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Bruce Conner, the Last Magician of the 20th Century
Program Two

Screening on Film
  • Report

    Directed by Bruce Conner.
    US, 1967, 16mm, black & white, 13 min.

Haunted by JFK’s assassination, Conner obsessively filmed television coverage of the killing, funeral and miscellaneous contemporary programming, repurposing the footage into both a sorrowful portrait of a lost hero—NB: Conner’s use of blank “leader”—and a blistering critique of postwar consumerism.

  • Crossroads

    Directed by Bruce Conner.
    US, 1976, 35mm, black & white, 36 min.

Conner followed his fascination with the atomic bomb to an absolutely brilliant furthest extreme, “expanding” 27 different shots of the 1946 Bikini Atoll a-bomb test footage into a mesmerizing two-part epic that juxtaposes the enhanced “realism” of Patrick Gleeson’s sound track in the first half against the hallucinatory trance music of Terry Riley that closes the film.

  • Television Assassination

    Directed by Bruce Conner.
    US, 1963-95, 16mm, black & white, 14 min.

Originally part of a sculpture in which the footage was projected onto a decrepit television set, Conner’s film offers a frightening meditation on the televisual spectacle of JFK’s assassination.

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Bruce Conner, the Last Magician of the 20th Century