Max With a Keitai. The city film was shot entirely on two mobile phones by Max Schleser in Japan in 2006 and is now being distributed for cinematic and mobile media release.
The experimental documentary Max with a Keitai is exploring Japanese metropolitan centres through the lens of a mobile phone and captures a new emerging mobile phone video aesthetic, which surfaced and characterises the years 2005-2008. The city film captures the everyday life of the mobile phone filmmaker Max during the mobile-mentary (mobile documentary) production and the Japanese megapolis in the Taiheiyō Belt. The cityscapes are depicted as a hybrid of tradition and progressive technoculture. In addition Max With a Keitai provides an alternative reading of the technologically most advanced centre. Max recorded the failures of the technoculture, such as the derelict shopping mal in Den-Den town (= Electric city) with his kaitei (mobile phone). Max With a Keitai is a digital record of a vblog (www.mobile-mentary.co.uk). The video-blog was produced at the end of 2006 during the production on location in Japan. A short of the experimental city film Max With a Keitai was edited on location and screened for the first time in Japan at the Design Fiesta in Tokyo in December 2006. The screening of the film to a Japanese audience became part of the feature project and is a direct reference to Kinoki filmmaking. Including original soundtrack based upon mobile field recordings by Dithernoise (aka Simon Longo), Demetris Roditis, Kota Kawasaki, Glitchworks (aka Jo Thomas), Will K-nine (aka Will Oliver) and Charlie McConville.
hi Max,
I am impressed with your presentation at Limkokwing Wuniversity today. Could you give me the name of the artists/ film makers who produced films using the aesthetic of movements? Could you elaborate more on it? Thanks. by Khor
khengkia76 3 years ago
Hi Max,
Thanks for having a sharing in Limkokwing University today. I am impressed with your presentation. Could you tell me again the names of the artists/ film makers who produced films based on the aesthetic of movements?
khengkia76 3 years ago