ICA is closed from the 30 May – 3 June inclusive.
This screening, programmed by the Machine That Kills Bad People, brings together Chantal Akerman’s first four short films (all 1967) and American independent filmmaker Kelly Reichardt’s debut feature River of Grass (1994).
In 1967, Chantal Akerman shot four black-and-white, silent, 8mm films for her entrance exam to the Institut Supérieur des Arts du Spectacle (INSAS) in Brussels. These early works, recently rediscovered, feature street scenes and personal moments, and hint at Akerman’s nascent artistic vision. Akerman filmed at the Foire de Midi in Brussels and the courtyard of the Hôtel de Clèves-Ravenstein, which would, fifty years later, house the Chantal Akerman Foundation. She also captures a short narrative set in the shops of the Belgian seaside resort of Knokke, featuring her childhood friend Marilyn Watelet and her mother Natalia Akerman, both of whom would become significant figures in her later works. The four films not only mark her brief tenure at INSAS but foreshadowed her recurring thematic focus on personal and intimate spaces.
Kelly Reichardt’s debut feature River of Grass (1994) explores the stark suburban landscapes of southern Florida. Shot in 16mm, River of Grass follows the disenchanted Cozy and the aimless drifter Lee. Reichardt subverts traditional generic expectations; Reichardt has described the film as "a road movie without the road, a love story without the love, and a crime story without the crime”. Through a series of misadventures, including a failed murder and a botched robbery, Cozy and Lee are anti-heroes who clumsily attempt to live out their renegade fantasies. Reichardt’s film humorously illustrates the discrepancy between romanticised cinematic portrayals and the banality of real life, marking the emergence of a distinctive new voice in American independent cinema.
A specially commissioned essay by Huda Awan accompanies this screening.
Programme:
Examen d’entrée INSAS (Films 1-4), Dir. Chantal Akerman, 1967, 8mm transferred to digital, 14 min
River of Grass, 1994, Dir. Kelly Reichardt, 16mm transferred to DCP, colour, sound, 81 min
In 1967, Chantal Akerman shot four black-and-white, silent, 8mm films for her entrance exam to the Institut Supérieur des Arts du Spectacle (INSAS) in Brussels. These early works, recently rediscovered, feature street scenes and personal moments, and hint at Akerman’s nascent artistic vision. Akerman filmed at the Foire de Midi in Brussels and the courtyard of the Hôtel de Clèves-Ravenstein, which would, fifty years later, house the Chantal Akerman Foundation. She also captures a short narrative set in the shops of the Belgian seaside resort of Knokke, featuring her childhood friend Marilyn Watelet and her mother Natalia Akerman, both of whom would become significant figures in her later works. The four films not only mark her brief tenure at INSAS but foreshadowed her recurring thematic focus on personal and intimate spaces.
Kelly Reichardt’s debut feature River of Grass (1994) explores the stark suburban landscapes of southern Florida. Shot in 16mm, River of Grass follows the disenchanted Cozy and the aimless drifter Lee. Reichardt subverts traditional generic expectations; Reichardt has described the film as "a road movie without the road, a love story without the love, and a crime story without the crime”. Through a series of misadventures, including a failed murder and a botched robbery, Cozy and Lee are anti-heroes who clumsily attempt to live out their renegade fantasies. Reichardt’s film humorously illustrates the discrepancy between romanticised cinematic portrayals and the banality of real life, marking the emergence of a distinctive new voice in American independent cinema.
A specially commissioned essay by Huda Awan accompanies this screening.
Programme:
Examen d’entrée INSAS (Films 1-4), Dir. Chantal Akerman, 1967, 8mm transferred to digital, 14 min
River of Grass, 1994, Dir. Kelly Reichardt, 16mm transferred to DCP, colour, sound, 81 min
07:00 pm
Tue, 21 May 2024
Cinema 1
Ticket information
- All tickets that do not require ID (full price, disabled, income support) can be printed at home or stored in email
- For aged-based concession tickets (under 25, student and pensioner) please bring relevant ID to collect at the front desk before the event.
Access information
Cinema 1
- Both our Cinemas have step free access from The Mall and are accessible by ramp
- We have 1 wheelchair allocated space with a seat for a companion
- All seats are hard back, have a crushed velvet feel and they do not recline
- These are our seat size dimensions: W 42 x D 45 x H 52
- Arm rest either side of the seat dimensions: L 27 x W 7 x H 20
for the following requirements:
- We have unassigned seating. If you require a specific seat, please reserve this in advance
- Free for visitors where ticket prices are a barrier, please email
All films are ad-free and 18+ unless otherwise stated, and start with a 10 min. curated selection of trailers.
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no. 236848.