His Comedy / Njegova komedija
Paul Bush
1997, UK, 8'
The poet Dante is taken by Virgil through the city of desolation and into the centre of hell. What he sees is not simply an apocalyptic vision of the punishment that awaits sinners after death, but also the very real horrors committed by human hands on Earth.
Virgil pesnika Danteja skozi opustošeno mesto odpelje v središče pekla. Na poti pesnik ne vidi le apokaliptične vizije kazni, ki grešnike čaka po smrti, temveč tudi zelo resnična grozodejstva, ki jih je človek povzročil na Zemlji.
Recommended for children under 14 years old: No
Techniques: Engraving directly on 35 mm colour filmstock
Language: English
Paul Bush
Paul Bush’s films challenge the boundaries that separate fiction, documentary and animation. His background in Fine Art is an influence on all his work and this is reflected in its inclusion in art collections and exhibitions as well as cinema distribution and television broadcast. During the 1980’s he wrote and directed several short and medium length films that were critically acclaimed but it was not until the 1990’s that his films became widely distributed and he was able to concentrate all his attention on film making. During the 90’s his films were commissioned by all the major broadcasters, won numerous awards and were shown in cinemas, exhibitions and television all round the world. During this period he usually used single frame techniques often involving live action elements. In 1999 he was polled in second place in Creation’s list of top directors of animation. In 1996 he set up his company Ancient Mariner Productions to produce his own films and he also directs commercials and his clients have included Panasonic and Philips. In 2003 he was awarded a Nesta fellowship to develop feature films. His first feature Babeldom was completed in 2012. Due to the uncertainty of funding in the UK since 2000 he has increasingly relied on international co productions to finance his work. Bush was born in 1956 and studied Fine Art at Central School and Goldsmiths College, London. He taught himself how to make films while a member of the London Film-makers Co-op and Chapter Film Workshop in Cardiff. From 1981 to 1993 he taught film-making, establishing a film workshop in South London and supervising a wide variety of courses and the production of numerous student films. between 1995 and 2001 he taught on the visual arts course at Goldsmiths. He has lectured, run workshops and tutored at numerous art and film courses around the world including the Media Academy of Cologne, National Film Board of Canada, The Netherlands Institute of Animation Films, La Poudrière in France, TAW in Denmark, St Lukas in Brussels, KASK in Ghent, Anadolou University in Turkey, EIC-TV in Cuba, and the Royal College of Arts, Duncan of Jordanstone and the National Film and Television School in Britain. He runs workshops every year at Centro Sperimentale di Cinematografia, Turin, and Lucerne University, and from 2015-17 he was visiting lecturer at Harvard.
source: http://www.paulbushfilms.com/