Bringing Dogme Back, This Time In Southampton - 27 East

Arts & Living

Arts & Living / 1348330

Bringing Dogme Back, This Time In Southampton

icon 5 Photos
Brian Bailey loads wood into his fireplace in Sag Harbor.

Brian Bailey loads wood into his fireplace in Sag Harbor.

A painting is evaluated by Terry Wallace of the Wallace Gallery. BY ERIN MCKINLEY

A painting is evaluated by Terry Wallace of the Wallace Gallery. BY ERIN MCKINLEY

A painting is evaluated by Terry Wallace of the Wallace Gallery. BY ERIN MCKINLEY

A painting is evaluated by Terry Wallace of the Wallace Gallery. BY ERIN MCKINLEY

author on Dec 9, 2014

Some lights. One camera. Natural action.

Those are the simplified rules of the Dogme ’95 avant-garde filmmaking movement, launched almost two decades ago by Danish directors Lars von Trier and Thomas Vinterberg. The participants vowed to create films based on traditional values—story, acting and theme—and shun special effects, taking power away from the corporate studios and handing it back to the artists.

The movement officially died in 2005. But it has been reawakened.

This week, digital filmmaking graduate students at Stony Brook Southampton are shooting their course’s culmination—seven interlocking short films in the Dogme style—led by associate professor Magdalene Brandeis and Lenny Crooks, one of the early collaborators of the Dogme ’95 movement and, currently, a development consultant for Killer Films.

“We wanted to get rid of the plot-driven approach,” Ms. Brandeis said on Sunday afternoon, taking a break from the shoot on campus. “We wanted to emphasize storytelling, as opposed to the gadgets and gizmos of modern movie-making.”

Shot with one camera, sans tripod, a single microphone and natural light, the completed 50-minute project will be without the “tricks” of the editing process, Mr. Crooks explained on set, including artificial light, re-recorded audio, transitions and even makeup.

The key to a successful Dogme work, he said, is the creation of authentic characters—no superficial action, car chases, or gratuitous killing allowed. “The characters, if they are strong enough and believable enough,” Mr. Crooks said, “will tell the story.”

This particular story, however, remains a mystery. The only clues are the title, “How to Write A Killer Résumé,” and a basic plotline: seven misfits from present-day Southampton are brought together once a week for a résumé-writing class.

“I don’t want to corral this story line into one direction,” Mr. Crooks said, “because it could have gone in seven different directions.”

The program’s seven students created each of the film’s characters for a previous project, Ms. Brandeis explained, before pairing up to write two of the final seven episodes that will be shot consecutively over the course of a week. Each student will direct one episode with 10 hours to shoot.

Melissa Bank, author of “The Girls’ Guide to Hunting and Fishing,” and Patricia Marx, staff writer for The New Yorker, also contributed to the project by co-writing the first and last episodes, respectively, alongside the students.

“All that mattered was that each pairing evolved the story,” Mr. Crooks said of the student collaboration. “Even if it wasn’t a narrative arc, it would still be an interesting sequence of events.”

This isn’t the first time the MFA program has attempted this sort of endeavor. Last year, the “20/20/20 Project” featured 20 filmmakers making 20 movies in 20 days. It was only natural for the idea to evolve and expand, Ms. Brandeis said.

“I was thrilled to know [Mr. Crooks] had experience with the [Dogme] movement,” Ms. Brandeis said. “We knew we had to give this a try.”

Mr. Crooks, who worked in Denmark during the Dogme movement, said the style of the 20/20/20 Project reminded him of the challenges and demands presented to the creators and those involved in the era of Dogme. Taking away the gimmicks and flashing lights actually allows the artists to be more creative and focus on the heart of the work—its characters—while removing the ability to string together the action artificially, like many modern Hollywood films do.

“The idea that things are happening naturally in those movies is simply not true,” he continued. “There are so many things that have been manipulated and reworked to make you think that it’s natural.”

You May Also Like:

A Jazz Brunch With Judy

On Sunday, May 5, The American Hotel in Sag Harbor will be the place to ... 19 Apr 2024 by Staff Writer

Sag Harbor Cinema Celebrates Earth Day With Films

Sag Harbor Cinema will screen Anne Belle’s 1976 film short film “Baymen — Our Waters are Dying,” recently restored by the New York Public Library, together with Greek filmmaker Leon Loisios’ “Fishermen and Fishing” (1961). The screenings will take place on Sunday, April 21, at 1:30 p.m. and will be followed by a presentation by the Cornell Cooperative Extension’s Back to the Bays initiative, with a special focus on the Sag Harbor Stewardship Site. “Baymen– Our Waters Are Dying” portrays the life of clam diggers on the East End and the growing concerns over water pollution and commercial fishing. It ... 18 Apr 2024 by Staff Writer

How To Die Eco-Style

Dead people live much more sustainably than the rest of us do. Despite that, we ... by Jenny Noble

The Ultimate Queen Celebration

The Suffolk welcomes back The Ultimate Queen Celebration on Thursday, May 9, at 8 p.m., ... by Staff Writer

New Additions to the Parrish Art Museum’s Collection

The Parrish Art Museum has announced the addition of significant artworks to its permanent collection. ... 17 Apr 2024 by Staff Writer

Sag Harbor Cinema’s ‘Projections’ Teams Up With ARF

Sag Harbor Cinema continues its “Projections” series on Sunday, April 28, from 1 to 3 ... by Staff Writer

Musician Ben Folds Will Perform at WHBPAC in July

As part of his “Paper Airplane Request Tour,” Emmy-nominated, multi-platinum-selling music artist Ben Folds will ... by Staff Writer

Looking Back and Forward With Artist Christopher Engel

“Looking Back Looking Forward, the Work of Christopher Engel” will be on view at Kramoris ... by Staff Writer

Five Hundred Years After Giovanni da Verrazzano

The Montauk Library will present a series of concerts and live performances in the coming ... 15 Apr 2024 by Staff Writer

Southampton’s Liz Sloan Prepares for International Debut in Tokyo

Liz Sloan, an artist whose work is deeply rooted in the Southampton art scene, is ... by Carole Reed