Frank and Caroline Mouris
"I treat objects in a very subjective way, and I treat subjects
by themselves in a very objective way," says independent
film producer/director Frank Mouris at the end of SCREENTEST (1975,
20 minutes), a fragmented cinematic portrait of nine talented
amateur actors and mimes. One cannot help but notice the way in
which the Mourises give an intimate, honest, yet non-judgmental
picture of these characters by making the viewer witness the actors
in the creation of their art. It appears that by the end of this
film that for these characters as well as the director, art and
"real" life are interchangeable; the essence of these
actors is their art, and the art is the essence of their life.
The independent film producer-and-director duo, Frank and Caroline
Mouris, have been creating films together since the early 70s.
They are best known for FRANK FILM (1973, 9 minutes), which won
an Academy Award in 1973, for "Best Short," as well
as winning many other foreign and domestic film competitions,
including the Grand Prix at the Annecy Film Festival the same
year. It was also selected for the Olympiad of Animation as one
of the thirty-two greatest short films ever made. In 1996, it
was chosen by the National Film Registry, an organization created
in 1988, to preserve acclaimed films which have been deemed as
"culturally, historically, or aesthetically important."
The unique collage-style animation of FRANK FILM and their latest
film, FRANKLY CAROLINE (1999, 9 minutes), has been featured in
commercials, music videos, documentaries, as well as on PBS, MTV,
VH1, HBO, Comedy, and the Nickelodeon channels. Their work has
appeared on programs such as Sesame Street, 3-2-1 Contact, They
Came From Outer Space, and I Am a Promise.
Frank Mouris claims that they made FRANK FILM as that "one
personal film that you do to get the artistic inclinations out
of your system before going commercial." Yet it was the success
of this film that he says made the duo become "fiercely independent
film makers, only interested in doing new films, whatever the
genre, and not just repeating ourselves in one area of film."
Indeed the innovative edge shines through in all of their work,
from their commercials for Levis Shirts and Nickelodeon Toys to
their broad range of 16 mm independent shorts. Their willingness
to experiment with different film techniques is apparent, yet
all the while they maintain their keen and unique understanding
of culture as it is filtered through their use of objects, images,
and setting in their films.
The creative collage animation technique that they are best known
for first appeared in FRANK FILM, and is repeated in FRANKLY CAROLINE.
In these two films, viewers are given a visual biography of each
filmmaker’s life thus far through a series of colorful,
pop art-like images. The viewer is bombarded and inundated with
images in these films that are so commonplace they have become
embedded in our collective consciousness. Both films uncannily
appear to sum up and tell the story of a viewer’s own life,
by representing images of culture through a meticulously cut out
and collaged iconography. In the larger scheme, their film biographies
present an interesting view of westernized culture. The images
flashed on the screen in overabundance include everything from
food and drink, money, political images, to body parts, pens,
clocks, to name just a few. The cornucopia of objects in these
two films evokes everything that is appealing and appalling about
our society. Like Frank and Caroline, we are all situated in our
settings, affected by the objects that surround us.
FRANK FILM gives the biography of Frank Mouris. It was created
before and resulted in the duo’s great film success. In
FRANK FILM, Frank talks by himself and to himself. He imagines
his successful future, which came true in less than a year. A
quarter of a century later, FRANKLY CAROLINE was produced with
the premise that it was time for Caroline’s story to be
told. The mood of this short is much more upbeat and colorful,
as Frank and Caroline engage and address their audience, and they
also add a new dimension to this film, by engaging, addressing
and arguing with each other. FRANKLY CAROLINE not only presents
her story, but it also presents the story of Frank and Caroline’s
working and personal relationship. This film shows very acutely
why their partnership, on a professional and personal level is
successful.
One of the important aspects in their films is the use of objects
to create environment, and of environment to create an individual
and collective reality. This not only appears in the collage animation
technique of FRANK FILM and FRANKLY CAROLINE, but is also very
prevalent in their short from 1975, CONEY (5 minutes), a fast-paced
look at New York’s Coney Island. In this film, the masses
of people appear less significant than the Ferris wheel, than
the carnival-type games, than the sun rising and setting. Coney
Island would not be the childhood bazaar of fun that it is without
the hundreds of people gallivanting along the boardwalk. Yet it
appears that Mouris is making a statement about how an individual
is less important when s/he is in a setting that has the power
to completely control and envelop an individual, a setting like
Coney Island. This film has a hypnotizing effect. A viewer cannot
help but be seduced by this common, so-American backdrop of a
Ferris wheel, nickel-and-dime amusements, and the lovely filtered
pink blur of cotton candy.
In all of Frank and Caroline Mouris’ work, objects and images
are utilized to create a mental and visual free-association. Frank
and Caroline’s play with objects produces a feeling that
is at once familiar and foreign, a pop-culture semiotics.
http://www.albany.edu/writers-inst/fnf99n1.html
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