Dorothy Wiley

Most Popular Dorothy Wiley Trailers

Total trailers found: 11

Five Artists: BillBobBillBillBob Trailer (1971)

11 November 1971

A feature-length documentary directed by Dorothy Wiley and Gunvor Nelson about five working San Francisco artists: William T.

Letters Trailer (1972)

01 January 1972

Dorothy Wiley films four letters - a letter from her friend, a letter from worms, a letter from bugs, and a letter from her son.

Miss Jesus Fries on Grill Trailer (1973)

01 January 1973

"MISS JESUS FRIES ON GRILL is a mysterious striking evocation of pain and the short-circuiting sensations of living in this predicament of death.

Cabbage Trailer (1972)

01 January 1972

The cosmos in a cabbage.

Coffee Trailer (1977)

01 July 1977

Silent, meditative film of an everyday object, a “cosmic love letter to coffee”.

Weeny Worm or the Fat Innkeeper Trailer (1972)

01 January 1972

"I first saw these creatures at the Bodega Bay Marine Biology Lab. I was amazed - I lived on this planet so long not knowing I was sharing it with weenie worms.

Before Need Redressed Trailer (1994)

01 January 1994

After doing Before Need, Gunvor Nelson and Dorothy Wiley embarked on a new creative process. They revisited the film, reworked it and reassembled it creating a shorter new version, called Before Need Redressed.

Schmeerguntz Trailer (1965)

01 March 1965

A hilarious, grotesque and grave attack on the public ideal of the American housewife.

Fog Pumas Trailer (1967)

30 December 1967

A lyrical, surreal film populated by an assortment of human beings, creatures, places and events.

Before Need Trailer (1979)

01 January 1979

“We started with some dream images, a few actors, friends, and relatives. Slowly the film evolved into sequences or images that expressed the emotional discoveries of an aging woman… Standards of Perfection applied to all the selves, the relationships, the layers of memory.

Zane Forbidden Trailer (1972)

01 January 1972

Dorothy Wiley's film portrait of her mischievous son Zane, with soundtrack by William T. Wiley and Jim Hockenhull.