Déjà-Vu
A cinematic experience by Douglas Gordon - in which the film D.O.A. is screened simultaneously on three screens beside one another, but at slightly different speeds. The films quickly fall out of synch with one another. Déjà-vu uses footage from D.O.A. 1949-50, a Hollywood thriller directed by Rudolph Mateé. The film has been transferred to video and is projected simultaneously on three parallel screens at normal speed as well as slightly faster and slightly slower - 25, 24 and 23 frames per second (left to right). This has the effect of making the three identical narratives diverge increasingly over time, and inducing in the viewer an experience similar to déjà-vu.
Storyline
A cinematic experience by Douglas Gordon - in which the film D.O.A. is screened simultaneously on three screens beside one another, but at slightly different speeds. The films quickly fall out of synch with one another. Déjà-vu uses footage from D.O.A. 1949-50, a Hollywood thriller directed by Rudolph Mateé. The film has been transferred to video and is projected simultaneously on three parallel screens at normal speed as well as slightly faster and slightly slower - 25, 24 and 23 frames per second (left to right). This has the effect of making the three identical narratives diverge increasingly over time, and inducing in the viewer an experience similar to déjà-vu.
Sense and Sensibility
7.4The Shape of Water
7.2Joker
8.1Your Name.
8.5Wonder Woman
7.2Knives Out
7.8A Star Is Born
7.5The Batman
7.7Logan
7.8Venom
6.8The Perks of Being a Wallflower
7.8The Invisible Man
7.1The Platform
7.0Rogue One: A Star Wars Story
7.5Avatar
7.6Soul
8.1The Lion King
7.1Star Wars: The Force Awakens
7.3Two Is a Family
7.7Love Actually
7.1