"Tiny Katerina" was another Cinema Verite where life is filmed purely from voyeur standpoint without any script or acting. Katerina lived with her family in Siberia and the film showed how they lived on a day to day basis in both summer and winter climates. It was honestly kind of odd to see Siberia without any snow on the ground as was depicted in the early moments of the film, but it quickly grew colder and as thing progressed. Katerina and her brother were very adult-like in their actions...obviously in that kind of environment, everyone has to pitch in as soon and as much as they can. The oil rigs that sprout up at the end were ominous to say the least. Sad to see that both wildlife and human habitats are affected by that sort of thing.
Chel White's "Choreography of a Copy Machine" was shot in a very modern looking way. I feel like not every image in the film was a shot strictly from a copy machine, but I definitely still thought it was a very innovative idea.
Chris Landreth's "Ryan" was pretty much the culmination of our entire class as it was a mash up of many of the genres we've learned. Documentary, Animation, and even Avant Garde in the sense that this was a pretty unusual film. The animation was incredible. The imagination needed to manufacture the look of those characters is pretty amazing. It was a sad story, but one that is better told than left unsaid.


