Henry Hills' Experimental Films: Radio Adios & Plagiarism

A superabundance of useless information effectively subdues freedom of speech. Condense and survive!

RADIO ADIOS (1982) is a monologue in 12 plaited strands; an extremely precise, condensed and intensely rhythmic Busby Berkeleyish spectacle of an examination of conversational and literary language over a fair range of vocal timbre, microphones, volume settings and single-system sync peculiarities and its dissolution into music to the accompaniment of simultaneous Manhattan ambiances punctuated by fragments of jazz, personalized handheld camera movement, movement from cut to cut--juxtapositions of scale, pulsating changes in light intensity, a varying pallette of various filmstocks, generations, etc., at an appropriately furious pace and in strict one-track sync,.offering simultaneously several levels of apprehension or interpretation to encourage multiple viewings.

Brakhage says it's real.

Starring Hannah Weiner, Diane Ward, Sally Silvers, Jemeel Moondoc & Muntu, Aline Mayer, Jackson MacLow, Abigail Child, Charles Bernstein, Bruce Andrews and Rashied Ali on drums, with George Kuchar as a Maoist revolutionary.

Text published in O.ARS/3: TRANSLATIONS (Cambridge, 1983).

PLAGIARISM (1981) Begins jokingly proclaiming, "I'll make my Ernie Gehr film," a major preoccupation of my generation in the late 70s/early 80s, & then this very raw other thing proceeds to unfold, raw because I only had enough money (a loan from Abby Child) to do 4 shoots never having done sync & using outdated film stock from Rafik & an unfamiliar, undependable camera & trying to keep everything together & everything going wrong, yet determined to make concrete the ideas I had been abstractly developing over several years with whatever I got back from the lab no matter & so abandoning all caution to open a new area, I decided who could possibly talk better than poets? Edited in Times Square. Starring Bruce Andrews & Charles Bernstein, co-editors of L=A=N=G=U=A=G=E magazine; James Sherry, editor of ROOF; & the late Hannah Weiner, author of CLAIRVOYANT JOURNAL, reading from the notebooks that later became LITTLE BOOKS/INDIANS.

Hills' early films are dense landscape montages whose passages achieve a precise shuffle effect not unlike 
			Charles Sheeler's Cubist-influence paintings.  His recent works, RADIO ADIOS and PLAGIARISM, are no less kinetic--
			using sync sound and Burroughs-like cutups in a manner that underscores his interest in jazz and sound poetry.' 
			--J. Hoberman, The Village Voice

back to top