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Home Movie
Day
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| Taped memories: sharing a family Christmas past Photo:
Jim Wallace |
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In the dimmed lamplight of the Rare Book Room, on a rainy day last
August, a man narrated for an audience of strangers the silent
scenes of his boyhood as they flickered across a screen. "It
was pheasant season. I think it was December. We had a tremendous
population of Korean Ringnecks. That's me, the short kid. I was
twelve."
The occasion was the second-annual Home Movie Day, sponsored by
the Association of Moving Image Archivists, a worldwide screening--forty
cities, six countries--of birthdays and Christmases and vacations
to the beach recorded on celluloid and accessible only through
the mechanical magic of an obsolete device.
"Until recently, nobody recognized the historical significance
of small-gauge film" (anything less than 35mm), says Karen
Glynn, a longtime AMIA member and, since 2001, Perkins Library's
visual materials archivist. "We were worried that it would
all disappear when people transferred their footage to DVD. Projectors
are scarce these days." Indeed, for many visitors, their pasts
locked away in a relic of the Sixties, the Rare Book Room's rare
projectors--the Brownie 500, the Eiki "slot mouth," the
Eumig--held the promise of long-awaited revelation.
"I've never seen this before," said the man as he watched
himself nearly fifty years ago practicing a cornet on a sun-dappled
lawn in Holland, Michigan. "Ah, the vegetable garden," he
said, as the scene shifted to the backyard. "I was the lucky
picker of produce."
"What's your name?" asked a woman from the back of the
room. The man turned. "I'm Paul," he said. A ring of
silver hair crowned his head. He had a bushy mustache and a round
paunch and sad blue eyes. "But the film is for my father,
Peter. That's why I call it Requiem for Peter." Peter is eighty-three,
Paul explained, and not doing so well. "My sister found the
film. She said she was going to edit it. So I got it from her before
she could do any damage."
New scenes. Tulip Time in Holland. A parade filled the frame: folk
dancers in klompen and bonnets; a marching band. And the camera
searched for a cornet player. Moments later, a new scene: the green
blur of farmland from a car window. "I'm not sure where we
are now," said Paul, inviting guesses. The audience chimed
in:
"It looks like Amish country."
"It looks like Northern Indiana."
"I think that's tobacco."
"Did the Amish grow tobacco?"
"It could be lettuce."
"Oh, yes," Paul said. "We were taking a trip to
Gettysburg. My father was manager of a furniture store. He had
a week off to travel, and he always took it on the Fourth of July."
After the film, Paul rubbed his eyes. "So much water has flowed
under the bridge," he said. "You start to lose your mental
picture after a while. My mother wanted to use the camera as sparingly
as possible. She would never let me get my hands on it. I should
have asked to borrow it. It would have been a fight. But at least
I could have asked."
Glynn asked for the next presenter. "We've got one," said
a woman with her husband and two small children. "Let's see
what you've got," said Glynn. She took their reels of Super
8 film and loaded them into the Eiki on a table in the center of
the room. There was a clattering of parts. Lights flashed. Wheels
spun. And then a black and white Ireland, a pasture by the sea,
appeared on the screen. "It's our honeymoon," the woman
told the room. "We went to the west coast."
"Daddy, why is it so empty?" asked one of the children.
"Because all the people left and went to America," he
said. "Look, a musk oxen. Isn't that a nice shot," he
said, laughing and pointing to a black speck in a sea of gray.
His wife sighed. "You've seen too many Stan Brakhage movies," she
said, referring to the avant-garde filmmaker.
Projectors and projectionists were stationed in smaller rooms to
the side, and throughout the day a cinematic hush prevailed, punctured
every so often by coos or the sudden exclamatory recollection. "I'm
not sure what happens when people come to show these films," said
Glynn, "but the ambience is very special."
Glynn says she finds in film an authenticity that the more advanced
technologies can't match. "I saw footage of Cuba that a man
had brought in one time, and there was water on the lens, and it
was because he was right next to the sea wall. You could see the
ocean." Glynn added that the 8mm rolls are just over fifty
feet long. "That's three and a half minutes. So you know whatever
the filmmaker focused on had to be significant. He had to make
a choice. It's part of the whole aesthetic."
Later in the afternoon, a woman named Arlene showed films her father
had taken in the Fifties. "He was a Methodist missionary in
Argentina. When we came back for visits, he liked to photograph
things in the U.S. that people had never seen in Argentina and
show them there." A trip to Gulf Shores, Alabama, documented
the objects of a roadside America, the fire hydrants and mailboxes
and water sprinklers, all astonishing, no doubt, to Argentine eyes.
Arlene narrated. "Wait till you see the Crab Jubilee," she
said. She seemed anxious. "It's coming up. Just wait. There
were so many of them." A sign read "Gulf Shores," and
then a car drove on to the beach and unloaded the towels and chairs
and umbrellas. "We always liked the water," said her
husband. He tapped his wife on the shoulder. "You know, honey,
we still have those chairs." A line of beachfront cottages
came into view. "Do you know how much those cost back then?" he
said. "A thousand dollars. I remember, I said to myself, if
I had $2,000, I'd buy one. Gosh, can you imagine what that's worth
now?"
"Here come the crabs," said Arlene. "You can't believe
how many there were."
The camera panned the beach. There were large plastic tubs to hold
the crabs. "We filled those to the top," said her husband.
But there were no crabs. Just people smiling for the camera, waving,
unknowingly, to Argentines and, now, a crowd in Durham. "That's
strange," said Arlene. "Don't you think, honey?" She
apologized for the letdown. "Well, I'm sorry. I remember it
so clearly. It doesn't show it, but there were thousands. Just
thousands of them."
--Patrick Adams
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