Why You Should Watch Experimental Documentaries

Поділитися
Вставка
  • Опубліковано 25 вер 2024

КОМЕНТАРІ • 361

  • @JabaToons
    @JabaToons 2 роки тому +184

    Koyaanisqatsi is one of the greatest films ever made. Every human being should see it!

    • @DurpVonFronz
      @DurpVonFronz Рік тому +5

      and the other 2 that go with it! Baraka, and Samsara!!

  • @highwind1991
    @highwind1991 2 роки тому +537

    these are my favorite type of documentaries. in terms of purely visual ones, I'm surprised you didn't mention the excellent Apollo 11 documentary from 2019. watching that in 70mm IMAX was unbelievable

    • @evanfuccio3784
      @evanfuccio3784 2 роки тому +2

      Absolutely amazing I agree!

    • @cheetahluv210
      @cheetahluv210 2 роки тому +7

      Hmm how would that qualify as experimental?

    • @highwind1991
      @highwind1991 2 роки тому +12

      @@cheetahluv210 because it's purely visual. No talking heads, no narration, just the 70mm print and any other archival footage and images

    • @cheetahluv210
      @cheetahluv210 2 роки тому +13

      @@highwind1991 okay I see how it’s purely visual but that doesn’t seem experimental it just seems archival

    • @criticizedreviews1081
      @criticizedreviews1081 2 роки тому +3

      Hey, I was wondering, how find out that documentaries like this will show in theaters. Like would I have to be in fandango or some smaller site that has some of these listed

  • @carlhiller9659
    @carlhiller9659 2 роки тому +13

    So glad that F for Fake is mentioned here. That one is severly underlooked, like many movies Welles did after Citizen Kane.

  • @kailichtverschlinger1612
    @kailichtverschlinger1612 2 роки тому +210

    Sans Soleil is my favorite movie of all time. After seeing it, I was desperate to find more movies like it, and so I found this niche, which includes so many great films and filmmakers that more people should be aware of. So glad you made this video!

    • @ThomasFlight
      @ThomasFlight  2 роки тому +46

      Sans Soleil is mind-blowing. I don't talk about it much here because I hope that will get it's own video one day. (Lets also just say it has been very influential on the secret feature-length project I'm currently working on).

    • @flaiman
      @flaiman Рік тому +9

      @@ThomasFlight that's a relief but Chris Marker deserved his name mentioned in this at the very least

    • @PedroMarquesdeve
      @PedroMarquesdeve Рік тому +9

      Can you share a top list?

    • @rio9981
      @rio9981 Рік тому +4

      Can you please say the list

  • @ElTuco84
    @ElTuco84 2 роки тому +12

    I have a lot of appreciation to The Man with a Movie Camera, when I watched that film for the first time I was blown away by the editing, it looked so modern being a movie from 1929.

  • @TravisD.Barrett
    @TravisD.Barrett 2 роки тому +44

    If I were to summarize your videos (at least recently), I’d say you are fascinated with how the medium of film can be used to evoke subjective experience. You talk a lot about objectivity vs. subjectivity, and how playing with those notions can make the audience see, hear, feel, and experience things more viscerally and authentically. I love it, keep up the great work, Thomas! Thank you for some of the best video essays in UA-cam!

  • @TallSilhouette
    @TallSilhouette 2 роки тому +52

    Baraka was my introduction to this genre and has become one of my favorite films. The older I've gotten the more I've grown to appreciate nonverbal storytelling in general.

    • @hodgemann
      @hodgemann Рік тому +1

      I recall, many years ago, watching an interview with Sylvester Stallone, where he said the perfect movie script would only contain one word.

    • @THICCTHICCTHICC
      @THICCTHICCTHICC 7 місяців тому +2

      @@hodgemann Raul Ruiz made a movie called On Top of the Whale which kind of touches on this concept. In the movie, people are studying a tribe who speak a language with only a few words - but those words can be used to describe anything.

  • @harshsonar9346
    @harshsonar9346 2 роки тому +66

    It's videos like this which I yearn for on youtube when it comes to watching cinema related essays. It's videos like this which restore my love and faith in movies as a piece of art and not just as an entertainment.

  • @christiancalawa8637
    @christiancalawa8637 2 роки тому +26

    I am so impressed by your ability to write and narrate with a clear, academic, and intentional tone while still maintaining a consistent personal candor. Thank you for your work and introducing these documentaries! Im excited to check them out!

  • @Trixiethegoldenwitch
    @Trixiethegoldenwitch 2 роки тому +114

    Every shot from your film at the end is incredible, any one of them made me want to walk a video game character through it and explore it as a "place"

    • @merlinjames5954
      @merlinjames5954 2 роки тому +2

      sometimes I forget you like films, too

    • @Flackon
      @Flackon 2 роки тому +2

      As I was looking at the visuals, and listening at how documentaries have to discover the story rather than write it, I was thinking that this is a quality the medium of videogames often uses, too. Especially those videogames that create worlds to explore and inhabit.

  • @marianoguy
    @marianoguy 2 роки тому +247

    More than 'experimental documentary" these are what used to be called "film essays", since they function more in the tradition of the literary essay. They share a lot of things in common regarding their relationship to reality, the fact that they both reject being pigeonholed as just "non-fiction" or just journalism, and their dealing with other forms of expression such as poetry. Some people classify the film essay as being a part of the documentary category of film but I personally think that the 'essay' name is what we should have been calling the category from the start in opposition to being just a fiction film and for the reasons I mentioned before. It makes more sense for the reasons outlined in the video to say that you’re making a film that is "essaying" with a subject or group of subjects than it is to say that you are just "documenting" which implies (again, like the video says) that you’re just an impartial spectator and aren't introducing your subjectivity into the film. The thing is, that in the youtube era the term has lost its original meaning and we use it for a much wider range of things and most of the public just associates the term with short videos online.

    • @julesdrums6167
      @julesdrums6167 Рік тому +6

      Holy shit. That was like reading an academic paper. I’ll have to reread that several times

    • @marianoguy
      @marianoguy Рік тому +3

      @@julesdrums6167 I feel like I could have explained myself better but english is not my first language 🙃

    • @julesdrums6167
      @julesdrums6167 Рік тому +11

      @@marianoguy No way man, that was way better than I could have said it and I am a native english speaker. You're just a smart fellow!

    • @marianoguy
      @marianoguy Рік тому +3

      @@julesdrums6167 that's high praise!

    • @nnn-ov4ei
      @nnn-ov4ei Рік тому +1

      what are your favourite essay films or essay film directors?

  • @brucetidwell7715
    @brucetidwell7715 2 роки тому +24

    I can put into words how it does, and it's probably different for everyone who sees it but I don't think you can walk away from Koyaanisqatsi without your perception of "reality" on Earth deeply challenged, if not upended. I just stumbled across it on public TV, not long after it was released, with know context or introduction. There it was. There I was...transfixed, stunned, confused, revolted, ecstatic, breathless, and moved almost tears by both the beauty and tragedy of it's unflinching reality.
    The sequel, Powaqqatsi, is equally as amazing.

  • @daankeijzer8818
    @daankeijzer8818 2 роки тому +8

    You might've just made my favourite youtube video in a long while, THANK YOU

  • @Yuanjac
    @Yuanjac 2 роки тому +37

    This is the best video essay I ever watched, truly spoke to me and made me want to watch every single doc you mentioned while contemplating my life

  • @Michael-cv5wk
    @Michael-cv5wk 2 роки тому +3

    Watched Grey Gardens the other day, I think it would fall under what you're talking about here and it was really amazing. Surprisingly profound.

  • @AlAboutCinema
    @AlAboutCinema Рік тому +1

    I loved this. I'm a big fan of experimental Documentaries. Cameraperson being a more recent example. There is so much more that can be done with film and we are lucky to have artist willing to try to push the boundaries. A more traditional documentary which did a lot for me was the classic American Movie.

  • @davitgarage
    @davitgarage 2 роки тому +6

    Strongly recommend watching documentaries made by Artavazd Peleshyan

  • @multipass113
    @multipass113 2 роки тому +7

    “Stories are discovered not created.”
    I have seen none of the films you mentioned here yet I find myself nodding vigorously with what are being said. THANK-YOU so much for making this essay and for leaving those references so I can make my own discovery.

  • @user-rd3jw7pv7i
    @user-rd3jw7pv7i 2 роки тому +30

    I'm only halfway through the video but I just want to jot down my thoughts of this film. This is by far the most thought provoking film I've ever seen. Your writing and choice of footage to structure the narrative is a dazzling display of UA-cam content creation. The quintessential video essay channel. I hope you find great joy with making these videos, God bless you.

  • @cloudbloom
    @cloudbloom Рік тому +2

    Philip Glass is one of my all time favorite composers. An underrated score of his is from the film The Illusionist, check it out!

  • @mmgbtv
    @mmgbtv 2 роки тому +3

    Feels like I'm back in my Elements of Film class. We watched a 15min film on 16mm of a brick wall slowly coming into focus

  • @jagajazzin
    @jagajazzin Рік тому +4

    I saw Herzog's "Lessons of Darkness" in 2004 as a senior in high school and to this day contains some of the most frightening and evocative imagery every imprinted on my mind; I find myself going back to it often, for whatever reason.

  • @arthurcab
    @arthurcab 2 роки тому +5

    The beauty and choas

  • @clovu712
    @clovu712 Рік тому +4

    When I understood what kind of movies you were referencing, I instantly thought of Manufactured Landscapes (2006), of how it makes you feel and perceive the world differently. I haven't seen Lessons of darkness but the images reminded me of that. The scale of the transformation we impose over the world is impressive, and as people in developed countries we're rarely used to seeing that perspective. That movie really stuck with me.

  • @billhaverchuck3745
    @billhaverchuck3745 2 роки тому +10

    I highly recommend "Voices Through Time" by Franco Piavoli, a beautiful non-narrated documentary about the cycles of life.

  • @gojiplusone
    @gojiplusone 2 роки тому +2

    I gotta admit... I watched Koyaanisqatsi for the first time when I was high on weed. Then it has since become a habit, every time I smoke weed, I watch Koyaanisqatsi. Until one day I watched it for the first time fully sober. 10 minutes into the movie, I was instantly high.

  • @avdcam
    @avdcam 2 роки тому +6

    If you haven't seen Apollo 11, you seriously need to. Probably one of my favourite films, period. And definitely take some time to checkout Jennifer Baichwal's films like Anthropocene, Watermark & Manufactured Landscapes. Highly recommend.

  • @houston-coley
    @houston-coley 2 роки тому +4

    I'm late to the party, but this is a wonderful video! One of the influences on my most recent documentary project was the film "Into Great Silence", about a monastery full of silent monks. It's nearly 3 hours and almost entirely devoid of "plot," but absolutely the definition of meditative, prayerful art.

  • @ezequielsiqueira3337
    @ezequielsiqueira3337 2 роки тому +1

    Dude you just described what I love so much about chris marker stuff (nice Sans Soleil reference!)

  • @taheralshawi7834
    @taheralshawi7834 2 роки тому +6

    Incredible video as usual,
    Surprised you didn’t mention Close-Up by Abbas Kiarostami.
    Also, you must check out Cousin Jules (1973) and A Man Vanishes (1967)

    • @ThomasFlight
      @ThomasFlight  2 роки тому +4

      Close-Up is great! Eventually you just have to stop somewhere though or the videos just get too long haha.

  • @minibando3660
    @minibando3660 Рік тому +3

    I was on the DOK Leipzig this year due to my work as a journalist. It's a film festival for documentary and animation in, well, Leipzig. I watched about 25 short and long films and critiqued some of them as well as doing some interviews with directors and "actors". All of that made me fall in love with documentaries forever and I highly recommend visiting the DOK next year to all of you!

  • @hekmuddingulmatjar2650
    @hekmuddingulmatjar2650 Рік тому +3

    Couple of years ago there was this truly weird film on a doc film festival in Paris supposedly (according to a conversation among other audience members) about looking at society falling apart in front of us. The director came on stage afterwards and didn't even get to give his version of what it is because he had to referee different blocs of the audience arguing for one "truth" or another. Some russians in attendance felt outraged about how their country was depicted (the thing was shot all over the world but never mind),some thought it was some sort of sci fi, no clearly horror Comedy Cinema vérité.. Makes you wonder what it really was supposed to mean and if I would still be intrigued by it if I fully knew. Anyway, good introduction into more experimental doc films, well done. Shout out to Peter Mettler who could/should have been in this maybe and I guess sans soleil deserves it's own episode. Good work.

  • @JasonTopo
    @JasonTopo 2 роки тому +1

    I fucking love your channel, dude. I'm learning so much about filmmaking.
    Congrats on the release of the film too.

  • @58christiansful
    @58christiansful Рік тому

    What a truly wonderful channel. Strictly for the sophisticated palate.

  • @asap.6283
    @asap.6283 2 роки тому +7

    I recommend Ornette Coleman’s Made in America. The experimental filmmaking perfectly fits Coleman’s unconventional musicianship

  • @cre8tivbiz
    @cre8tivbiz 2 роки тому +4

    So happy to see you talk about Leviathan and Sleep Has Her House. Psychogeographical films like these have always been my complete artistic obsession. If this is your shit too, I can't recommend enough the movies of the grandmaster James Benning, especially his California Trilogy or Ruhr, as well as any of the short films by his student Bill Brown or an Injury to One by Travis Wilkerson.

    • @ThomasFlight
      @ThomasFlight  2 роки тому +2

      Definitely gonna put them on the list!

    • @alan49964
      @alan49964 2 роки тому +3

      Yeah, I was going to mention Benning's California Trilogy - a filmmaker deeply rooted in the experimental scene and yet while the California Trilogy is experimental and harkens back to the actuality films of the early 20th century it is also fundamentally a documentary about the politics of land and space. Much closer to psychogeography though would be Patrick Keiller's London (which is credited in the video and sadly only used for a single frame, unless I missed something). Another rec would be another student of Benning, Deborah Stratman, her films In Order Not be Here and O'er the Land are phenomenal.

  • @johnniefujita
    @johnniefujita Рік тому +1

    i love the space launch scene, because it so much ressembles destruction and as it turns to be the exact opposite, it is the desire to live beyond the limits of our planet. It is pure life energy.

  • @danielnewton2390
    @danielnewton2390 2 роки тому +1

    Boy, this has me really inspired to create my own film now.

  • @kelvinfesa
    @kelvinfesa 2 роки тому +1

    This is beautiful

  • @minexplosion2857
    @minexplosion2857 2 роки тому +2

    Stark! Love your videos, they expand my interests and the way I see cinema, films and the world. Thank you for your work.

  • @pamdemonia
    @pamdemonia Рік тому +1

    I saw an amazing doc recently that def fits this. It's called "I Didn't See You There" by Reid Davenport. It's all from his POV as he goes about his life mainly rolling in his wheelchair through Oakland, and it's beautiful.

  • @mangomariel
    @mangomariel Рік тому

    Thank you for this! Samsara is actually one of my favorite films of all time, and that film alone made me stop eatng meat and become a minimalist. And it just has no words. I really like documataries that just shows the feeling of something, like that fish boat, I gotta see that.

  • @rebeccamichelson5642
    @rebeccamichelson5642 2 роки тому +2

    I remember being a freshman in high school and seeing Koyaanisqatsi at the Hollywood Bowl while a live orchestra played Philip Glass' score and having my mind completely blown -- that experience introduced me to so much, Koyaanisqatsi and Reggio's other experimental documentaries, Philip Glass, non verbal films (one of my favorites types of movies to watch)

  • @lennartbreede
    @lennartbreede 2 роки тому +1

    Watched Koyaanisqatsi for the first time two week ago. I since watched and rewatched it, Chronos and Baraka multiple times and yesterday, finally, my Samsara Blu-Ray arrived, which I had also never seen before. So inspiring!

  • @ronlight7013
    @ronlight7013 2 роки тому +3

    Very good job, Thomas, and a truly fine survey of experimental docs. I happen to have seen most of the films depicted. And yes, they truly are eye-opening. I think perhaps you might have included (part II?) some of the wonderful personal documentary essay films of the past 40 years. To choose just two (out of hundreds) there’s Alan Berliner’s Intimate Stranger at the more personal end of the spectrum, and Chris Marker’s seminal Sans Soleil as a profound social and more global style commentary. Really glad you decided to go down this path!

    • @ThomasFlight
      @ThomasFlight  2 роки тому +2

      Sans Soleil is a personal favorite, saving that one for its own video one day.

  • @mclare71
    @mclare71 2 роки тому

    Absolutely stunning!! I didn’t expect to be hypnotized in my waking up time until I realized 18 minutes had gone by.

  • @arthurb8436
    @arthurb8436 2 роки тому +13

    You should watch Joel Haver's "Say That You Love Me"! It's such a beautiful and heart breaking film, and I still don't know whether it was done with actors or real people, neither do the rest of the viewers. Although Joel's best known for his silly skits this is a really beautifully crafted and poignant story about trying to find love and just connection as a sensitive male, alongside trying to deal with the grief from his father's death. He shot and edited the whole thing as well as being the main star.

  • @eleanorwittering3126
    @eleanorwittering3126 2 роки тому

    Extraordinary "commentary" encapsulating staggering visuals. Amazing.
    The world is huge, so many subjects to study, to attempt to comprehend and understand.
    Didn't even know this study existed before stumbling onto your video, "Why Better Call Saul is Brilliant."
    Thanks!

  • @noahkasanardjo
    @noahkasanardjo Рік тому

    this is the best promo video I've ever seen

  • @jayinri6658
    @jayinri6658 Рік тому +1

    I remember goin to a local theater & watching the doc samsara, at some point in the movie the movie transcended into a primordial language that was communicating to me in the deepest level, purely off imagery I was put into a trip w/ no drugs & felt like it was just speaking to me alone & could understand everything it was saying, when I snapped out of it at the end, it was like something timeless awoke or was reminded within me & realized there were other ppl there too, I left the theater & before I crossed the street to go on my way I just stood there for minutes as the nyc world around me was moving.. haven't felt that since & never forgot how it felt

  • @nobodynoone2500
    @nobodynoone2500 8 місяців тому +1

    I _REALLY_ love F for Fake. You have to invest a bit of attention, but where it leads you, ends up being a place you never knew existed, just behind a familiar doorway in your own mind. He breaks the fourth wall only for there to be another to be broken after charming you back into his impeccable narrative.

  • @neezy5559
    @neezy5559 Рік тому

    this is my favorite channel on UA-cam

  • @somthingoriginal1
    @somthingoriginal1 2 роки тому +1

    I adore Leviathan, probably one of the most visceral and textural movies I've seen while remaining very meditative. Shots of rust and chains and hundreds of starfish disintegrating in red water are ones I won't be forgetting soon.

  • @pattongilbert
    @pattongilbert 2 роки тому +1

    A really fantastic and important topic about film. I’ve always wanted to watch more of these kinds of movies. Truly a great video.
    F for Fake really is incredible, though. The editing is truly breathtaking.

  • @curiousworld7912
    @curiousworld7912 2 роки тому +2

    I remember seeing 'Koyaanisqatsi' in a theater, back in the early '80s. It certainly rocked my world. I believe there is great value to be found in these experimental documentaries - they give us a very different experience of what non-fiction film can be. Herzog's 'Lessons of Darkness' is amazing, as is his 'Into the Inferno'; both of which give the viewer a new way of looking at events, or as he says 'tell an ecstatic, poetic truth' that is deeper than mere cinema-verite. All these films are valuable to the film experience. Even Warhol's 'documentaries' are interesting, and have worth. Your film looks intriguing. :)

  • @thaldros8643
    @thaldros8643 Рік тому

    Watched Koyannisqatsi because of this vid. Really interesting experience. Never had any piece of media make me feel that way before. Getting bored yet enjoying myself. Seeing the beauty of nature and humanity together, juxtaposed against each other with some of the editing and music. Then that ending. Wow

  • @BobStein
    @BobStein 2 роки тому +1

    1:10 Point of fact, the rocket launch at the beginning of Koyaanisqatsi is the Saturn V rocket of the Apollo 11 flight in 1969, not a space shuttle. Otherwise, well agreed, that was powerful filmmaking.

  • @nibblesd.biscuits4270
    @nibblesd.biscuits4270 Рік тому

    Baraka was the film that made me fall in love with filmmaking.

  • @cheddaromero
    @cheddaromero Рік тому

    Since I’ve been going to more museums I’ve been seeing imagery similar to this and just been desperate to find little clues to where I can see more of it and you just blessed us with this little golden nugget of a video.
    Thank you so much for sharing this !

  • @TheSpyknieff
    @TheSpyknieff Рік тому

    this is an awesome video, and I can't wait to see Labyrinth Ion!

  • @TheIAlive
    @TheIAlive Рік тому

    This video shares the same thumbnail as a Katarakt LoFi house mix. The visuals behind the music mix always mesmerized me, and now I know why.

  • @greenman5907
    @greenman5907 Рік тому

    I’ve been trying to tell people about F for Fake whenever I can. Such an interesting work.

  • @NedWellingtonNW
    @NedWellingtonNW Рік тому

    the act of killing is the most bizarre and fascinating and unsettling and upsetting thing ive ever seen all rolled into one

  • @zhuber
    @zhuber Рік тому

    Love this video and experimental docs. Tokyo Noise is the experimental doc that opened me up to the genre.

  • @easytargetYT
    @easytargetYT 2 роки тому

    Koyaanisqatsi is beyond words brilliant. Visual imagery that produces emergent story telling that cannot be told any other way.

  • @edwardgermakovski5438
    @edwardgermakovski5438 2 роки тому +1

    Ive never watched any experimental documentaries but after watching this video essay I feel extremely inspired. I just finished working on a documentary of my trip to Ukraine and a lot of stuff I tried to do was talked about in some of these films. Pretty pog

  • @silschouten
    @silschouten Рік тому

    Best art video ive seen in like a year

  • @cyrildelarosa4020
    @cyrildelarosa4020 Рік тому +1

    My favorite experimental documentary that I watched in college was RaMell Ross's "Hale County This Morning, This Evening." It's extremely personal and captivating, with a focused scope that fleshes out the narrative of a rural county in Alabama in a way that feels embedded with heart and beauty. IDK what I'm really saying. But it's so good. And not that pretentious (which is unfortunately a problem of many documentaries :P ).

  • @matthewleger5605
    @matthewleger5605 Рік тому +1

    a favorite video of yours. gonna be checking these out. love the way you described the herzog film - thanks!

  • @elbirahsen
    @elbirahsen 2 роки тому +1

    You are definitely shaping my understanding of the art of film. Love every video you make, this is one of the best. Also love your own film, looks like a great experience i’d love to watch it.

  • @MichaelBrown-bn8ie
    @MichaelBrown-bn8ie 2 роки тому

    I am not entirely certain of this yet, it will take more consideration, but I think you are my favorite UA-camr (maybe ever)

  • @Nkanyiso_K
    @Nkanyiso_K 2 роки тому +1

    What incredible recommendations, I can't wait to dive in

  • @ballysham10
    @ballysham10 Рік тому +1

    Oh wow leviathan!! I've actually seen that one and loved it

  • @videoartbxl
    @videoartbxl 8 місяців тому

    Herzog "Lessons of Darkness" is truly a masterpiece. These aerial shots.....

  • @atomsofstardust
    @atomsofstardust 2 роки тому +4

    What a fantastic essay! Definitely inspires me not only to go and watch a few of those stunning visual masterpieces, but to think about what I could make in that genre as well! Fascinating!
    Appreciate it a lot! Oh, and the preview of your own film also looks great! (I’m guessing there’s a few shots of foods? At least it looked like that to my eye)

  • @cordellfenneval6215
    @cordellfenneval6215 2 роки тому +1

    As much a striking, poetic and unforgettable journey that is "Koyaanisqatsi", the old experimental documentary "Baraka" (1992) is another little gem to mention. "Home" (2009) is definitely also worth a watch.

  • @TheThinkersBible
    @TheThinkersBible Рік тому

    Very interesting introduction to a sub-genre I recently heard of for the first time, but knew nothing about. Thanks!

  • @thefurbyqueen7572
    @thefurbyqueen7572 Рік тому

    I'll gladly watch tarkovsky filming the ground for 3h straight but sleep has her house broke even me, jesus christ "guided meditation" is a massive understatement

  • @der0hund
    @der0hund 2 роки тому +2

    HI! 01:18 - it is not a space shuttle it is a Saturn 5. Greetings from Vienna!

  • @cesarmartin8147
    @cesarmartin8147 2 роки тому +4

    You should check out "Unser täglich Brot", by Nikolaus Geyrhalter, a documentary about the food industry and one of the most objective I've ever seen

  • @JB-vl2kx
    @JB-vl2kx 2 роки тому +1

    The way you described the sequence with the launch of the space shuttle giving you a sense of discovery made me immediately wonder if you play any video games. There are different types of gamers who enjoy playing for different reasons such as competition or cognition, and they are on different ends of a spectrum. I know it sounds like a bit of an exaggeration, but certain games in that exploration genre have definitely changed the way I look at life. I think what makes that sense of discovery so impactful is the fact you will never be able to experience it for the first time again. You’re burdened in a way by the knowledge you’ve acquired. If you do play games and you are driven by that sense of discovery, I highly recommend Outer Wilds. I love film and how easily it can influence who you are, but games I think have a higher ceiling in that sense. They are exceedingly rare as it’s not always the intent of the creator to make think critically and examine your ways, but artful games do exist and I find it a shame many film buffs will never be able to experience what is in some ways the next evolution of the art form they love.

    • @ThomasFlight
      @ThomasFlight  2 роки тому +1

      I used game a bit but much less recently, I especially lean towards games without a strict storyline like Minecraft, and sim and strategy games. But I'm definitely interested in checking out Outer Wilds based on this recommendation!

  • @hiimapotato
    @hiimapotato Рік тому

    I just realised it says the Beauty and Choas :D that made me smile and made my day thankyou

  • @raksh9
    @raksh9 Рік тому

    Although I saw ads for Koyanisqatsi as a kid, I never saw a movie of this type until watching Samsara in the cinema over ten years ago. It blew my mind, i walked out thinking that anything, in terms of film making, was possible.

  • @MrMusicbyMartin
    @MrMusicbyMartin Рік тому

    Koyaanisqatsi gives a Gods-eye view of the world, usually looking down, often from a distance. It reaches a epiphany when the camera settles at a human level and takes a while to look at some of the faces within the crowds. Herzog has never been afraid to get right up to the beast and look it right in the eye. Leviathan turned my stomach like no other film, grotesque but also transcendent and in it’s way beautiful, not unlike the guided meditation approach of the later clip - just faster and grimmer, but we still must accept what we are viewing fully in order to process it. The best docs grab the beast by the horns and look it directly in the eye.

  • @thats4thebirds
    @thats4thebirds 2 роки тому +1

    F for fake is one of my all time faves

  • @hazyfeilds
    @hazyfeilds Рік тому

    Thank you for making a beautiful video! I feel enriched having listened to you speak!

  • @malevolentronweasel659
    @malevolentronweasel659 Рік тому

    It reminds me of why I was so enamored by episode 8 or Twin Peaks The Return. Beautiful video thankyou

  • @BeingIntegrated
    @BeingIntegrated 2 роки тому +2

    Have you seen Rat Film? One of my faves, so unique and brilliant, it's really an experience.

  • @selinbonfil6068
    @selinbonfil6068 2 роки тому

    AMAZING video, thank you for this. You really tap into something profound and examples of artists challenging the limits of the medium. Kepp them coming

  • @TheatreOfDelays
    @TheatreOfDelays Рік тому

    Thanks for the great collection of documentaries.. very inspirational

  • @-JaxonRay
    @-JaxonRay 2 роки тому

    i stopped this video midway through to go watch Lessons of Darkness. great film. and great video. your title worked.

  • @benvincent6473
    @benvincent6473 2 роки тому

    Koyaanisqatsi is one of my all time favorites. Not enough people have even heard of it, let alone seen it. Hopefully this brings it, along with similar films, the attention they deserve.

  • @krantzyboursiquot2647
    @krantzyboursiquot2647 Рік тому

    No ads in the intro-auto sub

  • @ramblinactivist
    @ramblinactivist 2 роки тому

    Excellent! It's nice to know you're not the only weirdo in the theatre! ;-)

  • @Leto_0
    @Leto_0 Рік тому

    Guided meditation is a great way to describe some of this

  • @A_Civilian
    @A_Civilian 2 роки тому +4

    I choose to believe the typo on the word Chaos in the beginning is intentional :D

    • @rticante
      @rticante 2 роки тому +1

      Yeah same, I instantly noticed it but it can be passed off as intentional given the meaning of the word lol

  • @theprofectionist520
    @theprofectionist520 2 роки тому

    Koyaanisqatsi and Leviathan are literally my 2 favorite documentaries

  • @nick-w
    @nick-w Рік тому

    What a beautiful video essay, thank you.

  • @cartercrisco2524
    @cartercrisco2524 2 роки тому

    I’ve only seen Koyaanisqatsi in terms of experimental documentary but that’s enough to tell me that these films are one of a kind.

  • @captainbean3114
    @captainbean3114 2 роки тому

    god i love Koyaanisqatsi, truly a masterpiece. I watched it at the Walden School of Music and it changed my life lol, that film is weirdly powerful.
    I would love to hear you go deeper into Phillips score, as in my opinion, it's the reason you interpret the humanity of everything, and it truly dictates the pace and the audio-visual narrative. That sounds pretentious, but I think you know what I mean. That score is fucking insane, it deserves a video in and of itself.