La Jetée

Cinema itself is a trick of time — still pictures passed through a focused beam of light at 24 frames per second. We are reminded of that in La Jetée, Chris Marker’s 28-min.-long meditation on time travel, apocalypse and fate. Composed almost entirely of black-and-white still frames, voice-over and an elegiac score, La Jetée propels its main character through time — from a ruined postwar Paris back to his own days as a young boy in the City of Lights, where he falls deeply in love. If this sounds vaguely familiar, it’s because Terry Gilliam essentially remade it as the full-length 12 Monkeys. Only one scene in the film steps away from still photographs to show a brief flicker of movement. The shot is so beautiful, the moment so unexpected, that it’s literally breathtaking.
Primer

They don’t travel very far along the timeline in Primer, but it’s the philosophical implications of their methodical hops through space-time that linger most. The ultra-low-budget Sundance winner, directed by engineer Shane Carruth and filmed in his parents’ garage, has gone on to become an unlikely cult hit on DVD. Two grown friends who spend their nights experimenting into the wee hours in hope of developing and selling the next hot patent accidentally build a metal chamber that is able to transport them a day into the past, where they can make surefire stock purchases to pad their portfolio. But as the friends grow cocky and sloppy — and suddenly realize there are already duplicates of them running around all over town — Primer uses its simple silver device to pry open Pandora’s box.

























