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Reconstruction Trilogy: Les LeVeque

Through the deployment of various structural strategies, the narrative logic of three problematic and influential films is transformed into a sensuous hallucinatory unveiling of repressed representations in historical dramas of the U.S.’s critical period of nation-building.

# Title Artists Run Time Year Country
1 Backwards Birth of a Nation Les LeVeque 00:13:07 2000 United States
2 Red Green Blue Gone with the Wind Les LeVeque 00:11:45 2001 United States
3 Stutter the Searchers Les LeVeque 00:12:15 2001 United States

Backwards Birth of a Nation

Les LeVeque
2000 | 00:13:07 | United States | English | B&W | Stereo | 4:3 | Video

DESCRIPTION

Backwards Birth of a Nation is a re-editing of D.W. Griffith's 187-minute film, Birth of a Nation (1915), into a pulsating 13-minute black and white phantasm. By means of structural strategies of condensation, the frame by frame inversion of black and white, and playing the resulting work from end to beginning, an apparition is brought forth where images of racism float to the surface and are contextualised as a part of the flow of United States history.

This title is also available on Les LeVeque Videoworks: Volume 2 and Reconstruction Trilogy: Les LeVeque.

Red Green Blue Gone with the Wind

Les LeVeque
2001 | 00:11:45 | United States | English | Color | Stereo | 4:3 |

DESCRIPTION

Red Green Blue Gone with the Wind is a phosphorescent deconstruction of David O. Selznick's Technicolor classic Gone with the Wind (1939). Through the structural devices of condensation, the frame-by-frame separation of the red, green, and blue Tehnicolor layers, and the de-interlacing of the video field, LeVeque presents a destabilized illumination of the relentless romantic nostalgia for the antebellum past.

This title is also available on Reconstruction Trilogy: Les LeVeque.

Stutter the Searchers

Les LeVeque
2001 | 00:12:15 | United States | English | Color | Stereo | 16:9 |

DESCRIPTION

 

Stutter the Searchers is an undulating re-edit of John Ford's "frontier saga" The Searchers (1956). Ford's violent narrative is restructured through the use of condensation, repetition, and the oscillating de-location of the image's place within the frame. This work pursues a spiraling, percussive search where flashing images endanger assumptions about home and wilderness.

This title is also available on Reconstruction Trilogy: Les LeVeque.