Bruce Conner's CROSSROADS and
THE EXPLODING DIGITAL INEVITABLE
a work in progress

Bruce Conner, BOMBHEAD (1991)
Live cinema essay with separate restoration lecture. An early draft of this material previewed as a work-in-progress at the AMIA Reel Thing Technical Symposium, Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences (LA), 2013. The restoration lecture was presented at Museum of Modern Art (NY), Oct. 28 2013. Made possible with the generous assistance of NT Picture and Sound.
Accompanied by the text essay, "Conservation at a Crossroads"
in Artforum, October 2013
In 1976 groundbreaking collagist, sculptor and filmmaker Bruce Conner released what was to prove his magnum opus, a 36 minute assemblage of the iconic atomic bomb test footage shot at the Bikini Atoll on July 25, 1946. Conner's editing of film's brilliant "dual" score--by seminal minimalist composer Terry Riley and synthesizer pioneer Patrick Gleeson--evokes a surreal beauty latent in the devastating images that comprises one of the most profound meditations on the nuclear era extant.
THE EXPLODING DIGITAL INEVITABLE is a live documentary essay integrating an array of movie and audio clips, still photographs, and rare archival documents that tells the story of CROSSROADS' unique production, as well as the massive cultural spectacle of the original Bikini Atoll tests themselves--the singlemost recorded event in human history. It also chronicles the extraordinary collaboration of Conner with Riley and Gleeson, including original interviews with both composers. In joint presentation with CROSSROADS, the entire program runs 90 minutes.
A separate 30 minute presentation discusses the groundbreaking 4K digital restoration of the film, as detailed in ARTFORUM.
The Restoration and Reconstruction
In 1996, the Pacific Film Archive in collaboration with the Academy Film Archive embarked on a then-authoritative preservation of the film in consultation with Conner, under the directorship of Michael Friend. Now the Conner Family Trust and the Michael Kohn Gallery, in a joint project with the UCLA Film & Television Archive, has created a unique edition that seeks to faithfully interpret the film in digital presentation while simultaneously honoring the previous work and addressing traditional archival imperatives to respect medium specificity. This undertaking involved a multi-tiered strategy of versioning, with different iterations intentionally created for different media forms and exhibition contexts.
Of particular importance to the interpretive process was a 2003 standard definition video remastering conducted under the direct supervision of Conner. This version not only included slight editorial changes, but critically, went back to the original 1/4" audio recordings made at Patrick Gleeson's Different Fur Studios. Terry Riley's composition had been recorded in stereo, but the film was released in mono in 1976 as the industry had not yet widely integrated the Dolby Stereo format. The current project closely examined the 2003 remastering, the 1996 preservation, and the original 1976 production in generating its versions. "Conservation at a Crossroads" discusses the archival issues surrounding the broad industrial changes that led to a significant new remastering and reconstruction of the film.
CROSSROADS (Bruce Conner (1976): Digitally remastered, reconstructed, and restored by the Conner Family Trust and the Michael Kohn Gallery, in collaboration with the UCLA Film & Television Archive. Laboratory work by Cinetech and NT Picture and Sound. Sound Restoration by Audio Mechanics.
Thanks to: Dave Cetra, Grover Crisp, Michael Friend, Shawn Jones, John Polito, Michelle Silva.
see list of restored films here
see list of essays and lectures here
