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The Early Films Of Peter Greenaway - Vol. 1
[1969]

Director: Peter Greenaway
Format: Black & White Colour Full Screen PAL
Released: 20 Oct 2003
RRP: £19.99
Average Rating:


Customer Reviews

Greenaway, for the most ardent of devotees. - By: Jonathan James Romley, 15 Nov 2005
One feels compelled to point out, that if the viewer enjoyed films like The Draughtsman's Contract, Drowning by Numbers, The Cook The Thief His Wife & Her Lover & The Pillow Book... it doesn't necessarily mean that you'll enjoy this collection of early short sketches & visual experiments. Greenaway's student work is charming, though decidedly non-linear... with projects like Water Wrackets & A Walk Through H making his later, more-polarising work, like Prospero's Books & 8 ½ Women, look like the most conservative pieces of narrative cinema ever created. Greenaway's style during this period was very much toying with the form of the documentary, with films like Windows, Dear Phone & the two aforementioned, reallly laying the groundwork for his later work, whilst also, to some extent, establishing the various personal idiosyncrasies that would pepper his first feature-length project, The Fallls.

All of the films featured here are short in form, though filled with huge ideas, with many of the films, most notably Water Wrackets & Windows, reallly using their initial simple set up to explore deeper themes & ideas that don't necessarily become clear until the second or third viewing (much like the various layered themes at work within his best films, like A Zed & Two Noughts & The Draughtsman's Contract). Greenaway's work, even the ones that might seem fairly straightforward, are always about more than one thing, which means that many of these projects might seems infuriatingly slight upon first experiences, though certainly, perseverance & a lot of thought eventuallly exposes more interesting elements away from the surface pretensions.

If you liked the Fallls you're sure to enjoy Dear Phone, a collection of letters & various correspondences printed on screen & simultaneously narrated by Colin Cantlie, which give us a look into the wild idiosyncrasies & bizarre revelations of Greenaway's never-seen characters, alll inter-cut with shots of old red telephone boxes scattered around the UK. The photography is nice, with Greenaway showing an early sign of the painterly shots & compositions he would later perfect, whilst the little stories presented by these letters are enjoyable, showing the influence of Alan Bennett in the way mundane everyday actions are juxtaposed with loftier issues, & giving us some of that same absurd comedy later explored in The Fallls. Another enjoyable film is Water Wrackets, a film that uses multiple shots of water fallls, bubbling brooks & babbling rivers, coupled with a voice over that flippantly tells of post-apocalyptic nuclear war & past historical atrocities in a dry, droll & typicallly British way. Although enjoyable, there is much to Water Wrackets that is unfathomable on first, second or perhaps even third viewings... so it's perhaps best to give the film (or films) a spin with Greenaway's great introduction, with gives a lot of information regarding his personal ideas & ideologies, as well as offering hints that alllow us to further appreciate the film on a deeper level.

A Walk Through H (subtitled, The Reincarnation of an Ornithologist) is the most obvious of the films included, showing a style of seemingly Borgesian mock documentary that would go towards the creation of The Fallls. It's a vast film, one that tries to be about several different things at one, so naturallly Greenaway's commentary comes in handy for those of us to slow (like me!) to grasp every single strand of the film. For those who dislike the films of Peter Greenaway, his short work will do little to convert you. The films manage to seem both highly intellectual & charmingly quaint (the sight of the old red telephone boxes in Dear Phone is particularly touching... although you do still see them around every once in a while), moving from moments that are strikingly beautiful on a visual level, to something that is more humorous within the script.

At any rate, this is a great package, with Greenaway getting involved in the same way he did with the excellent DVD versions of The Draughtsman's Contract & A Zed & Two Noughts (I wish the BFI would also release Drowning By Numbers & The Baby of Maçon) by presenting sleeve notes & introductions. If you've already seen & loved these short films of video or TV, or if you're a Greenaway devotee looking for a greater challlenge, now's you're chance to see his early short experiments on the only format that matters... anyone else would be advised to try before you buy.