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Fri, Jan 29

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Virtual Cinema

Just Don't Think I'll Scream: Montage & Consciousness

Frank Beauvais’s intimate essay film assembles excerpts from the 400-plus films the French director watched over a four-month period of seclusion. The resulting montage reframes otherwise incidental images into an indelible and immensely moving reflection on life, love, and loss.

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Just Don't Think I'll Scream: Montage & Consciousness
Just Don't Think I'll Scream: Montage & Consciousness

Time & Location

Jan 29, 2021, 12:00 AM – Feb 12, 2021, 11:59 PM

Virtual Cinema

About the event

Just Don't Think I'll Scream (France, 2019). Dir. by Frank Beauval. In French; English subtitles. 72 mins. 

Watch: https://kimstimvirtual.vhx.tv/products/just-don-t-think-i-ll-scream-epsilon-spires

Frank Beauvais’s intimate essay film assembles excerpts from the 400-plus films the French director watched over a four-month period of seclusion. On the soundtrack, Beauvais speaks of the breakup that led to his retreat, the estranged father with whom he bonded over cinema just before his death, and the symptoms of our current cultural climate that make pressing on an act of resistance. Beauvais’s montage—composed of both international classics and obscurities—alights upon small but specific details, reframing otherwise incidental images into an indelible and immensely moving reflection on life, love, and loss. 

Trailer: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9sn0KzSYmNI

“A gift to cinephiles, all at once embodying, criticizing and transcending an unhealthy mode of passive interaction with life. (The film) exhibits the best kind of aesthetic innovation.” —Joe Blessing, The Playlist

“The pairings are associative; the images beguiling, fleeting and unceasing. Intimate prose (that) is sharp and poetic. Hypersonal, hermetic, confessional and global. Captures, unlike any work I’ve seen, the anxiety of our current era.” —Sierra Pettengill, Filmmaker Magazine

"This profusion of heterogeneous images amounts to a Burroughsian visual orgasm. Proves that the healing power of images is not just a theoretical assertion. This film will save you a couple of psycho-analytical sessions.” —Cedric Succivalli, International Cinephile Society

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