This program is partially supported by a grant from the Illinois Arts Council Agency.
Welcome to the Featured Film page for Bridge Video, now with more free access. Click here for our Fall 2024 program lineup. New all-original films, exclusively available on Bridge Video are posted here weekly on Fridays Sept-Dec & Feb-June. Click here to subscribe & view our entire collection of under-represented categories of film and video.

THIS WEEK’S FEATURED FILM PREMIERE: "Interdeviation” (Nov. 15-21)
"Interdeviation" visualizes a world where humans, technology, and nature become inextricably merged. The video blends live action footage taken from the environments surrounding the artist’s home as well as images and footage of the artist herself. This footage was used as reference within generative AI to cultivate new and imagined landscapes as well as speculative human-plant hybrid organisms.

THIS WEEK’S FEATURED FILM PREMIERE: "CyberSilhouette” (Nov. 8-14)
There is an identification with the greater forces of life and death in not just a suspension of the self or the self as a singularity of interpersonal forces meeting with the absolute. When I deconstruct my body, obscure my personage, and simultaneously sacrifice myself, I multiply into a fragmented composite. This process is not rooted in spiritualist escapism. Rather, "I" undergo a symbolic detachment or displacement from the realms of nature, allowing me to decontextualize myself and attain a renewed sense of being.

THIS WEEK’S FEATURED FILM PREMIERE: "Intervención Inaugural” (Nov. 1-7)
At that unexpected hour, between sleep and wakefulness, the participants arrive for their first rendezvous. The inaugural intervention is the enactment of the logic behind the artistic experimentation device. The body of the performer that carries the guideline is written. Locks of hair with their poetic mathema are cut. Converted into offerings, they are handed in a box to each artist, while an unintelligible phrase, but not any phrase, is whispered in their ears.

LIMITED ENGAGEMENT (NOV. ONLY): “No se ve desde acá”
A spatial exploration of Miami and the endless pursuit of the American Dream, in an era of immigrant mass mobilization and the absurd dominance of wealth and border securocracy.

THIS WEEK’S FEATURED FILM PREMIERE: "SYN-ACK 2023-05-11” (Oct. 25-31)
Offensive cybersecurity tools are transformed into audio-visual instruments. Port scans, vulnerability exploits, wifi packet sniffing, deauth attacks, ping scans, and more are used to generate network activity that is converted directly into raw digital sound and raw terminal text in real-time.

THE GENOCIDE HOUSE: Full Trailer (Oct. 25-31)
The second of five trailers for Robert Kloss’s novel, “The Genocide House” is a viewing portal that puts on display the grim history of what dishonest people call civilization. Voices of the damned speak passages from the book over a blend of cinematic stock and archival materials optically cohered into a dusty black & white stew.
This trailer brings together the previous five sections into a single short film.

THIS WEEK’S FEATURED FILM PREMIERE: "SeaMonster II” (Oct. 18-24)
SeaMonster II is a single channel video with sound. All the objects used in this performance were collected at the sea shore near the artist's studio on the island of Aegina.
This work is part of the "SeaMonster" series. The first iteration "SeaMonster Monk" a live performance took place at the Athens Art Fair 2019 and was featured at the WhiteBox NYC in 2023.

THE GENOCIDE HOUSE: Section IV (Oct. 18-24)
The second of five trailers for Robert Kloss’s novel, “The Genocide House” is a viewing portal that puts on display the grim history of what dishonest people call civilization. Voices of the damned speak passages from the book over a blend of cinematic stock and archival materials optically cohered into a dusty black & white stew.
Section IV of “The Genocide House” Trailer draws comparison between the men who oversaw the extermination of European Jews and Japanese civilians at the height of their authority.

THIS WEEK’S FEATURED FILM PREMIERE: "Dissolve” (Oct. 4-10)
“Dissolve” is a short meditation on the transience of sensory awareness pointing to that which is unchanging, immaterial, outside of time. It reaches for an equivalence between immediate sensation and metaphor. Ultimately, this work aims to be experienced more fully through the body than the mind. Moving at a breath-like pulse, modulating its light and atmosphere, repeating, varying, and elaborating both its visual and aural themes; “Dissolve” arrives at a dynamic stillness.

THE GENOCIDE HOUSE: Section III (Oct. 11-17)
The second of five trailers for Robert Kloss’s novel, “The Genocide House” is a viewing portal that puts on display the grim history of what dishonest people call civilization. Voices of the damned speak passages from the book over a blend of cinematic stock and archival materials optically cohered into a dusty black & white stew.
Section III of “The Genocide House” Trailer takes on a more impartial tone, shedding light on what life was like during the era of the 1918 Influenza pandemic at the tail end of WWI.

THIS WEEK’S FEATURED FILM PREMIERE: "Regressus ad Uterum: the universal language beyond the incommunicable” (Oct. 4-10)
My research stems from the need to investigate an immutable human peculiarity: miscommunication. By definition, it is an existential condition that makes it impossible to communicate oneself objectively to others. This state consequently results in a form of isolation and loneliness - a continuous attempt to be understood by clinging to the most humanly possible, followed inevitably by failure. Despite being the only living beings existing on Planet Earth to have the privilege of speech, humans are also the only living beings who fall victim to inexpression, incomprehension, and the impossibility of communication; at least, through verbal language.

THE GENOCIDE HOUSE: Section II (Oct. 4-10)
The second of five trailers for Robert Kloss’s novel, “The Genocide House” is a viewing portal that puts on display the grim history of what dishonest people call civilization. Voices of the damned speak passages from the book over a blend of cinematic stock and archival materials optically cohered into a dusty black & white stew.
Section II of “The Genocide House” Trailer explores the callous thoughts of a sexually malicious killer who lived in the latter half of the 19th century.

LIMITED ENGAGEMENT (OCTOBER ONLY): “Demi-Goddesses”
LIMITED ENGAGEMENT (OCT ONLY)
‘Demi-Goddesses’ is the second essay about still dominant dark aspects of our modern society. It is conceived as a surreal anti-patriarchal thought experiment and raises important questions about gender, power, and social change, prompting us to reflect on how historical patterns of discrimination and oppression might be either repeated or overcome in a reversed gendered world. It challenges the viewer to confront their own assumptions and biases, and to consider the possibilities of a more equitable society.

THIS WEEK’S FEATURED FILM PREMIERE: "Echoes of Pandemic” (Sept. 27-Oct. 3)
“I want a symbolic death, that leads me in a last poetic, almost desperate act: to die with a seed stuck in my throat.” -- From the poem "Edge."
Echoes of Pandemic combines the power of video and poetry to explore the impact of the pandemic on the vibrant city of Miami. Capturing the beauty of poetry in difficult times, and painting a vivid and emotional portrait of a town in the throes of a global health crisis. “Echoes of Pandemic” is a video about the universal human spirit and the transformative power of poetry.

THE GENOCIDE HOUSE: Section I (Sept. 27-Oct. 3)
The first of five trailers for Robert Kloss’s novel, “The Genocide House” is a viewing portal that puts on display the grim history of what dishonest people call civilization. Voices of the damned speak passages from the book over a blend of cinematic stock and archival materials optically cohered into a dusty black & white stew.
Section I of “The Genocide House” Trailer paints the disturbing portrait of white colonial expansion across North America and the subsequent extermination of the continent’s indigenous people from 1675 to the present.

THIS WEEK’S FEATURED FILM PREMIERE: "Pedestrian: Chicago Actualities of North Ave.” (May 24-30)
Pedestrian is an archivization of North Avenue from Claremont to Damen, from September 2021 - March 2022. This is a first-person visual documentation of one route through Chicago. This is an experimental film composed of multiple videos and audio that come together to make up one timeline showing showing multiple perspectives and experiences through the seasons.

THIS WEEK’S IMAGE UNION FEATURE: “Time’s T-Bone” (May 24-30)
“Time’s T-Bone” by John J. McClintock. Poetic piece with a combination of humans and cardboard cutouts sitting in an abandoned car.

THIS WEEK’S FEATURED FILM PREMIERE: "Inbetweenness” (May 17-23)
Inbetweenness alludes to the ambiguities of deterritorialization and of hybrid cultural identity. It navigates a destabilizing state of diasporic existence by reimagining and experiencing childhood home through digital mapping tools. Searching for traces of the past within satellite imagery, aerial photography, and 360 photography, Director Mona Kasra yearns for a sense of belonging to her homeland.

THIS WEEK’S IMAGE UNION FEATURE: “‘Ricky & Rocky” by Tom Palazzolo (May 17-23)
“Ricky and Rocky” by Tom Palazzolo and Jeff Kreines, 1972. The two filmmakers use the style of direct cinema to film the Italian/Polish backyard wedding shower of a young couple, Ricky and Rocky. The pair show off their wedding gifts and guests and relatives express their approval of the shower to the filmmakers.

THIS WEEK’S FEATURED FILM PREMIERE: "McGunner05” (May 10-16)
In 'MCGUNNER05' (2022), footage of Saddam Hussein’s US occupied palace is documented by McGunner05, a US soldier.
A documentary video, played side by side on screen, creates a gutter of "doubling" or "afblau". Through the facade of paired videos, an outward appearance emerges that reveals a less pleasant reality.
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"While in letting things say themselves, we rest in them, while we let things say themselves….and while yet even in the establishing of facts we meet with a doubling which to some extent arises from the things themselves, in the process of intending we go from ourselves toward things. We do not thereby have a dead image of something, but we are dealing, with a living movement toward what is intended (see PG 107; PI-455-6; PG 98; PG109)."
-Brand, Gerd, The Essential Wittgenstein (Basic Books, Inc.), 24.