24 FRAMES PER SECOND

24 FRAMES PER SECOND

Directed By Al Wong

USA | Documentary | 15 min

From the filmmaker: “I first started by taking a black 16mm film leader and holding a magnifying glass above the film. I then used the sunlight to burn each frame in the film leader. At the same time that I was burning the film leader, I was also filming the process of burning each frame. After developing the film, I then physically burned each frame with a soldiering iron in the exact same area that it was burned by the sunlight.

The result was that when projected, one would see the filming of the burn at the same time one sees a single frame action of the physical burning of the film, followed by other concepts dealing with 24 frames. 24 frames make one second and this gives the illusion of smoothness. However, because each frame was burned, it gives an animated impression together with the smoothness of 24 frames.”

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    Film Details

    1. Noise Sensitivity

    2. N/A (no dialogue)

    3. N/A
    4. 1978

    5. 15 minutes

    6. Experimental

    7. Documentary

    8. USA

      1. Al Wong


      Al Wong is a native San Franciscan artist and has spent the past 50+ years making art in a variety of mediums. He taught classes at the San Francisco Art Institute and California State University, Sacramento. He has shown at exhibition venues such as the New York Museum of Modern Art, the Whitney Museum of American Art, and the San Francisco Museum of Modern Art. He has received numerous awards and honors including the American Film Institute Grant, an NEA grant, a Guggenheim Fellowship, and most recently, the California Arts Council Legacy Individual Artist Fellowship.