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Himself as Herself / The Dead Ones / Through a Lens Brightly

Introduction by Mark Webber
Screening on Film
  • Himself as Herself

    Directed by Gregory Markopoulos.
    US, 1967, 16mm, color, 60 min.
    Print source: Temenos

Loosely based on Balzac’s novel Seraphita but merging its male and female protagonists, the film is at once melancholy and transcendent, laden with the gloom of what Markopoulos termed the character’s denial of self but also alive with the possibility of transformation. Clad in formal attire, the young hero seems the essence of maleness, yet he’s troubled by vaguely feminine objects – a fluttering fan, a gold-colorred foot standing on fur. Soon his masculine and feminine selves are intercut, the latter signaled not by drag but by a simple sari, as each of his identities appears to look and gesture at the other. The images are tinged with a powerful if partially suppressed eroticism, yet the plush interiors (this is a rich young man) trap us in a deadened world of opulence, the thick colors embedding the character in the decor. Most important, Markopoulos’s radical editing intercuts two or three scenes, sometimes in a single-frame flicker, which undermines the stability of any one locale or person, each image poised to escape its immediate moment. – Fred Camper

  • The Dead Ones

    Directed by Gregory Markopoulos.
    1948, 16mm, color, silent, 28 min.
    Print source: Cinema Arts Centre

Markopoulos’ first attempt at making a 35mm feature film, clearly inspired by the cinema of Jean Cocteau, was left unfinished and the materials were lost for many years.

  • Through a Lens Brightly: Mark Turbyfill

    Directed by Gregory Markopoulos.
    US, 1967, 16mm, color, 15 min.

The life of painter, dancer and poet Mark Turbyfill, seen in his 70th year, is evoked through Markopoulos’ unique form of cinematic portraiture.

Part of film series

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Film as Film: The Cinema of Gregory Markopoulos

Current and upcoming film series

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The Reincarnations of Delphine Seyrig

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Rosine Mbakam, 2025 McMillan-Stewart Fellow