London Underground / Photo Credit: The Verge
WHAT IS UNDERGROUND FILM? (In
the Entertainment industry.)
What is Underground Film?
An underground film is a film that is
out of the mainstream either in its style, genre, or financing.
The first printed use of the term
"underground film" occurs in a 1957 essay by American film critic
Manny Farber, "Underground Films." Farber uses it to refer to the
work of directors who "played an anti-art role in Hollywood." He
contrasts "such soldier-cowboy-gangster directors as Raoul Walsh, Howard
Hawks, William Wellman," and others with the "less talented De Sicas
and Zinnemann’s continue to fascinate the critics." However, as in
"Underground Press", the term developed as a metaphorical reference
to a clandestine and subversive culture beneath the legitimate and official
media.
In the late 1950s, "underground
film" began to be used to describe early independent film makers operating
first in San Francisco, California and New York City, New York, and soon in
other cities around the world as well, including the London Film-Makers' Co-op
in Britain and Ubu Films in Sydney, Australia. The movement was typified by more
experimental filmmakers working at the time like Shirley Clarke, Stan Brakhage,
Harry Everett Smith, Maya Deren, Andy Warhol, Kenneth Anger, Jonas Mekas, Ken
Jacobs, Ron Rice, Jack Smith, George and Mike Kuchar, and Bruce Conner.
By the late 1960s, the movement
represented by these filmmakers had matured, and some began to distance
themselves from the countercultural, psychedelic connotations of the word,
preferring terms like avant-garde or experimental to describe their work.
Through 1970s and 1980s, however,
"underground film" would still be used to refer to the more
countercultural fringe of independent cinema. The term was embraced most
emphatically by Nick Zedd and the other filmmakers associated with the New
York-based Cinema of Transgression and No Wave Cinema of the late 1970s to
early 1990s.
In the early 1990s, the legacy of the
Cinema of Transgression carried over into a new generation, who would equate
"underground cinema" with transgressive art, ultra-low-budget
filmmaking created in defiance of both the commercialized versions of
independent film offered by newly wealthy distributors like Miramax and New
Line, as well as the institutionalized experimental film canonized at major
museums. This spirit defined the early years of underground film festivals
(like the New York Underground Film Festival, Chicago Underground Film
Festival, Boston Underground Film Festival, Sydney Underground Film Festival,
Hamilton Underground Film Festival, Toronto's Images Festival, and others),
zines like Film Threat, as well as the works of filmmakers like Craig Baldwin,
Jon Moritsugu, Carlos Atanes, Sarah Jacobson, and Bruce La Bruce. In London the
Underground resurgence emerged as a movement of Underground cinema clubs which
included the radical open access group the Exploding Cinema.
By the late 1990s and early 2000s,
the term had become blurred again, as the work at underground festivals began
to blend with more formal experimentation, and the divisions that had been
stark ones less than a decade earlier now seemed much less so. If the term is
used at all, it connotes a form of very low budget independent filmmaking, with
perhaps transgressive content, or a lo-fi analog to post-punk music and
cultures. Taking place in basements across America, underground film has long
had difficulties in gaining mainstream acceptance.
Underground versus cult
The term "underground film"
is occasionally used as a synonym for cult film. Though there are important
distinctions between the two, a significant overlap between these categories is
undeniable. The films of Kenneth Anger, for example, could arguably be
described as underground, experimental and cult. The 2013 indie sci-fi
Hyperfutura by James O'Brien is likewise an underground, experimental and cult
film. However, a studio film like Heathers may have a cult following, but could
not be accurately described as an underground film.
References & Credits: Google, Wikipedia, Wikihow, WikiBooks,
Pinterest, IMDB, Linked In, Indie Wire, Film Making Stuff, Hiive, History
Channel, Film Daily, New York Film Academy, The Balance, Careers Hub, The
Numbers, Film Maker, TV Guide Magazine, Blurb, Media Match, Quora, Creative
Skill Set, Chron, Investopedia, Variety, No Film School, WGA, BBC, Daily
Variety, The Film Agency, Best Sample Resume, How Stuff Works, Studio Binder, Career
Trend, Producer's Code of Credits, Truity, Production Hub, Producers Guild of
America, Film Connection, Variety, Wolf Crow, Get In Media, Production Beast, Sony
Pictures, Warner Bros, UCAS, Frankenbite, Realty 101, Careers Hub, Screen Play Scripts,
Elements of Cinema, Script Doctor, ASCAP, Film Independent, Any Possibility, CTLsites,
NYFA, Future Learn, VOM Productions, Mad Studios, Rewire, DP School, Film
Reference, DGA, IATSE, ASC, MPAA, HFPA, MPSE, CDG, AFI, Box Office Mojo, Rotten
Tomatoes, Indie Film Hustle, The Numbers, Netflix, Vimeo, Instagram, Pinterest,
Metacritic, Hulu, Reddit, NATO, Mental Floss, Slate, Locations Hub, Film
Industry Statistics, Guinness World Records, The Audiopedia
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London Underground / Photo Credit: The Verge
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