Hi Eric, Try:
John Hawkins, LSD Wall (1965) clay animation of a trip (with a dedication to his dealer!) Storm De Hirsch, Peyote Queen (1965) Eric Emerson's monologue sequence in reel 9 of Warhol's The Chelsea Girls is a tour de force, and reportedly was performed under the influence of LSD (though I don't know that he ever confirmed this). It certainly seems that way. Ben van Meter's beautiful film "S.F. Trips Festival." Robert Cowan's Rockflow (1967) isn't representational of a trip, but does have trippy movement and imagery - it's a delight. There are clips floating around of a film called "Syd Barrett's First Trip." Andy Ditzler On Sat, Feb 9, 2013 at 2:40 PM, Eric Theise <ericthe...@gmail.com> wrote: > Hello Frameworkers, > > I'm hoping to get suggestions for studying the tropes of the trip, > that is to say, the way hallucinatory and other drug experiences have > been portrayed on-screen. Flashy, over-the-top visual signifiers are > what I seek, but Frameworks excels at identifying examples that aren't > what the original poster had in mind, so please go to it! > > Examples will be put to experimental purposes, but can come from any > genre, thanks in advance. > > Hope all of you affected by the Nemo storm are okay and able to find > beauty in it. > > --Eric > _______________________________________________ > FrameWorks mailing list > FrameWorks@jonasmekasfilms.com > https://mailman-mail5.webfaction.com/listinfo/frameworks >
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