. My internet connection can’t access much video. There is one short that I managed to tape off of a short-lived TV show that featured “shorts”. It’s a sarcastic, silly animation of a song, in the style of a childrens cartoon but it’s not really for children. If anyone wants to try to find it online it’s called “Jollity Farm” I think the producer/writer’s last name was “Stone”. I wouldn’t mind hearing people’s opinions about it and its subject matter.
posted by Tdave on 10-20-2007 at 1:15 am
I myself enjoy shorts, and found two animated ones that are pretty good. I believe, the first one is based on a Mark Twain short story. Search for “Adventures of Mark Twai.” The second one is titled “More”, by Mark Osborne. It’s also very beautiful.
Too bad I am not allowed to post links here. :(
posted by Kevin on 10-22-2007 at 3:49 am