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Radúz Çinçera «Kinoautomat»
Radúz Çinçera, «Kinoautomat» One Man and his Jury, 1967
© Radúz Çinçera
 


 
 

Categories: Film

Check as well:

Oliver Hirschbiegel «Mörderische Entscheidung»| Lynn Hershman «Lorna»


Montreal | Canada | 4' | 35mm film, b/w, sound; interactive film with live performance on stage, electronic polling system | Concept: Josev Svoboda, Jaroslav Fric, Bohumil Mika | Director: Vladimír Tosek | Camera: Jan Eisner | film (7mm) transferred to DVD
 

 Radúz Çinçera
«Kinoautomat: One Man and his Jury»

At the Expo of 1967 in Montréal, Radúz Çinçera presented for the first time to a larger audience the «Kinoautomat» (movie vending-machine) he developed together with the directors Jan Rohac and Vladimir Svitacek, scenographer Josef Svoboda, and Jaroslav Fric and Bohumil Mika. It involved the world’s first interactive movie theater. In the movie theater’s seating, viewers found two buttons necessary for making selections; they were confronted with a film whose action could always be stopped. At one point, two principal actors from the screened film appeared onstage and asked the audience how they thought the scene should be continued. The viewers decided; afterwards, the adequate film version, arrived at by public vote, was then screened. The film«One Man and his Jury» told the story of an «average apartment house,» with turbulent goings-on between tenants. In one scene, a young woman slams her door shut after checking to see who rang her doorbell. Since she was in the shower, nothing covers her body except a towel. In her panic she rings her neighbor’s door and asks for help. Here the film is stopped. The audience is asked whether the neighbor should let her in or not. In almost every case the majority of the viewers answered yes. Only once, at the Expo, did the viewers vote no—when the scene involved a large group of nuns.

«The branching structure wasn't tree-like, doubling the number of scenes needed at each choice, but rather always remained only two. They did this by carefully crafting a story such that no matter which of the two options were chosen, it would end up back at the same next choice. The vote was executed by the projectionist switching one lens cap between the two synchronized projectors. The artfulness, ultimately, was not in the interaction but in the illusion of interaction. The film's director, Raduz Cincera, made it as a satire of democracy, where everyone votes but it doesn't make any difference.» (Quote from: Michael Naimark, Interactive Art - Maybe It's a Bad Idea, 1997)

 

Rudolf Frieling