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LOS
2001, 90 mins. 16 mm. print.
Directed, Photographed, and
Edited by James Benning.
From a review by Neil Young on Jigsaw Lounge, http://www.jigsawlounge.co.uk/film/benning.html:
Nearing the completion of El Valley Centro, I began planning
an urban companion piece, Los, that was to be a portrait
of Los Angeles. It seemed logical, for the politics of water certainly
run from the Valley to the City. Los would have the same
structure as El Valley Centro and would look and listen
with the same intensity. The two films would be connected with
the last shot of El Valley Centro pumping water out of
the Valley over Wheeler Ridge while the first shot of Los
would show Mulholland's first spillway (still in use) bringing
water into LA.
-James Benning, December 2001
Conceptual-art portrait of Los Angeles County, comprising 35
two-minute shots of streams, hills, buildings, factories, gardens,
highways, rivers, cattle, trains, people, the ocean, a cemetery,
the skyline, policemen, back streets, a jail, soccer players…
Bennings' camera remains static, and in the absence of commentary
the only sounds we hear are whatever's audible in each of these
places: snatches of dialogue, distant background music, the rumble
of cars and trains.
Benning has been one of American leading avant-garde film-makers
for over 20 years, but remains barely known by the wider cinema-going
public, especially abroad—partly because he doesn't allow his
works to be available on video. And while Los is no-one's
idea of 'commercial' film-making, Benning's low profile is an
indictment of the timid policies of our supposedly adventurous
arthouses: this is much too fascinating a use of film for it to
be relegated to art galleries.
Los can be taken as 35 short movies, each of them saying
something about the county, each of them posing some question
about Benning's technique, providing Viewing becomes an active,
enthralling experience—even when there's apparently 'nothing happening'
on screen. It soon becomes clear that the timing, order and contents
of each image has been very precisely calculated, and in many
cases it's what we can't see that's the 'subject' of the shot.
The penultimate shot is of 'homeless people', and at one point
an unseen passerby exclaims “What the f*ck are you lookin' at,
stupid motherf*cker?” But there are no answers—everything about
the film is a matter of subjective interpretation, and every response
is equally valid. Benning's gaze transforms the whole of 'greater'
Los Angeles into a vast work of art, in the process making it
even 'greater' still—and this is only the central part of a
projected 'Southern California' trilogy.
The film is full of engrossing incidental details, cross-references,
tantalizing clues that might mean everything or nothing. Early
one we see a DKNY advertising billboard owned by a company named
'Outdoor Systems', and this phrase sums up Benning's real subject
– the human and natural processes that combine to form the bizarre
anomaly we know as LA: a huge cloud of dust rising from a brush
fire; the evening lights of cars zooming along a six-lane highway;
the flight path of a landing jet-plane. This is a game with specific
rules of form (the length and horizon-lines of each shot are similar)
and content (each shot must contain some aspect of human activity;
each shot must be outdoors) and, finally, memory test. We're exposed
to each of the images for so long, that by the end, when Benning
brings up a series of captions identifying the locations of each,
we can run through the whole movie again, in our mind.
Needless to say, Los won't be to all tastes—in today's market-oriented
climate, such a project necessarily runs the risk of 'pretentiousness'
accusations—but it's surprising how quickly you adjust to the
film's unique rhythms, and this is a very straightforward, accessible
kind of experimentalism. In terms of an artist using cinema to
express himself, it dwarfs almost all this year's 'conventional'
releases: if any film of 2001 can possibly change the way its
audiences think about and view their world, it's James Benning's
mysterious, majestic, magical Los.
From “California Dreaming: California Trilogy,” by Jonathan
Rosenbaum, Chicago Reader, March 15, 2002:
Experimental films usually attempt to rearrange our reflexes along
with our expectations. James Benning's 270-minute, 16-millimeter
California Trilogy does that in part by obliging us to
rethink the way we interpret "directed by" and "written
by." If "directing" refers to the placement of
camera and microphone, then Benning—who works alone, recording
image and sound by himself—directed these three films. And if
"writing" means the choice and identification of subjects—including
the way they're represented in the credits—then Benning is also
the trilogy's writer.
Benning—who will attend the March 21 screening of his film at
the Film Center—placed his name at the end of the final credits
of El Valley Centro, Los, and Sogobi, the three 90-minute features
comprising his trilogy. Each feature consists of 35 shots lasting
150 seconds apiece, followed by final credits also lasting 150
seconds. Thirty-six times two and a half minutes equals an hour
and a half; multiply that by three and you get 270 minutes, or
four and a half hours. Benning used to teach high school math,
and a passion for such neat, symmetrical patterns is central to
his work, for better and for worse; he apparently wants to give
images, sounds, and certain verbal classifications the uncluttered
purity of numbers and mathematical concepts. Countering this rage
for neatness is a spirit of adventure and exploration, which inspired
him to brave the elements in all sorts of climates and terrains
to film 226 shots for the trilogy, 105 of which he used.
Watching symmetrically composed California landscapes for four
and a half hours must sound a bit boring. I wasn't bored, but
I can't deny that I felt frustrated at times. I'm quite capable
of nodding off during movies—even during ones I like—but I can't
recall a single time this happened to me while watching a nonnarrative
film, including any of Benning's (and by now I've seen quite a
few). The linear thrust of narrative tends to be hypnotic. In
contrast, Benning's movies demand to be read rather than simply
followed; you have to walk alongside them and keep them company,
so to speak, which generally keeps one alert.
The main thing that frustrates me about California Trilogy is
that the credits come at the end of each feature. They function
a bit like extended cast lists, consisting of 35 separate titles
identifying, in order, the 35 shots one has just seen. Each title
lists the subject, its owner, and its location. The first shot
of El Valley Centro and the last shot of Sogobi, for instance,
are both identified as "spillway/Department of Water Resources/Lake
Berryessa." (In the first case the spillway is active, swallowing
up water like a sink drain; in the second it's inactive.)
What's frustrating about these titles isn't simply that they appear
at the end of each film. (Unlike most spectators, I had a complete
list of them, which Benning had sent me in advance, and I periodically
consulted it like a program.) I'm more bothered by the conflict
in this trilogy (which I find in most of Benning's work) between
a formalist impulse and a sociopolitical impulse—a conflict in
which the formalist impulse always wins.
I don't think Benning views the conflict this way. In a recent
interview he described the structure of El Valley Centro—a film
I reviewed for the Reader when it premiered in Chicago in 1999—saying,
"I wanted to code and then cause a rereading of the whole
film by naming what you see and exposing ownership. Like, you
might not know that this was a cotton picking machine, and almost
all of the land is owned by the large corporations, like railroads,
or oil companies, banks, causing a political reading. And so,
those titles at the end describe what is seen, who owned the land,
and where it was located, what small town it was near. Not only
do I want to bring out the politics, but I want the viewer to
recall the whole film, to play with memory."
In the same interview he acknowledges that El Valley Centro—which
deals mainly with corporate farming in California's Central Valley;
"550 miles long and 60 miles across," it feeds a quarter
of the U.S.—is more clearly and specifically political than the
other two films. But he adds that he hopes its political perspective
carries over into Los, which focuses on greater Los Angeles ("from
the San Diego County line to Val Verde," where Benning lives,
"about 50 miles north" of Los Angeles, and moving inland
from the Pacific "as much as 40 or 50 miles east"),
and into Sogobi, which takes in the whole "California wilderness."
(Benning gives an ethnic inflection to each film by including
a song over the final credits: Mexican pop in Spanish in El Valley
Centro, country-and-western in English in Los, and a Native American
chant in Sogobi, whose title is a Shoshone word meaning "earth.")
The political message isn't sustained or even clearly articulated.
Indeed, Benning's definitions of his subjects and their owners
often seem misplaced—in some cases because they're abstract,
in others because they're simply wrong. Los—my favorite film
in the trilogy, perhaps because its urban turf is more familiar
than farmland or wilderness—includes the following dubious identifications:
"summer rain/Golden State Freeway/Newhall Pass," "joggers/San
Vicente Blvd./Santa Monica," "planes landing/Los Angeles
International Airport/Los Angeles," "soccer/Hansen Dam
Park/Pacoima," "business people/Arco Plaza/Los Angeles,"
"police/Democratic National Convention/Los Angeles,"
"brush fire/Pechanga Indian Reservation/Temecula," and
"homeless/6th Street/Los Angeles." It's not just that
summer rain isn't exactly owned by the Golden State Freeway, or
the joggers by San Vicente Boulevard, the landing planes by LAX,
the soccer game by Hansen Dam Park, the businesspeople by Arco
Plaza. It's also that we can't be sure whether Benning has pegged
many of these subjects precisely or even accurately. The Newhall
Pass shot is an extraordinary view of 16 to 18 busy lanes of moving
traffic, most of them on the same superhighway, but the rain is
strictly incidental. Making the Santa Monica joggers more important
than the trees, buildings, cars, bicycles, and nonjogging pedestrians
seems fairly arbitrary. Plenty of people on Arco Plaza don't appear
to be businesspeople, and lots of people on Sixth Street aren't
visibly homeless. And the Temecula brushfire shot shows us not
flames but towering heaps of smoke. In other words, this is a
classification system gone awry, apparently driven by an impulse
to be encyclopedic, and not even Benning's avowed hatred of Los
Angeles can adequately account for it.
Furthermore, Benning wants many of his shots to be cross-referenced—so
that the "burnt land/Pechanga Indian Reservation/Temecula"
shot in Sogobi is recognized as the same place seen in the brushfire
shot in Los—which is difficult given that he's labeling these
shots long after they appear. More troubling is his decision to
order his shots mainly according to formal principles—sound,
color, texture, composition—sound, color, texture, composition—rather
than thematic development or continuity. (He noted last month
at the Berlin film festival, where he premiered the trilogy, that
the number of possible editing combinations with 35 shots is 35
factorial, or "1 with 40 zeros"; he said he generally
worked with slides made with frames taken from each shot to determine
the final order. He also noted that "maybe a third of the
shots were chosen for the sounds themselves rather than the image.")
Benning's approach to a given terrain can stimulate a great deal
of philosophical or religious reflection about order and design,
and in some ways his current reluctance to attach text directly
to his sounds and images—he explored its use in detail in his
preceding four films—only increases this sort of reflection.
It also points to a kind of art-world orientation in which interest
in technique supersedes interest in meaning, especially when it
comes to an audience's comprehension.
I can't say that Benning licked this problem when he integrated
text into his work, so perhaps it's unfair to reproach him for
not doing that here. Nevertheless, it's hard to have it both ways—to
create attractive formal patterns while hoping wistfully that
a political message will somehow grow out of them and develop
into something meaningful or politically useful. Maybe this is
because a formalist impulse and a taste for abstraction often
turn out to be the same thing—a taste for shapely concepts to
go with shapely sounds and images that defy reality even as they
appear to make it more palatable; obviously that's the last thing
we need if we hope to acquire any lucidity about what we're doing
or attending to in the world. The efforts of the Bush administration
to pound catchy but meaningless phrases into our skulls demonstrate
a similar problem: what could be more formalist than "war
on terrorism" or "axis of evil," each of which
furnishes us with two abstractions for the price of one? (According
to the Economist, the recent departure of journalist David Frum,
who coined "axis of evil," from Bush's speech-writing
team was occasioned by his egotism in taking credit for this phrase
rather than his stupidity or cynicism in dreaming it up.)
I don't mean to say that the formal qualities of Benning's trilogy
are as consistent as the cookie-cutter form implies. Some shots
clearly aspire to beauty—there are some breathtaking landscapes,
especially in Sogobi—while others seem motivated more by a desire
to document or bear witness, depicting such things as a waste-disposal
plant or steelworkers at a construction site. There's even a hint
of this dialectic in the contrast between the banal shot of ocean
waves that concludes Los and the spectacular and strikingly composed
Pacific vista that opens Sogobi.
The ongoing theme that natural resources are being squandered
leaves us with the feeling that, as in Disney's Bambi, the human
race is the ultimate villain. This theme is especially evident
in Sogobi, where no trace of humanity is visible until the tenth
shot, when a fire-fighting helicopter puts in an eerie appearance.
(Other surreal images include a barren landscape of housing lots
and an oil well in the midst of flowers and multicolored brush
in Los, and a distant view of a cement quarry resembling the ruins
of a Greek amphitheater for giants, with trucks crawling along
the tiers like insects, in Sogobi. The mysterious offscreen sounds
heard with the "red boulders" in Sogobi—apparently
distant gunshots and the faint gurgle of running water—also create
a surreal effect.)
The tension between impartially bearing witness and creating or
finding meaning is evident throughout the trilogy. When a bird
flies into the frame of shot number 18 in El Valley Centro ("dredge/Delta
Dredging Co./The Delta") and lights on top of a mast, it's
not clear whether this should be seen as an accidental intrusion
or as an element that retroactively becomes part of Benning's
design. His filmmaking is full of vexing questions of this kind,
which perhaps makes it only logical that his political agenda
periodically slides in and out of focus.
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