The Trembling Giant
The Trembling Giant is an experimental nature documentary that remediates the landscape of the American south-west by filming through the take-up reel of the projector itself. While we do not see the 16mm films playing on the projector, they nonetheless leave their trace as their passage through the mechanism warps the space in front of the camera, much as their soundtracks warp our reading of the landscape.
The Trembling Giant is also the name of a clonal colony of quaking aspen tree in Fish Lake Utah which, having survived for sixty thousand years, is now threatened by human interference. Thought to be the largest living organism in the world, this aspen colony is also known as Pando (Latin for ‘I Spread’) and is capable of putting up genetically identical stems from its single, vast root system. The bark of the quaking aspen tree provides one of the 38 Bach flower remedies and is thought to be the cure for any fear whose cause can't be named.
Credits
Screenings
- Slamdance (Jan 2017) Park City
- U S A Pori Film Festival (Nov 2016) Pori
- Finland 20th Jihlava International Documentary Film Festival (Oct 2016) Jihlava
- Czech Republic BFI London Film Festival (Oct 2016) London
- United Kingdom Nominated for best short film Haverhill Experimental Film Festival (Jul 2016) Boston
- U S A
runtime: 20 min