Chick Strand Trailers
Woman with Flowers TrailerFake Fruit Factory TrailerArtificial Paradise Trailer
Mildred "Chick" Strand's accomplishments as an artist spanned more than three decades. In the early 1960s, with a new anthropology degree in hand, she turned her attention to ethnographic filmmaking. Her early work focused on Meso-American cultures explored through the language of the experimental documentary.
In 1961, she founded Canyon Cinema with Bruce Baillie, an organization that, in 1965, spawned the San Francisco Cinematheque. They organized screenings of experimental, documentary and narrative films in East Bay backyards and community centers. Acting in response to a lack of public venues for independent movies, they were part of a wider explosion in American avant-garde film. The era was one of social idealism and communal energy, and the films they showcased boldly embraced purely cinematic visual expression and cultural critique.
Strand left Northern California in the late 1960s to pursue studies in ethnographic film at UCLA. She then joined the faculty of Occidental College, where she served as the director of the film as art program for a quarter of a century. In the 1970s she continued to define her visual technique, and her subjects more frequently became women. She soon evolved a distinctive film style: backlit subjects photographed in close up and in motion, with a handheld telephoto lens. The technique produced sensual, lyrical images that became Strand's signature. Her entire filmography numbers nearly a score of works, and along the way, she also become an accomplished photographer and painter.
Most Popular Chick Strand Trailers
Total trailers found: 23
16 November 1979
Chick Strand's SOFT FICTION is a personal documentary that brilliantly portrays the survival power of female sensuality.
10 September 1965
Chick Strand's first film, made while living in the Bay Area, features her young son Eric as a little boy traipsing through a mysterious landscape, perhaps pursued by the titular monsters.
01 January 1968
A short piece of commercial work done by three legendary L.A. artists. This piece was shown on loop projectors in Sears stores to promote an exciting and new young ladies' clothing line.
16 November 1979
Loose Ends is a collage film about the process of internalizing the information that bombards us through a combination of personal experience and media in all forms.
16 November 1979
A bewitching, mysterious work of enveloping beauty, the film’s ominous title and a dedication to Anne Frank deeply inform our reading of its haunting subtext.
12 February 1970
Filmed at Mission San Francisco de Guayo on the Orinoco River Delta in Venezuela, in 1965. A Franciscan nun and an Indian woman describe the Indian way of life before and after the arrival of the mission 20 years prior to the making of the film; their words are translated to English voice-over.
01 January 1971
An educational film in which the positive benefits of Title 1 funded schooling are illustrated. Though a commissioned work, this film fully exhibits close-up camera work and remarkable, fluid editing.
01 January 1967
Strand spent over twenty years documenting her friend Anselmo Aguascalientes’ life, eventually creating a stunning trilogy of films—Anselmo, Cosas de mi vida, and Anselmo and the Women—tender portraits that are also glimpses into poverty, resourcefulness, perseverance and patriarchy.
10 October 1975
Impressionistic surrealism in three acts. The approach is literary experimental with optical effects.
26 September 2011
A Mexican flower seller’s story of personal tragedy is delicately illuminated in an intimate and moving act of portraiture that is both unsettling and liberating.
16 May 1976
An expressionistic, surrealistic portrait of a Latin American woman.
13 February 1986
Aztec romance and the dream of love. The anthropologist’s most human desire, the ultimate contact with the informant.
12 February 1968
A film poem using found film and stock footage altered by printing, home development and solarization.
16 November 1979
A wet hot dream about sensuality. Preserved by the Academy Film Archive in partnership with the National Film Preservation Foundation and the Pacific Film Archive in 2009.
12 February 1966
An experimental film poem in celebration of life and visions. Techniques include live action, animation, montage and found images.
31 December 1986
Intimate documentary about young women who make papier mache fruit and vegetables in a small factory in Mexico.
16 November 1979
An abstract compilation of found footage. Preserved by the Academy Film Archive in partnership with National Film Preservation Foundation and Pacific Film Archive in 2009.
01 January 1986
"A sort of collage film, using images shot for other films that somehow never were finished. The sound comes from various sound gathering adventures.
12 February 1986
Continuing the life of Anselmo, a Mexican street musician, and his life-long struggle to make a good life for his children.
12 February 1986
A "new narrative" film based on the visions of magic realism in an Anglo context. This is a gothic mystery that explores a reckless pursuit of interchangeable personalities and experience.
10 October 1975
Poetic surrealism. Approach is experimental in relationship of image and sound. A film about the loss of innocence and the search for the essence of the human spirit.
29 January 1976
Strand spent over twenty years documenting her friend Anselmo Aguascalientes’ life, eventually creating a stunning trilogy of films—Anselmo, Cosas de mi vida, and Anselmo and the Women—tender portraits that are also glimpses into poverty, resourcefulness, perseverance and patriarchy.
01 January 1968
"In celebration of movement." - C.S.