(Godfrey Reggio, 1982.)
Koyaanisqatsi, literally translated as “life out of
balance”, is a collection of videos that represent moving image as art. It's an
innovative, personal journey documenting time passing via various
environmental, industrial and human actions. It's an epic and poetic journey
through footage that speaks volumes without any actual dialogue; just the
moving image choreographed to the soundtrack composed by Phillip Glass. It's
systematic and repetitive music that changes very slightly according to the
mood emoted by the visuals.
The initial piece of film we see is footage of slow-motion
debris falling, although at first it's not entirely clear what we're looking
at. As it slowly widens, it becomes distinct that it's the base of a rocket
launch; the scale of which, I personally find quite threatening. In a complete
change from this, the footage changes to a largely environmental scene, a wide
pan across a landscape of rocks and boulders. Footage of clouds passing over
the landscape, casting shadows and creating formations, is sped up to the point
of darkness falling. Footage is also shot from in and above the level of the
clouds, drawing attention to the movement and formation of such natural
occurrences. There's imagery of clouds spilling around mountains and valleys,
like water being poured. POV footage takes us through the sky, looking down on
the varying landscapes below, showing the audience a different way of viewing
nature. It pans across fields of rich colours; blues, purples, reds and
yellows. It draws attention the perfection of natural reflections as well as
the fluidity in the movement of unaltered/ untouched conditions, like the
rolling of waves or the dissipating of clouds and mist.
The next section seems to focus on beauty in unexpected
places, man-made surroundings. This is accompanied by big, looming music. The
footage goes through a series of heavy machinery, dense black smoke engulfing
the screen, implosions, explosions, stills of power lines, long leading lines
of pipework; beauty amongst an engineered environment or within destruction.
Similarly, the visual features offered by the imagery of war are equally
hypnotic and strangely beautiful. Imagery of missiles falling in slow motion,
sailing through the sky like birds. Or the POV of a fighter jet flying through
the air. Rows of tanks, guns cocked upwards. The space capsule detaching. An
atomic bomb detonating. All of the aforementioned are threatening, scary
occurrences that, when placed within such a forceful rhythm of film and to such
a strong sound, are weirdly mesmerizing.
The next phase of film is heavily centred around a
cityscape; overcrowded, busy, dense and relentless. Full car-parks, planes
taxiing amid the haze of water vapour, cars filtering in towards the city-
bathed in the shadows of skyscrapers. Night footage of tall buildings with
lights flickering on and off like parts of a circuit board. High speed, long
exposure footage of cars passing through the city, creating lines of light.
Aerial shots of cars moving through the labyrinth of roads. The full moon
passing behind the silhouetted skyline. The vastness of the cityscape is shown
in daylight via a long shot, interrupted by the lens glare of the sun
reflecting off of the huge amount of glass and metalwork.
The whole thing feels like feels like a real visual feast,
overpowering and stimulating the senses in a completely unique (at the time)
and beautiful way.
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